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8 Tips to Getting Started in Cloud Computing

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May 10, 2010

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In the old days, infrastructure meant buying $5,000 servers, putting them into high-security, cooled rooms, and hiring IT folks to make them all work. And then doing this all over again so that you’d have redundancy. Those days are gone—in fact, if you tell investors that you need money for IT infrastructure, they’re going to question your intelligence.

 

Cloud computing is what has changed the game. It provides small businesses with the ability to deploy websites and applications quickly, to pay only for what you use, and leave all the management issues to someone else. It makes for a leaner business that can react faster to challenges and opportunities.

 

But cloud computing also requires understanding a whole new technology and computing philosophy. I was lucky when we put my company’s website, Alltop.com, “into the cloud” because our service provider, Rackspace, hosts hundreds of companies and our developers at Electric Pulp have done this many times. The gang at Rackspace and I have come up with a list of ten tips to help you get started in cloud computing:

 

1. Know the different options available to you. “Cloud computing” simply means that you pay only for what you use—like electricity, but it can be found many forms. A platform-as-a-service (PaaS for short) works well for front-end applications and websites. It takes care of a lot of the infrastructure you need to get started. An infrastructure as a service (IaaS for short) gives you access to a command line and allows you the flexibility to customize your load balancing, autoscaling, security and failover settings, but requires advanced technical knowledge in system administration.

 

If you don’t have someone comfortable programming in a terminal, an IaaS is not for you. Infrastructures-as-a-service require some system administration experience. If you don’t have someone with this type of expertise, either find a competent systems administrator or consider a platform-as-a-service instead. A PaaS provider should be able to handle basic but necessary tasks such as load balancing and security.

 

2. Understand that scaling is a skill, not a default. Cloud computing gives you a lot of flexibility to scale at a lower cost. However, no cloud provider offers “infinite scalability” out of the box though. The world’s most popular websites and applications have professionals working full-time to ensure uptime and speed when they are needed most. Be sure to factor this into your long-term IT costs.

 

3. Implement a disaster plan. The cloud is not fool proof, but there are ways to protect yourself should it go down. A multi-tenant cloud will go down on occasion. If uptime is crucial to your business, be sure you have a disaster recovery plan, geographic failover, and redundancy set in place.

4. Don’t be naïve. Cloud computing will not make up for a poorly written application or database structure. A hosting provider gets the blame for a lot of performance issues. If a database is not set up properly, or code is not optimized, there is nothing a hosting provider can do to make up for this. When it comes to developers, remember that you often get what you pay for. Be sure to check their resumes and portfolio for other work.

 

5. Budget for your specific use-case. Calculating your budget is not as simple as reading a provider’s website. Cloud computing treats hosting as a utility. Like other utilities such as electricity, your bill will vary each month with usage. If you see a surge in traffic or users, use more space, or process more information, expect to pay more at the end of the month.

 

6. Choose a cloud provider on your needs, not its popularity. Do you need something that is highly elastic in a short period of time? Are you going to need support and additional services? High availability? Integration with third party software? Different cloud providers excel at different things. Consider your individual needs, do your homework, and ask cloud providers questions about their availability, speed, security, and integration before you sign up.

 

7. Remember: some applications are not good fits for cloud. Cloud computing is great for anything you’d need to deploy quickly and at a low cost. However, just like multi-tenant buildings are not good for every business, a multi-tenant cloud is not good for every application. If you have high security or bandwidth needs, you will need to pursue dedicated gear.

 

For security reasons, any application that requires PCI or HIPPA compliance is not a good fit for cloud computing. A multi-tenant cloud may also not be able to handle extreme performance loads often seen by more resource intensive applications. Evaluate your specific needs and don’t rule out dedicated or hybrid hosting (a combination of cloud and dedicated hosting) if it looks like the right fit.

 

8. Think outside of the box. When hosting becomes a commodity, it opens your business up to new and exciting things. You can deploy applications or sites on the fly. Consider media rich or real-time elements to your application or website. Set up a server just to comb through customer information or other data your company collects. These possibilities were not as accessible to the masses before cloud computing, so don’t be afraid to try new things and expand how your business operates.

 

Here is more information about cloud computing from Rackspace.

 

Disclosure: Rackspace provides hosting for my company’s website, Alltop.  

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Join the conversation ( 6 )

  • Pankaj Taneja 1 year 9 months and 13 days ago

    Pankaj Taneja

    the link - http://www.hyperoffice.com/saas-reviews-for-smbs/

  • Pankaj Taneja 1 year 9 months and 13 days ago

    Pankaj Taneja

    Nice tips. We had once done a whitepaper on "SaaS Vendor Selection" with Rusty Weston that readers might find useful.

  • Brent Courson 1 year 9 months and 13 days ago

    Brent Courson

    The Incipi Platform as a Service (PaaS), powered by WorkXpress, allows anyone to create custom business software without coding. The enterprise grade cloud platform is both robust and user friendly. It can be hosted by a cloud hosting provider or on an internal server. Internal hosting, behind your firewall, eliminates the concern about third party data storage while still providing the benefits of cloud software. For more information check out: incipi.com

  • Jordan Dossett 2 years 0 months and 16 days ago

    Jordan Dossett

    PCI ignorance at it's best: "As for PCI we have built in card processing using a PCI Certified partner who keeps us out of scope which means the merchant nor ShopKeep.com ever touches or sees the card information."The site that collects the card user data has to meet PCI compliance. In this case that would be ShopKeep.com. The credit card and credit card holder data is collected, I am sure securely but collected none the less and then passed to a gateway that then processes. The ignorance is in the idea that the site ShopKeep does not need to be compliant. Any site that collects, even if passing to a third party processor, has to be compliant. Good grief charlie brown!Ms. Jordan Dossetttwitter/facebook/skype: jordandossett

  • JASON RICHELSON 2 years 0 months and 20 days ago

    JASON RICHELSON

    Much as Rackspace has done for hosting, SalesForce has done for CRM and Gmail has done for email - ShopKeep.com is looking to bring simple, accessible and innovative tools to retail management in the cloud. A multi-tenant solution, ShopKeep.com will translate retailer's raw sales data to actionable information with a suite of business analytics. The solution has a built in disaster plan where a small local application runs the register when the internet connection fails and pushes data online when restored. Operating on the highly-regarded Amazon EC2 cloud, ShopKeep.com is able to start offering service and support plans under fifty dollars a month no matter a customer's usage. As for PCI we have built in card processing using a PCI Certified partner who keeps us out of scope which means the merchant nor ShopKeep.com ever touches or sees the card information. As the owner of The Greene Grape Wine store in Manhattan I designed ShopKeep.com to fit the real needs of retailers and I eat my own cooking by using the system first in my stores. If you would like more information please go to www.shopkeep.comJason Richelson

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