Is 2010 the year of the cloud?
Research by Resource on Demand claims to show the company has been receiving a record number of enquiries for salesforce and SaaS specialists during the first month of the year.
According to Rolf von Roessing, international VP of ISACA the 233 per cent surge in recruitment requests seen by the firm during January signals that, after brief gestation, cloud computing is firmly set to take off into the mainstream in 2010.
“The financial and organizational benefits of switching to cloud-based storage and systems are clearly driving this surge in demand, as witnessed by Gartner’s recent prediction that, within the next four years, 20 per cent of firms will have no appreciable local resources as a result from switching,” he said.
“It’s important, however, that in the rush to embrace the obvious benefits of the cloud, businesses do not overlook the security implications of extending their IT resource into what is, to all intents and purposes, a virtual environment,” he added.
Business and IT managers should take the time to review their security systems and resources, and ask themselves whether their information security management can effectively defend their data and other assets in the cloud, the ISACA leader went on to say.
And, even if an initial budget to extend and enhance a firm’s IT security resources to fully support the cloud is not apparently available, IT managers should not lose sight of the possibility that some of the direct cost savings that arise from cloud migration can be invested in security facilities, he explained.
Von Roessing, who has extensive experience in the financial services security industry, said that, in May of last year, ISACA joined the Cloud Security Alliance to promote good practices on the cloud security front.
“As new computing functions and services appear in what will undoubtedly be the year of the cloud, it is important that IT professionals remain vigilant about the security implications of what is set to become a rapidly-changing IT landscape,” he said.