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NJVC Platform as a Service to Include Google Geospatial Services for NCOIC Geospatial Community Cloud Project in Support of Disaster Relief Efforts
CHANTILLY, Va., July 9, 2013 — NJVC® was selected by Network Centric Operations Industry Consortium (NCOIC) to provide the platform as a service (PaaS) element of a cloud-computing-based humanitarian assistance…
Fathers of Clouds – A Tribute
(A guest post from Mr. Ray Holloman, NJVC Digital Communications Manager ) For more than half a century, cloud computing has changed names more often than a Hollywood starlet. Utility…
CNBC Closing Bell: Bob Gourley on NSA Leaker
This is clearly off topic, but I couldn’t help myself! Please take a moment to view this CNBC video where my good friend Bob Gourley addresses this important event. Good…
Guest Blog: Sequestration and the Cloud
(This post was provided by Praveen Asthana, Chief Marketing Office of Gravitant, a cloud service brokerage and management company) Sequestration burst out of obscurity and entered our household vocabulary in…
Join Me at the Gartner IT Infrastructure & Operations Management Summit
Please join me at the Gartner IT Infrastructure & Operations Management Summit in Orlando, Florida, June 18-20, 2013, where my session topic will be “Cloud Service Integration: Increasing Business Value…
Five Years of Cloud Musings!!
https://kevinljackson.blogspot.com/2008/05/hello-world-april-18-2008.html “Sunday, April 18, 2008 Hello World ! – April 18, 2008 I’ve been toying with the idea of doing a blog for about six months now. Initially I didn’t…
Global Interoperability Consortium’s Cloud Computing Project Detailed at NATO Conference
PRESS RELEASEApril 30, 2013, 2:30 p.m. ET Eric Vollmecke of the Network Centric Operations Industry Consortium reports the proliferation of geospatial information will pose problems for disaster responders and describes…
IBM Debate Series – What’s Next in IT?
Next week I will be participating in the inaugural session of What’s Next in IT Debate Series, a new program of authentic debates and conversations on key technology topics. Sponsored…
Lisbon Bound: NATO Network Enabled Capability Conference 2013
This week I will have the honor of attending the 2013 NNEC Conference at the Corinthia Hotel in Lisbon, Portugal. The NNEC conference is an annual event which has been sponsored by HQ…
Demystifying PaaS for Federal Government
Join us on April 16, 2013 at 1 PM EDT to remove the mystery surrounding Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) for Federal Government https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/8966264786104832512 The PaaS market is plagued with confusion, and agencies…
There is almost a deafening discussion going on about the self-centeredness of today’s young adults. Weather you call them Generation Y, millennials or twenty-somethings, the general refrain seems to be a perception that the entire lot of them only care about themselves.
Patricia Greenfield of the University of California in Los Angeles actually used the Google Ngram Viewer to study this perception. Her findings, published in Psychological Science, showed that there has indeed been a distinct rise in more individualistic words such as “choose,” “get,” “feel,” “unique,” “individual” and “self” and a decrease in community-focused words such as “obliged,” “give,” “act,” “obedience,” “authority,” “pray” and “belong.”
This shift toward “me” has been driven by society’s transition to a more urban environment. It has actually been going on for a couple of centuries and has recently been accelerated by the rise of technology and the availability of education. So is this a good or bad thing?
To #BeFutureReady the answer to this question is immaterial because this is the marketplace of the future and businesses must know how to sell to this generation. That means enterprises must learn how to identify individuals, carry on two-way relevant conversations with those individuals and learn how to sell to a marketplace of one. This is why cloud computing is such a revolution to businesses of all sizes.
Cloud services, by their very nature, are simultaneously global in scope and individual in nature. They economically enable information technology platforms that can implement parallel and individually focused sales and marketing processes. Services like Twitter, Instagram, Twitch and Facebook are ideal for selling to this younger generation because individuals can be identified, engaged, enticed and yes, sold. This is not only important to the consumer market, but it plays well in the business-to-business (B2B) market as well. Organizations make decisions by committee and the key to a successful B2B engagement today is through the use of an individualized persuasion campaign aimed at each decision maker.
Businesses must also have the agility to use multiple cloud services and must be able to rapidly change the type or volume of services being used. That is why cloud service marketplaces may be even more important in the B2B realm. The future will be a world of many clouds with numerous service choices from a variety of cloud vendors. Businesses and governments are also increasingly choosing public clouds for a variety of software services and shared content. Software and IT service aggregators are working hard to make it easy to find, purchase and consume a wide variety of cloud services from a single cloud service marketplace vendor. To keep up with this trend, future-ready enterprises will need to know how to rapidly on-board, bundle, provision and de-provision their portfolio of cloud services. If this future viewpoint proves to be true, offerings like Dell Marketplace and AppDirect could be the perfect partners for a future-ready organization.
Cloud service marketplaces provide the tools, services and expertise needed to identify, converse, connect and sell to today’s millennial, or— should I say— tomorrow’s CEO.
This post was written as part of the Dell Insight Partners program, which provides news and analysis about the evolving world of tech. For more on these topics, visit Dell’s thought leadership site PowerMore. Dell sponsored this article, but the opinions are my own and don’t necessarily represent Dell’s positions or strategies.
( Thank you. If you enjoyed this article, get free updates by email or RSS – © Copyright Kevin L. Jackson 2015)
Cloud Computing
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