To become like a cloud provider, fire everyone here

A recent client inquiry of mine involved a very large enterprise, who informed me that their executives had decided that IT should become more like a cloud provider — like Google or Facebook or Amazon. They wanted to understand how they should transform their organization and their IT infrastructure in order to do this.

There were countless IT people on this phone consultation, and I’d received a dizzying introducing to names and titles and job functions, but not one person in the room was someone who did real work, i.e., someone who wrote code or managed systems or gathered requirements from the business, or even did higher-level architecture. These weren’t even people who had direct management responsibility for people who did real work. They were part of the diffuse cloud of people who are in charge of the general principle of getting something done eventually, that you find everywhere in most large organizations (IT or not).

I said, “If you’re going to operate like a cloud provider, you will need to be willing to fire almost everyone in this room.”

That got their attention. By the time I’d spent half an hour explaining to them what a cloud provider’s organization looks like, they had decidedly lost their enthusiasm for the concept, as well as been poleaxed by the fundamental transformations they would have to make in their approach to IT.

Another large enterprise client recently asked me to explain Rackspace’s organization to them. They wanted to transform their internal IT to resemble a hosting company’s, and Rackspace, with its high degree of customer satisfaction and reputation for being a good place to work, seemed like an ideal model to them. So I spent some time explaining the way that hosting companies organize, and how Rackspace in particular does — in a very flat, matrix-managed way, with horizontally-integrated teams that service a customer group in a holistic manner, coupled with some shared-services groups.

A few days later, the client asked me for a follow-up call. They said, “We’ve been thinking about what you’ve said, and have drawn out the org… and we’re wondering, where’s all the management?”

I said, “There isn’t any more management. That’s all there is.” (The very flat organization means responsibility pushed down to team leads who also serve functional roles, a modest number of managers, and a very small number of directors who have very big organizations.)

The client said, “Well, without a lot of management, where’s the career path in our organization? We can’t do something like this!”

Large enteprise IT organizations are almost always full of inertia. Many mid-market IT organizations are as well. In fact, the ones that make me twitch the most are the mid-market IT directors who are actually doing a great job with managing their infrastructure — but constrained by their scale, they are usually just good for their size and not awesome on the general scale of things, but are doing well enough to resist change that would shake things up.

Business, though, is increasingly on a wartime footing — and the business is pressuring IT, usually in the form of the development organization, to get more things done and to get them done faster. And this is where the dissonance really gets highlighted.

A while back, one of my clients told me about an interesting approach they were trying. They had a legacy data center that was a general mess of stuff. And they had a brand-new, shiny data center with a stringent set of rules for applications and infrastructure. You could only deploy into the new shiny data center if you followed the rules, which gave people an incentive to toe the line, and generally ensured that anything new would be cleanly deployed and maintained in a standardized manner.

It makes me wonder about the viability of an experiment for large enterprise IT with serious inertia problems: Start a fresh new environment with a new philosophy, perhaps a devops philosophy, with all the joy of having a greenfield deployment, and simply begin deploying new applications into it. Leave legacy IT with the mess, rather than letting the morass kill every new initiative that’s tried.

Although this is hampered by one serious problem: IT superstars rarely go to work in enterprises (excepting certain places, like some corners of financial services), and they especially don’t go to work in organizations with inertia problems.

Posted on November 18, 2011, in Industry and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink. 20 Comments.

  1. I have to agree wholeheartedly with this.. the primary culprit of stifling innovation and great employees is excessive management. I would go so far as to say that the two are inversely correlated, as you increase management, IT superstars that thrive on self management are systematically driven out of the organisation.

    The need for management is mostly around sub-par performance people.. whether or not you can run the world with no sub-par performance people is not really a question I think I can answer. But if you really do want to build a fast and agile organisation you must by principle only hire high performance people.

    Cloud companies aren’t immune here. I am seeing more and more “cloud” products pop up that are effectively just existing cumbersome managed service providers and hosting companies trying to make a buck out of “cloud” with decade old tech and processes. Where these people have missed the boat is that cloud is not a marketing term, it is not a technology and it’s not a business model. It’s a paradigm and model for service orientated businesses that needs to be embodied in everything the business does – be it development, operations, marketing or sales. It’s less and less about the product and more and more about how it is delivered.

    Harsh reality but comoditization does that to you.

    Whilever these huge inefficient management structures exist you can never compete. You will die a slow death, drowning in your own inability to change, innovate and chase a market that is moving faster than ever before.

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  2. Lydia, Excellent post.

    I had an interesting conversation today with a Fortune 20 bank about private Cloud, and the organization is all-in. The bank’s corporate IT stakeholders are smart, motivated, and open minded. But as they evolve their environment, they are still thinking about infrastructure components (e.g. nodes, images, machines, storage devices) and legacy application practices. I quickly pitched the concept of ‘leaky PaaS’, ‘service subscription rather than provisioning’,’hiding topology details from developers’, and ‘allowing architects to focus on service levels rather than environment tuning’. The concepts are a game changer defining Cloud architecture and Platform as a Service from a developer’s perspective. WSO2 Stratos is an early demonstration of these leading concepts.

    I blogged about your post at http://blog.cobia.net/cobiacomm/2011/11/22/will-it-culture-kill-cloud/

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  3. You sound like Simon Wardley. Where are the kittens? I demand kittens!

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  4. Yes, it is a really cheerless truth about modern service providers. I have met pretty enough such companies. But lucky I have found one that deserves attention to look at — https://www.nclouds.com/
    And I would like to know what do you think about it.

    Like

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