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Cloud impact: A state of the art discussion (podcast)

By | November 19, 2010, 12:02pm PST

Summary: As part of the Enterprise Irregulars track at this week’s Defrag conference, I moderated a panel of experts discussing the cloud. Enjoy this thoughtful and entertaining podcast.

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To listen to the podcast recording click the player above. Although, the audience audio quality isn’t great, for which I apologize, this discussion is well worth hearing.

The Defrag conference, held this week outside Denver, offered a fantastic opportunity to mingle with bright folks working on various technology-related problems. As part of the Enterprise Irregulars conference track, I moderated a panel discussion, titled Impact of the Cloud, that explored fascinating and important issues related to cloud computing.

The panel consisted of four cloud experts, but real magic happened as the audience engaged. In the end, the discussion was truly an equal collaboration between panel and audience. The audience included folks with serious expertise, so both panelists and audience learned from each other.

Aside from me as moderator, the panel included the following participants:

  • Steve Mann, a strategy consultant and formerly an executive with SAP
  • John Taschek, an executive with Salesforce.com who reports directly to CEO Marc Benioff
  • Sadagopan Singam, an executive with Mahindra Satyam, one of the largest Indian IT outsource firms
  • Mitch Lieberman, an analyst / consultant and previously Vice President of Marketing at open source cloud vendor SugarCRM

Here’s a photo of the panelists:

The discussion covered why the cloud is important, implications for groups such as IT, the business, end-users, professional services, and so on. We also spoke about differences between established, on-premise software vendors and the new breed of cloud-based suppliers.

At various points in the discussion, the conversation mentioned Microsoft, Oracle, Salesforce.com, SAP, and Workday.

[Photo by Graeme Thickins]

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Topics

Michael Krigsman is a recognized authority on the causes and prevention of IT failures.

Disclosure

Michael Krigsman

Michael Krigsman writes and speaks about technology in a manner that most observers consider to be fair and balanced. Michael believes that writing about IT failures, which often have complex causes, creates a unique obligation to be reasonable and accurate in both reporting and analysis.

Michael maintains active personal and professional relationships with enterprise technology buyers, vendors, analyst firms (or individual analysts), consultants, and system integrators. As CEO of Asuret, Michael sells and delivers paid services to members of these same groups.

Vendors regularly reimburse Michael's out-of-pocket travel expenses to attend industry conferences and events. Conference organizers frequently waive entry fees when Michael attends industry events. Michael often speaks at industry conferences and events.

He is a member of the Enterprise Irregulars, a loose association of consultants, investors, industry representatives, analysts, and users of enterprise software.

For daily updates on Michael's activities, follow him on Twitter.

Biography

Michael Krigsman

Michael Krigsman is CEO of Asuret, Inc., a consulting company dedicated to reducing technology implementation failures. Asuret's suite of software tools improve the success rate of enterprise software deployments by quantifying and measuring governance issues that cause most project failures. Michael led the research effort underlying Asuret's model of collective intelligence and its practical application to reducing IT failures in consulting environments. He is a recognized authority on the causes and prevention of IT failures and is frequently quoted in the press on IT project and related CIO issues. He is considered an enterprise software industry "influencer" and provides advice to technology buyers, vendors, and services firms.

Previously, Michael served as CEO of Cambridge Publications, which develops tools and processes for software implementations and related business practice automation projects. Michael has been involved with hundreds of software development projects, for companies ranging from small startups to Fortune 500 organizations. Michael graduated with an M.B.A. from Boston University and a B.A. from Bard College. He is a Board member of the America's Cup Hall of Fame and the Herreshoff Marine Museum in Bristol, RI.

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