It’s a new world out there, and organisations are looking for ways to create business value and enable growth. That’s where Google Cloud comes in.
Geopolitical uncertainty, high inflation and low economic growth are shifting corporate priorities, and with them, business’ expectations with regard to cloud: cost optimisation, the ability to scale and all the other rationales for moving to the cloud are no longer relevant.
“Nowadays, companies are looking to the cloud for ways to do business more smartly, to create value for them in an incredibly difficult environment. And the focus on value creation is acting like a pressure test on cloud implementations, showing up the inadequacies that mostly derive from the ‘lift-and- shift’ approach so many companies followed,” says Gregory MacLennan, CEO, Digicloud, Google’s enablement partner in Africa.
Too often, companies simply transferred their existing on- premise IT infrastructure into the cloud, without undertaking the necessary work to modernise their systems to take advantage of what the cloud offers, he adds.
“Even if a company’s business processes are performing brilliantly, to get the benefit of moving to the cloud, the underlying IT needs to be optimised for the new environment. If that doesn’t happen, the company finds it has a sprawling IT estate and is exposed to rapidly increasing dollar costs thanks to the declining rand.”
MacLennan says that companies are looking at five levers to accelerate business growth:
1. Do business smarter via digitisation
Companies have realised that their data is a treasure trove that can be mined to gain valuable insights into their customers, supply chains and products.
The current hype around artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) has led many companies to believe that a “data dividend” can be realised simply by hooking up to these capabilities in the cloud. Not so, argues MacLennan. First, it’s important to modernise the IT systems in order to facilitate the processing of data.
2. Move to an open architecture
“Nobody enjoys being locked into a relationship with a vendor and its crazy pricing,” observes MacLennan. “Google is the poster child for open source, not least because it avoids the lock-in trap — users can shift their applications easily between platforms as needs dictate.” He highlights the high levels of support and development rigour that underpins open source.
3. Enable better collaboration to enhance productivity and creativity
There’s a reason that digital natives tend to use Google Workspace as a platform, MacLennan says. Because it’s completely cloud-based, it offers a way for teams to work simultaneously on a document or other asset with none of the challenges of version control. “You cannot underestimate the power of collaboration, but making it happen is hard, especially as the hybrid, anywhere/anytime workplace becomes more popular,” he notes. “Google Cloud has the solution.”
4. Security remains a key concern
IT systems and the data they contain now constitute the crown jewels of any company, and they are under attack as never before by highly sophisticated cybercriminals. Google has eight products that have more than a billion users live at any one time—security is core to its business. “There’s a reason people talk about ‘Google-level security’, and that same level of protection is baked into Google Cloud,” MacLennan points out. “No individual company has the capital or expertise to provide that kind of protection.”
5. Sustainability has become a business issue for CEOs
Regulators continue to drive the integration of environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues into the reporting framework, with CFOs now under pressure to quantify the organisation’s ESG performance in the financial statements. Google Cloud is currently the most sustainable cloud, so switching to it should improve a company’s ESG score.
Over and above, Google Cloud is also launching products all the time designed to help companies report on ESG more accurately and easily. An example would be Google Earth Engine, which can be used to measure the change in carbon footprints.
“Google Cloud has solutions that speak to all these levers, making it the platform best suited to today’s companies wanting to do business better and smarter,” says MacLennan. “But you can’t just shift into the cloud and expect that to work; you have to get the basics right. If you do, the rewards can be stunning: we have clients that have seen processes taking 48 hours reduced to 38 seconds, all at the cost of $100. “That’s the power of Google Cloud, done properly with the help of one of our certified partners.”
“Nowadays, companies are looking to the cloud for ways to do business more smartly, to create value for them in an incredibly difficult environment.”
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