Finding a Framework for Hybrid Cloud Risk Management

Quantum Computing Delivered From The Cloud

By G C Network | March 6, 2017

Photo credit: Shutterstock IBM Cloud is now providing developers with the infrastructure and portal to a 5 qubit quantum computer. This equips them with the ability to build interfaces between…

Connections Redefining the Enterprise Network

By G C Network | February 23, 2017

Photo credit: Shutterstock The computer and the network that connects them are both inextricably linked to the success of any business.  This truth is at the heart of our contemporary…

Business Chatbots Taking Over

By G C Network | February 9, 2017

Chat apps characteristics make them very appealing to businesses and marketers. Prominent ones include their size, user retention, usage rates, and user demographics. In fact, the combined user base of…

NCTA CloudMASTER®: The Path To Your Future

By G C Network | January 31, 2017

In 2016, cloud computing started to dominate many IT market segments. As a business, Synergy Research Group reported that industry revenue for the four quarters ended Sept. 30 grew 25%.…

Cybersecurity in the President Trump Administration

By G C Network | January 29, 2017

From the rise of increasingly capable nation-states—like Iran and North Korea—conducting destructive attacks against American private sector companies, to the continuing pace of IP theft by China striking at the…

Creating Your Digital Strategy

By G C Network | January 20, 2017

Photo credit: Shutterstock For many corporations, welcoming the New Year also heralds the season of strategy development and budget distribution. This year, however, companies of all sizes are struggling with…

CloudMASTER® Pays Well In The US Great Northwest

By G C Network | January 17, 2017

The City of Beaverton is located seven miles west of Portland, Oregon, in the Tualatin River Valley, It encompasses 19.6 square miles, and is home to more than 95,000 residents.…

NATO ACT “Art of the Possible” Interoperability Demonstration

By G C Network | January 7, 2017

GovCloud Network is proud to have served as the Program Manager for the NATO Allied Command Transformation, “Art of the Possible” Interoperability Demonstration on December 16, 2016. supporting the The…

Olisipo Can Make You A CloudMASTER®

By G C Network | December 29, 2016

Olisipo Learning in Portugal has a culture that is based on the constant search for new challenges. Recognized by their clients as the “Best HR Supplier”, they have placed more…

What is Your 2017 Business Strategy?

By G C Network | December 26, 2016

Photo credit: Shutterstock End of year predictions in December are as predictable as tomorrow’s sunrise, but a recent video on 2017 Technology Trends helped me really understand how important a…

 (Sponsored by IBM. Originally published on Point B and Beyond)

Hybrid cloud is rapidly becoming essential to today’s information technology processes. This is why hybrid cloud risk management has become the keystone to many modern corporate strategies. To effectively manage this shift, leading enterprises are reorganizing how the business side of IT is accomplished. When this reality is coupled with the rising cost of poor cybersecurity, decisions often rise to the board level.

Threats that challenge cloud-based information systems can have adverse effects on organizational operations, organizational assets, employees and partners. Malicious entities can exploit both known and unknown vulnerabilities, compromising the confidentiality, integrity or availability of the corporate information being processed, stored or transmitted by those systems. In this environment, risk management must be viewed as a holistic activity that is fully integrated into every aspect of the business.

Establishing Standards for Hybrid Cloud Risk Management

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) offers a very good model for hybrid cloud risk management that groups activities into three categories based on the level at which they address the risk-related concerns. It divides activities and concerns into:

  • The organization level (tier 1);
  • The mission and business process level (tier 2); and
  • The information system level (tier 3).

Addressing these activities in reverse order, the NIST Risk Management Framework (RMF) provides a disciplined and structured process for integrating tier 3 enterprise information security with risk management activities. Since mission or business processes govern tier 2, those details generally lie outside the scope of general treatment. Tier 1 organizational level aspects are, however, at the heart of the organizational restructuring needed to deal with risk management within today’s hybrid IT environments.

One effective approach for addressing the tier 1 aspects of a cloud ecosystem is through the use of a hybrid IT operating model construct. This distributes tactical and operational risk management activities across a front, middle and back office. Generally referred to as a cloud service brokerage, organizational risk management activities are managed through:

  • A front office that accommodates IT service choice, automated provisioning and quick service delivery;
  • A middle office that holds responsibility for decisions that involve business operations and new IT service brokerage functions; and
  • A back office that integrates orders with service provider fulfillment, thus addressing IT supply chain risk management activities in order to ensure the continuous delivery of solutions from the organization’s cloud ecosystem.

More About Cloud Service Brokerage

The IT service brokerage function addressed here is in no way similar to the real estate or financial service broker function with which many are familiar. Far more than the single transaction service of these other broker types, IT service broker functions sit between the back office (operations) and the front office (user experience).

From that position, it is responsible for new IT business operations skills such as sourcing, procurement, packaging and billing. This continuous and ongoing function defines and executes board guidance with regard to the organization’s technology sourcing strategies. It also supports the creation of solution architectures that maximize the value of the multisourced hybrid IT investments while meeting business needs.

Cyberattacks are a threat to businesses everywhere. Executives, board members and IT professionals must strategically organize to address hybrid cloud risk management. While the RMF and business-specific risk management processes are excellent options for tier 3 and tier 2 issues, a front-middle-back office organizational construct can be used to effectively manage tier 1 and the operational risk of the hybrid IT ecosystem.

Cloud Musings

( Thank you. If you enjoyed this article, get free updates by email or RSS – © Copyright Kevin L. Jackson 2015)

Follow me at https://Twitter.com/Kevin_Jackson
Posted in

G C Network