The cloud can be a great investment in your companyâs digital future. But how well do you and your team understand it? And how well are you communicating with other departments and stakeholders?Â
Confusion surrounding the complex processes and technical details of the cloud can create misunderstanding and hinder progress at every level of your business. Companies that want to stay ahead of the curve and take full advantage of their cloud environment need to bridge the gap between IT and stakeholders across the organization.
Why all the confusion?
Cloud computing has many benefitsâlowering operating costs, increasing innovation and speed to market, and supporting a growing distributed workforce, to name a few.Â
Yet, even among IT professionals, understanding and communicating the complexities of a cloud environment can be difficult and often confusing. Add in conversations with other team members, stakeholders, and organizational leaders, and itâs not surprising that many companies struggle to get everyone on the same page.Â
The truth is cloud environments are complex.Â
Managing cloud architecture involves a variety of roles, tasks, accounts, and documentation. Plus, you are often dealing with both large environments and applications spread across different environments. Keeping track of all these moving parts and keeping the lines of communication and responsibilities clear is no small task. Â
Working in such complexity can lead to misalignments and confusion about:
- How things currently work vs. how they should workÂ
- What limitations exist
- What changes or updates have been made
- When changes were madeÂ
- Who owns the changes or is responsible for themÂ
- How ideas, processes, and initiatives should be implementedÂ
- What the purpose behind these decisions is
- How the cloud impacts the business as a whole
Confusion and miscommunication make it easy for misalignment to occur across teams and individuals in your organizationâwhich can harm your cloud operations and your business.Â
How confusion and misalignment hurt your business
Business leaders and stakeholders at every level make decisions daily that impact operations and the bottom line. If the organization isnât aligned in their priorities or understanding of current operations, you are missing opportunities for growth.Â
Inefficient operations and development
Your cloud operations impact every level of the organization. If your IT team isnât communicating clearly and effectively (within the team or with other stakeholders), you have a recipe for trouble. Your team must understand their roles and how their work affects your cloud processes, or you wonât have a smooth operation.Â
For example, if your goal is to optimize your cloud infrastructure, you have to understand its current state. Teams that donât have a clear picture of the current systems and processes wonât agree on the problems or on the path forward.Â
In other words, each person will probably have a different understanding of the current state (and its current issues), leading to misalignment on what the problems and the best solutions are. Clarity in communication and alignment on expectations and responsibilities means your business will run more efficiently and securely.
Beyond day-to-day operations, misalignment and confusion can also impact your companyâs ability to efficiently manage incident response. The effects of server downtime will only multiply if your team lacks a clear understanding of the current state of your cloud architecture. Without the ability to immediately identify both the problem and the steps necessary to fix the issue, your company risks becoming even more vulnerable to server incidents.Â
Lack of support and adoption among stakeholders
It can be tempting to think that understanding the ins and outs of your cloud management processes and decisions rests solely within the purview of your IT department.Â
But that isnât the case.
Company leadership and cross-functional teams also need to understand your basic cloud operations, at least insofar as they impact and integrate with the organization as a whole. A lack of clarity and context across the business can isolate the IT and cloud management team and hinder company-wide buy-in and support.Â
Without buy-in from leadership and adoption across the company, your cloud operations wonât be successful, and you wonât be able to take full advantage of all those benefits mentioned earlier. That means youâll have wasted resources, untapped potential, and a hit to your competitive advantage with other players in the industryâwhich isnât great for business.Â
Cloud adoption can help companies innovate and deploy fasterâa crucial advantage in a digitally transforming marketâbut if your people donât understand how the cloud works for them and what potential it has for your business, youâre leaving money on the table and falling behind cloud-optimized enterprises.Â
How to reduce confusion and realign your team
When it comes to cloud management, complexity is the nature of the beast. However, complexity doesnât have to result in confusion, misunderstanding, or misalignment in your business operations.Â
Kick confusion to the curb by applying these simple principles to your cloud management practices.
Clarify with visuals
A cloud environment involves many moving parts interacting and integrating across various levels. Visualizing that data within clear diagrams and roadmaps can contextualize your cloud architecture for both technical and non-technical employees.Â
Build cloud architecture diagrams
Bring your cloud operations into focus with a cloud architecture diagram. Mapping your cloud architecture helps you put all those moving parts in context so you can see how everything fits together, what your current environment looks like, and what areas need attention.Â
Diagrams minimize the visual clutter from text-heavy documentation and bring the most important data to the front so nothing gets lost in the shuffle.Â
Lucidscale helps you automatically visualize your cloud architecture by connecting to your cloud environment through third-party access. Within seconds, you will have your full cloud infrastructure organized by cloud, region, compute instance, or other resources.Â
This is a great solution for IT and development teams to communicate from one source of truth so that everyone is on the same page. When everyone agrees on what the current state of operations is, they can more easily align on solutions that move the business forward.Â
A comprehensive cloud architecture diagram is also a key component of an effective incident response plan. Not only can your infrastructure diagram help you locate and diagnose problems when they arise, but it can also highlight areas of potential vulnerability so that you can work to strengthen your architecture in advance. After all, the best incident response plan often emphasizes preventative measures, rather than focusing solely on reactive processes.Â
With an accurate and up-to-date cloud architecture diagram, you can troubleshoot, evaluate your network, and provide reliable recommendations for improvements. Rather than scrambling to figure out why youâre experiencing an outage and what systems are affected, you can pull up your diagram and quickly uncover the answers you need.Â