Betsy Zikakis is vice president of Marketing at RightScale. Her “cloud stripes” aren’t just from RightScale, but from 5 years of cloud experience including Avaki, a grid technology vendor, Engage, an internet advertising network and Workscape, a human resource SaaS provider.
As part of the Core Cloud Corps series, I had a chance to talk with Betsy and get her advice to companies thinking about using the clouds, thoughts on private clouds, industry trends, and the likelihood of standards in the near future. The Core Cloud Corps encompasses not only cloud providers, but the companies that provide security, management, tracking, and provisioning. See Core Cloud Corps blog.
Betsy’s Advice to people thinking about using the cloud
“Just do it. Pick a project and get started. Don’t let security get in the way, don’t let the concerns about how to budget it get in the way, and don’t let concerns of how to manage it get in the way! The cloud is the wave of the future. If you don’t learn how to use it, you will fall behind your competitors.”
About RightScale
RightScale was founded in 2006. They are a SaaS that manages IaaS for both public, private and hybrid clouds. Their Cloud Management Platform provides system administrator’s control and transparency of the data and applications that are moved to the cloud, across the entire lifecycle of the project. The platform sits between the infrastructure providers and the customers’ application. Infrastructure providers include public clouds like Amazon, RackSpace, GoGrid, (and soon to be IBM), as well as private cloud providers Eucalyptus and VMware’s VMExpress.
Public and Private Clouds
Private clouds are important for two reasons. First, they are often a stepping stone to future public cloud services, so support of hybrid cloud is important. Second, many applications will likely span both private and public cloud in a hybrid manner. Here is an interesting article from Gartner: Companies eyeing the private cloud
I asked Betsy for some examples of applications that might run in a hybrid configuration. She described e-commerce application, disaster recovery projects, and development and test examples.
E-commerce Application that wants to run the credit card application on a private cloud and the product application on a public cloud
Disaster Recovery Application that manages applications that are normally run on a private cloud but wants the flexibility to move to a public cloud in the case of a disaster.
Development and Testing may use private clouds for their development but perform scalability testing on public clouds.
Trends
I inquired about trends that RightScale is seeing from their customers. “While a few years ago, the most prevalent customer was web 2.0 company that was most worried about cost containment and scalability,” commented Betsy. “In the most recent survey, when asked what they were doing in the cloud. Customers had a different response. Today they are performing different tasks (BI gaming, grid computing) and they most often cite the need for agility as the reason.”
In the last 6 months we have seen the use of clouds emerging as a vital part of BI projects.
The growth of on-line gaming participation and its flash crowds which cause huge peaks in traffic, has increased gaming companies cloud usage in the past year.
Test and development has become more common, especially for testing scalability of products.
Use of grid computing continues to grow. Periodic demand for quickly completing a one off project, paying for only what you need, when you need it is attractive! It is interesting that many of these projects come from the line of business. ,
“When our customers discuss agility, they are often referring to projects they would never have attempted prior to the cloud. A pharmaceutical company that analyzed 5 years of data, simply to see if there was anything they could learn from it; A media companies that quickly transcoded (converted a media file or object from one format to another) all their existing files; A finance department that wanted to do massive number crunching to test different models, “ commented Betsy.
RightScale frequently find it is a business problem driving an enterprise’s first use of the cloud. The problems often represent a one off project, require faster turnaround than would have been feasible without a large capital investment, and include BI. “The cost is the same whether you use one machine for 1000 hours or 1000 machines for 1 hour,” Betsy said. “And when the solution is needed quickly, often 1000 machines for one hour is the answer.”
Standards
While every presentation I attend seems to agree that more standards are needed for wide spread adoption of the cloud, Betsy had an interesting perspective. She believes that even at the IaaS level, the different vendors are going to want to differentiate themselves. One may emphasize higher security, one the data stores they offer, and another pricing options. These may require different interfaces. So, while companies need the ability to move from one cloud infrastructure to another, they won’t want to know all the different APIs. They will depend on some vendor to provide a platform between them and the infrastructure provider.
Cloud Security
There are some industries that must contractually keep their data in-house. But most of the time when anyone else says the cloud is not secure; they often mean I don’t want to use the cloud.
We see companies such as Amazon continuing to add more and more security into their clouds. Procedures are in place that often make them even more secure and backed up than many companies’ in-house systems.
Next Article in the Series
Hopefully you found this article informative and will tune back in for the next blog – featuring an interview with Arvid Fossen, Director Product Management & Marketing, at AServer, about their Datacenter as a Service (DaaS) offering.


