Is the Way to the European Cloud Paved Mainly with Good
Intentions?
At
the end of last month the EU released its plans for "Unleashing the
Potential of Cloud Computing in Europe". But although the document (s) -
just like EU commissioner Kroes in this video - do a good job describing in
non-technical terms what cloud is and why Europe should care about having a
competitive cloud position, it kind of
stops there.
Even
though it defines three key actions - around Standards, Terms and Public Sector
taking a lead role - most described actions consist of softer items such as "promoting
trust by coordinating with stakeholders", "identifying best
practices," "promoting partnerships" and "investigating how
to make use of other available
instruments." Now of course European cloud computing can benefit from
funding reserved for other EU initiatives such as the Connecting Europe
Facility and from side initiatives such as the "Opinion on Cloud
Computing" published by the Article 29 working party that gives
privacy-related contracting guidance, but in general the recent published plan
seems to be more about what could and should be, than about what is or will be.
Meanwhile,
both regular and social media seem to be increasingly negative regarding the
progress that Europe is making. With the North American continent clearly being
the biggest cloud geo and ASIAPAC - also thanks to its many emerging economies
- claiming the position of fastest growing cloud geo, it only leaves less
desirable labels - such as slowest or most fragmented - for describing the
state of cloud activities in Europe.
Continuing
to look at why things are harder and slower in Europe will just further reinforce
negative sentiments, better to focus on European examples that are showing
success. And in "Switch: How to Change Things When Change Is Hard" the brothers
Dan and Chip Heath offer an engaging recipe for doing just that. In their book
they describe how by identifying “Bright Spots" (small pockets of positive
exceptions) potential future success scenarios can be discovered. Next, they
encourage promoting very specific actions instead of giving broad directions.
For example: Instead of asking people to eat healthier (too vague, too hard),
they suggest healthcare activists promote a specific action such as
"buying skimmed instead of full fat milk" (simpler, easier, more
actionable, more effective).
So
in Europe, instead of pushing cloud as a concept (too vague, too hard), why not
focus on identifying a few very specific and very simple scenarios including
their specific benefits. Next Europe can concentrate on removing any (legal,
fiscal, economic, cultural) barriers to these specific scenarios and promote
these few clearly and broadly. And in doing so best to follow the Heath brothers advice to promote this both on a rational and on an
emotional level (or as the brothers put it eloquently: both "Direct the
Rider and Motivate the Elephant”).
P.S.
What potential European cloud Bright Spots would you suggest (using the comment
field on this blog)?
For
further information visit: http://cloudcomputing.sys-con.com/node/2420564
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