Cloud Surfing: A New Way to Think About Risk, Innovation, Scale and Success
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Thomas M Koulopoulos
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Cloud Surfing - Thomas M Koulopoulos
Praise for
Tom Koulopoulos and Cloud Surfing
"Cloud Surfing artfully captures the first major megatrend of our century and shows us a world where hyperconnectivity is the new norm. The extraordinary access to new connections that the cloud enables will have a profound effect on how we scale our businesses and manage our people, processes, and technology."
— Andy Zynga, CEO, NineSigma
"Cloud Surfing is this year’s must-read! Reading it is like walking from room to room of an amazing building. As Tom turns on the light in each room, vague outlines pop into clear definition, revealing a dazzling array of new possibilities. This book reveals an entirely new future, one that goes far beyond the Internet and globalization."
— John Mariotti, CEO of The Enterprise Group and award-winning author of The Complexity Crisis
"The cloud, much like mobile technologies, represents the future of business. If you’re running a business today—and encountering barriers to innovation and scaling—Cloud Surfing is a much-needed resource. Tom Koulopoulos’ enthusiasm for the subject is palpable in this book."
— Chuck Martin, author of The Third Screen and other best-selling business books and CEO, Mobile Future Institute
"Tom Koulopoulos is the prognosticator of cloud-based computing, and Cloud Surfing is his crystal ball! Here he has truly captured the implications of the cloud and the way it is transforming the way we work, live, and learn. His insights into growing accessibility and the collaborative power of real-time connectivity to information and resources is an exciting and invigorating journey."
—David DeHaven, Dean, School of Info Systems/Technology Kaplan University
"Tom does it once again with his new book Cloud Surfing. Entertaining, educational, and a perspective changer."
— Carlos Dominguez, Senior Vice President, Cisco Systems and The Tech Nowist
Cloud computing often sounds like a marketing gimmick for IT managers looking to save money on their server farm. In this insightful book, Koulopoulos shows us why that perception is wrong. He lays out a compelling case for what cloud computing is, how it is changing our lives today, and what we can expect in the future—as our access to information, personal relationships, and the businesses we run are transformed in the cloud.
—Myers Dupuy, President CBANC
First published by Bibliomotion, Inc.
33 Manchester Road
Brookline, MA 02446
Tel: 617- 934- 2427
www.bibliomotion.com
Copyright © 2012 by Thomas M. Koulopoulos
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
Printed in the United States of America
ISBN 978-1-93713409-9
Library of Congress Control Number: 2012933937
Contents
Foreword From Automating the Old to Enabling the New by Jim Champy
Acknowledgments
Introduction Hyperconnected
1 Defining the Cloud
2 Cloud Economics
3 Complexity in the Cloud
4 Truth in the Cloud
5 The Mobile Cloud
6 Innovation in the Cloud
7 Commerce in the Cloud
8 Work in the Cloud
9 Learning in the Cloud
Afterword Working, Living, and Playing in the Cloud of 2020
Endnotes
References
Index
To Mia and Adam, surfers of a brave new generation, whose dreams will redefine our world.
In Memory of Maria 1934–2011
Foreword
From Automating the Old to Enabling the New
Since the 1950s, information technology has been slowly changing how we live and work. But we are about to experience a more dramatic and accelerated change. As this book will describe, the connectivity technology now offers will affect not just how we work, but how we behave—maybe even how we think.
The first applications of information technology were simple: just automate a company’s accounting processes. At about the same time, very big computers—ones that filled whole rooms—were starting to solve complex science and engineering problems. But it wasn’t until the introduction of the ATM, the automatic teller machine,
that information technology directly touched the lives of most people.
The introduction of ATMs was carefully managed. First developed by Citibank, ATMs were placed in the outer lobby of banks. A Citibank executive told me that the bank was initially uncertain as to how customers would engage with the technology. So a group of executives stood behind a column in the outer lobby of one of the branches to watch customer reactions. One of the first customers was an elderly woman who checked her bank account balance using the ATM, then went inside the bank to withdraw some cash, then quickly returned to the ATM to see if her account balance had been adjusted. At that point, the Citibank executives knew that they had a winner.
How primitive this now seems, as today hundreds, if not thousands, of new applications become available to consumers each day. Technology is generally seen and experienced as a force for good, but that has not always been the case.
When Mike Hammer and I published the original Reengineering book in 1992, we saw the world of business frozen in complexity, technology, and outdated business processes. Simple work took too much time to perform and cost too much. We had studied an insurance company that was taking twenty-four days to issue a simple policy and invoice. Why? Because the work went through sixteen different departments, each highly automated but not well connected. Our favorite expression became obliterate, don’t automate.
We didn’t want companies to automate old business processes. We wanted companies to focus on rethinking work processes first, then apply technology.
We even argued that work could be redesigned without the help of information technology. But I would not make that argument today. The role of information technology is dramatically different than what it was in 1992. The Internet became the first major change agent, making technology so ubiquitous that it is now the great enabler of process change. You have to look no further than how this book is produced and sold to see how the Internet has changed a whole industry.
It would not be an overstatement to say that the Internet has changed our lives and work. But this process of change has just begun. The confluence of the cloud—the ultimate computing utility—with the connectivity provided by mobile devices and the ubiquity of the Internet will deliver radical change in many places.
Recently, I sat in a three-day conference on innovation in education. The most inspiring presentation described how children in undeveloped countries now access textbooks that sit in the cloud through their cellphones—the most common form of mobile device. Education in these countries now looks more advanced that in so-called developed countries.
You are about to experience in Cloud Surfing how much change the cloud and hyperconnectivity
will enable. People are coming together as they have never before. Businesses need no longer be constrained. The cloud provides them with unlimited capacity. Work will change. Behaviors will change. We will have more choice in our lives. With technology, the future is now.
—Jim Champy, co-author of Reengineering the Corporation
Acknowledgments
One of the most gratifying and humbling aspects of writing a book is the opportunity to remind yourself of how much you rely on the help of others.
Books begin with ideas, which are incredibly convincing while they reside solely in the author’s head. But ideas only come to life with collaboration. I was very fortunate to have an extraordinary team that helped me to think through the many pieces of this book as well as the long process of bringing them together. If this book, and the ideas it contains, hit a chord with readers it is because of these amazing people.
The idea for Cloud Surfing began over three years ago in conversations with Erika Heilman, prior to her co-founding Bibliomotion. At first the idea seemed much too far ahead of the market. Undaunted Erika spent the better part of those three years working with me to refine the message of Cloud Surfing numerous times. Without her emotional and intellectual commitment to the project I doubt it would ever have progressed beyond the kernel of an idea I started with. Her enthusiasm was the fuel I needed to realize my ambition.
Erika and her partner at Bibliomotion, Jill Friedlander, are bravely innovating the relationship between publisher and author in ways that are long overdue. Simply put, they have spoiled me rotten by setting a new bar for what an author’s experience should be. Along with publicist Barbara Henricks , social guru Rusty Shelton, production pro Jill Schoenhaut, and copy editor Susan Lauzau the Bibliomotion team brings more firepower to publishing than most major publishing houses many times their size, but also maintains the intimacy that all authors crave.
My literary agent John Willig has been an incredible ally, a consistent advocate and source of encouragement throughout. With me now for eight of my nine books, John is my touchstone. His voice of reason and sharp sensibility are always my first stop. John not only gets the publishing business and its dramatic evolution but also has a deep passion for the value of big ideas—even if they start as very small ones. As important, John has been a good friend whose counsel and advice are always at the ready to help this author navigate both publishing and life’s travails—and few are the authors for whom the two are not often intertwined.
Early on, as Cloud Surfing was taking shape, I was also lucky enough to enlist the opinions and insights of Erin Rodat-Savla, a long-time colleague who graciously volunteered her time to kickstart Cloud Surfing. Erin is one of the best mental sparring partners I’ve come across. Her quick wit and thoughtful energy were just what I needed to get things rolling by turning rough ideas into conversations, mind maps, and case studies. It was after these early conversations with Erin that I realized the true extent of the Cloud’s reach and impact.
My sincere thanks also to all of the cloud pioneers who agreed to be interviewed and who provided valuable case studies, including; Rob Wrubel, David Dehaven, Myers Dupuy, Mark Woodward, Andy Zynga, Maynard Webb, Lukas Biewald, and Carlos Dominguez. These are the folks who are doing the heavy lifting and are building the future of the cloud.
I owe an especially large debt of gratitude to my many clients who are constantly teaching me how innovation happens not only in the cloud but also in the trenches. I’m fortunate to be able to see the future from the vantage point of these bold pioneers. And, of course, there is the tremendous energy and learning I get from my audiences every time I step up on stage to deliver a keynote, as well as my brilliant students at Bentley University. While I may be the hired talent
or the professor
I am also a very lucky student—there is nothing like a room of a few thousand professionals or, for that matter, thirty always-on, graduate students to keep you humble, honest, and sharp.
Then there is my friend and mentor for nearly two decades, Jim Champy, who was gracious enough to provide the Foreword for Cloud Surfing, and whose guidance has helped me chart my own career. Jim is that rare breed of person who can help you to frame nearly any challenge as an opportunity. Something we all need more of.
As Cloud Surfing was being written my mother, an incredibly strong, beautiful, talented, and vibrant woman, passed away after a long illness. Although I’m not sure she ever fully understood what I did for a living, it did not stop her from being my greatest cheerleader. While her passing was hard enough, it was followed by even greater swells that tossed me about and could easily have capsized me, along with the book, were it not for a handful of close friends and family who kept me upright. It seems a silly effort on my part to even attempt to thank them in these short sentences. However, I’ve come to realize that true friendship rarely requires as many words of thanks to be spoken as it does words of frustration to be heard. To these dear friends, especially Juergen, Mike, my brother Nick, Andreas, Giota, Joe, Dad, Deb, Harry, Steve, Eliot and my aspiring muse KT, thank you for your love, kindness, honesty, and friendship.
Finally, my gratitude and the largest measure of my love to the two greatest sources of inspiration I could have ever hoped for, my children Mia and Adam. Through their eyes the world remains for me a place of fascination, wonder, and hope. Whatever challenges I may face, ambitions I may have, or future I may imagine, it all pales in comparison to the joy you have brought into my life and the motivation you give me to occasionally pull my own head out of the clouds.
Introduction
Hyperconnected
To those who reach for the clouds, the few who make it and the many more who fall back to earth trying: you are all builders of a brave new future.
Nearly fifteen years ago I happened to be sponsoring a large event in San Diego on the future of technology and knowledge work. I’d invited dozens of speakers, including the late Peter Drucker, economist Paul Romer, and management guru Tom Peters. All of them were talking about the evolution of technology.
As the organizer, I didn’t have the luxury of sitting in on every session and hearing all the predictions being made, but one session stands out in my mind. It was a small breakout session set up for about forty people, yet the room was overflowing. Attendees were lined up at the back of the room, standing shoulder to shoulder. A colleague asked me to walk over and see if I could gently herd a few people to another session to ease the crowding. But when I got to the overflowing room I was curious, and I nudged my way in to see what all the buzz was about. What I saw and heard over the next few minutes changed my view of the future in what has to be the single most profound insight of my entire career.
A pair of technologists from the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) were describing their view of the future of the Internet. This occurred at a time when we barely understood the near-term impact of the Internet. Just as many people were wondering if it was a fad as were claiming it was a revolutionary phenomenon.
The image the two technologists used to illustrate the Internet of tomorrow was a large cloud. In this cloud, they claimed, would exist a nearly infinite number of possible connections, resources, capabilities, skills, and ideas, which they called objects.
It was, as they described it, the ultimate free market, where people could instantly access, purchase, and apply the resources of the world to solve almost any problem.
These objects would float around in the cloud, available to anyone who needed them. Many objects would have no owners, belonging to everyone and free to use, while others would be complex objects that could be purchased or rented for single use. But what was most spectacular about their vision was that this cloud would not have any geographical center. It would not be housed on any one machine, server, or desktop, and would not be the property of a single company or even a coalition or cartel of companies. The cloud belonged to humankind.
In 1999, to call this far-fetched was an understatement. It was beyond far-fetched, it was pure science fiction, and the term lunatic fringe would have been a more fitting descriptor for those who subscribed to it. Yet the session on the cloud drew people to it like bugs to halogen.
For some reason, the utopian view of that cloud never left me. I tried to apply it to the Internet as it evolved and kept looking for ways to use it to describe how technology and the world’s use of it was changing. But the fit always seemed forced, somewhat contrived, and stretched beyond the boundaries of believability—at least until very recently.
When companies such as Salesforce.com began espousing the benefit of the cloud, while longtime players in hardware and software such as Oracle—and more specifically its visionary founder Larry Ellison (who coincidentally was an early investor in Salesforce.com)—started bashing it as old wine in new bottles, it finally struck me that we had arrived at the starting line of a journey into the cloud.
It’s a journey that has in many ways been obvious from the outset of computing, and in fact from the earliest days of wired communication. Just as Leonardo da Vinci could have told you that a flying machine needed wings with camber and surface area to support flight but could not create an engine to power it, we have understood the virtues of surfing the cloud but have lacked the engines to do it. The changes to society wrought by the cloud, like those that came with the evolution of aircraft, will be much more profound than any of us are able to predict.
However, this book is not just about the new engines that are creating the cloud; more importantly, it’s about the behaviors that are shaping both the cloud and humanity in what I believe is the most powerful synergy ever to sweep the face of the earth.
As we will see throughout this book, the early indicators of these changes in behavior are everywhere. Some are subtle changes, such as the way we build relationships through social media; others are dramatic changes, such as the formation of real-time value chains that morph to anticipate and adapt to changing consumer behaviors before consumers even know those behaviors exist.
We’re living in what I call a hyperconnected world, a complex and interrelated global network of economic, social, political, and individual interests. In some ways we are already seeing the impact of hyperconnectivity in the way the cloud is being used to shape social and political agendas as well as business.
Hyperconnected
If you were asked to identify the single greatest phenomenon contributing to global growth, prosperity, and social and political change over the past two hundred years, what would you choose? Perhaps you think it’s the acceleration of technology, or maybe that it’s improvements in health care, pharmaceuticals, transportation, telecommunications, globalization, or education. Yet one phenomenon underlies all of these changes, and it is the same one that will allow us to keep pace with increasing rates of uncertainty and complexity in the future. It is the dramatic increase in connections.
This is not just an increase in person-to-person connections, such as those created through telecommunications or social media such as e-mail, Facebook, or Twitter; it is an increase in connections between virtually every machine, device, process, and person. There exists an intricate and immensely complex mesh of unimagined scale and reach that we have only just begun to appreciate.
FIGURE I-1 While the number of connections between people is increasing as the population increases, from five billion connections in 2011 to a projected seven billion in 2020, the number of machine-to-machine connections dwarfs this, projected to grow from one hundred million in 2011 to fifty billion by 2020. A simple tally of the number of people-to-people connections, machine-to-machine connections, and people-to-machine connections will likely reach seventy billion by 2020. Coincidentally, this approaches the hundred billion neurons in the human brain. Keep in mind that even the 70 billion connections shown here are extremely conservative since it assumes only one connection from each category person-to-person (population), person-to-machine (human connections), and machine-to-machine (machine connections). The reality will be orders of magnitude higher, with the potential for 4,900,000,000,000,000,000,000 connections.
Until now, what we have experienced are increases in connections that are separate, localized, and segregated. But what if all of these segregated connections were suddenly part of a single, interconnected whole that worked in harmony? Today that strikes chords of fear in most of us as we imagine the threat that such a coordinated body of information could pose to our security, identity, and intellectual property.
For example, imagine that all the information about you—your personal history, data about your behaviors and experiences, and your communications, whether by phone, e-mail, chat, or social networks—was combined in a way that captured the essence of who you are and what you do, and even what you might do. What if all of this information was connected, and was reliably and instantly available? Frightening? Of course it would be, in the context of today’s world, which is the equivalent of the World Wild West when it comes to the way these connections are handled, or, more to the point, mishandled.
But what if the context changed? What if this chaos were tamed in such a way that it offered a nearly unlimited amount of value, both to you as an individual and to businesses? What if all the fears you have today about the way in which the Internet can create risk were eliminated, while all the ways that the Internet creates value were increased? What if there were new opportunities for you to work in ways that are financially, professionally, and personally more satisfying? What would that tomorrow look like and how would you surf this vast tsunami of connections to get the most out of them, rather than be swept away by them?
Answering these questions is the broad ambition of this book. But a discussion of this magnitude involves more than the image of a network of computers that can be used in the same way as an electric utility. While we’ll start by using that idea as a springboard, the larger agenda for this book involves looking at a variety of forces that are driving fundamental changes in behavior for individuals, businesses, and nations.
An Agenda for This Book
This book covers a great deal of territory so it’s best to start with a broad scoping of the topics we will cover in each chapter. While the order of the chapters has a natural flow and each builds on ideas in previous chapters, it’s not critical that you read the book from front to back. Once you’ve made it through the first two chapters, feel free to rummage about. To help in your journey, here’s a brief synopsis of each chapter.
We’ll start in chapter 1 by defining the cloud and separating it from the idea of a simple network of computers, a mistake often made by those who feel the cloud is nothing more than a marketing ploy that repackages mainframe computing time-sharing models popular in the 1960s and 1970s. Then we’ll look at some of the basic shifts in behavior that will occur as the information technology industry moves to a business model that extracts value based on behavioral patterns and influence rather than one based on devices. This is a shift that will make consumers and user experience the ultimate products around which businesses will innovate.
In chapter 2 we’ll talk about the evolution of economic models for the cloud, describing three distinct ways in which the cloud will deliver value over time. Then we’ll look at how the socioeconomic global climate is creating a perfect storm for the advent and fast adoption of the cloud. Most prominent among these socioeconomic models will be the critical importance of time to community
as a metric of cloud-based value creation.
Chapter 3 considers how the tremendous onslaught of data, analytics, connections, and overall complexity of the cloud can be harnessed by using a pull-driven
framework of personalization that allows users to cut through the noise factor inherent in a hyperconnected world.
From there we’ll move to a discussion of transparency, security, and trust in chapter 4. Here, we’ll cover a broad swath of issues, including the ability to travel in time across the cloud’s perfect memory, dispelling current myths around security in the cloud. We’ll also take a closer look at how personalization creates more opportunities to track and understand behavior, the creation of cloud-based personas, and, ultimately, the importance of managing our reputations and brand in the cloud.
In chapter 5 we’ll bring into focus the importance of mobility in the cloud and position it as the killer app
for dealing with the challenges of living and doing business in real time.
Having discussed in the first half of the book how the cloud will alter many of our fundamental behaviors, in chapter 6 we take on the topic of how innovation will accelerate in the cloud, examining what l call first-, second-, third-, and fourth-derivative innovation. In addition, we’ll look at the expanded role of open innovation as it is facilitated by idea platforms such as NineSigma and we’ll introduce the notion of cloudsourcing as a way to mobilize the fast-growing global pool of