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Debating failure and the cloud

By | November 29, 2010, 5:44am PST

Following a recent panel discussion, that I moderated, on the broad impacts of cloud computing, Salesforce.com executive, John Taschek, offered to conduct a video interview with yours truly.

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

The conversation turned into something of a debate, which was fun, but more importantly, brought an interesting examination of important issues related to achieving success with enterprise software. John is a good buddy, so his attempts to trap me into a cloud cheerleading corner were quite enjoyable. He wrote about the debate over at CloudBlog.

Related: A Debate with the Doctor of Failure

John is a staunch, cloud-only fanatic (as an exec with Salesforce, of course we definitely expect that) whereas my view tends more broadly to find benefit in both cloud and on-premise solutions. Despite these differences, we both recognize that the roots of IT failure are not technological, but rather fall into the domain of people, expectations, perception, and communication.

As evidence of fundamental agreeement on the role of people over tech, John wrote the following comment at CloudBlog (yeah, he had to stick in number five, which goes back to specifics of platform, but I suppose that’s John’s right, especially since it’s his blog and his comment!):

What facilitates the best deployments are:

  1. Expectation management
  2. Alignment
  3. Vendor excellence
  4. Executive engagement
  5. Cloud as an enabler
  6. Product excellence
  7. Vision and Goals
  8. A top notch implementation partner
  9. Adoption and ROI benchmarking
  10. Communication

As the enterprise community continues to embrace cloud solutions, we must remember that people are always the center of success and failure. Although technology can make us more efficient, it doesn’t change the basic way we work, communicate, and collaborate. If you want IT-related success, look first at people and only later at technology. If this seems obvious, then find out how many of your organization’s projects are an unqualified success.

Here are parts one and two of the interview with John:

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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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