The 900 pound gorilla cuts a fat two way profile in our community of SharePoint users. Mention obesity in a crowded server farm and that usually means that Microsoft has layered more arterial-clogging goopiness than your WAN can possibly carry. It's true. This one's going out to all you...
According to the Office of Management and Budget, an estimated $20 billion of the federal government's $80 billion in IT spending is a potential target for migration to cloud-based solutions
"We hear the warning signs every day – when I talk to knowledge workers they say ‘I can’t find anything and the volume of stuff I am managing is rapidly getting out of control’; when I talk to security officers they say things like ‘Information is leaking outside of the organization on devices that weren’t even invented when the legacy systems were put in place’; when I talk to records managers and lawyers they say that the volume of information that is beyond our ability to control is increasing our business risk and exposure; the IT people say ‘oh gosh the business has gone ahead and implemented a new application I didn’t even know about’; and then the C-Suite constantly comes back to how do I stay competitive, how do I stay relevant, and how do I get more value out of my IT spend. So, that’s the impact of these changes on people and I think it is a pretty challenging era," Mancini said
We’ve likely all read the article by now, if not the summary is as follows: based on a Gartner study from 2012, CMOs will outpace CIOs in IT spend by 2017. Since first reading that article I have seen numerous other articles outlining what the CIOs new role will be and, in a nutshell, that role will go from manager of IT to leverager of IT
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If an organization doesn’t have the processes and will to get their information under control and leverage it, spending butt-loads on software will get them nowhere
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