Cloud

Should you let a cloud maturity model judge you?


I use them all the time: models or frameworks that allow you to compare your cloud maturity ranking with a set of criteria, letting you know where you sit in your progress toward the cloud.

Scores typically range from a low level of “nonexistent use of cloud,” to the highest ranks of “cloud optimized,” or something to that effect. Of course, most enterprises are somewhere in between: an “early adopter” to “cloud preferred.”

These maturity rankings typically come with sets of criteria which allow you to self-evaluate your use of cloud technology. Questions range from: “Do you use serverless or container technology?” to queries around the use of cloud-based security and governance.

In the past I’ve found these maturity models to be good tools, in that I could show leaders how their company ranked in terms of cloud computing maturity. This educates the leaders and shows them how they compare with their peers. At times the models would become selling tools.

The idea was to conduct a scientific analysis of an enterprise’s current state and where it should be headed. However, it really invoked an emotional response, and perhaps pushed enterprises in the wrong directions at times.

The issue that I have now with the many cloud computing maturity models out there—and there are many—is that people often rely on them too much. They can dilute the larger picture of the right way to do cloud adoption and how an organization should set the appropriate priorities.

Copyright © 2020 IDG Communications, Inc.



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