Technology & Innovation

Growth in the Cloud: The Corporation as Incubator

April 17, 2017

Global

April 17, 2017

Global
Our Editors

The Economist Intelligence Unit

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Companies are no longer wondering if cloud will aid expansion, instead the question is are they leveraging its full potential

In February 2014, Flickr cofounder Stewart Butterfield and his team officially launched Slack, a platform providing chat and social media services for enterprises. Within a year, the company’s user based zoomed from 16,000 to 500,000. Slack now boasts more than 4 million daily active users and has a valuation north of $1 billion.

Today, established corporations are well aware that cloud computing can help unicorns like Slack scale quickly. Now enterprises themselves are wondering if they can mimic such growth by implementing side projects, innovation labs or corporate mandates that require workers to spend a percentage of their time pursuing offbeat ideas.

As many companies continue to eye innovation as the key accelerant for growth, more enterprises are realizing that is just one avenue to cloud-based expansion. The lower costs and open-ended nature of the cloud provide several paths to increasing business, including opportunities to reach new customers or to develop new business models. The cloud also boosts efficiency and productivity‑- global teams can access data anywhere at anytime—and are able to collaborate more easily. The more pertinent question for companies today isn’t how they can grow via cloud computing, it’s whether they are fully leveraging all the opportunities.  

Success in a data-driven world

The cloud super-charges a company’s opportunities by throwing a new element into the mix: Access to seemingly infinite data and number-crunching ability. You are tapping into a very large collection of resources that is bigger than your company could want to assemble for itself and then use just the part you need. You can start small and grow using other people’s infrastructure that has been mapped out for you.

That advantage is expanding exponentially because cloud providers continue to add capacity and scale. Cisco estimates that by 2020 data center storage installed capacity will hit 1.8 zettabytes, up from 382 exabytes in 2015, a fivefold growth.

Beyond the raw numbers, the cloud allows exposure to expertise that was previously out of reach. The cloud era is what it is because of the ability to tap into such a specialized capability has now come to a maturity level in which individuals to small and large businesses can access it.  What professional IT specialists are capable of providing is now the basic standard for what everyone can expect and there’s just no way to do it cheaper on one’s own. Thus business growth can be unconstrained by rising costs and complexity in IT. In the best cases, those cost savings are readily allocated to efforts that directly grow the business itself, rather than just its IT budget.

APIs are another building block for new products and services. In an oft-cited example, Uber was made possible by Google Maps, which provided visibility into where all the drivers and consumers were within a given area. Thus, the Google Maps API inspired a new concept. Integrated maps is probably one of the most essential features in the Uber app and hence, Uber tried to use the best possible platform for the same. Uber later moved to MapBox, but it was inspired by and started with the widely available Google Maps API.

Cloud-based growth doesn’t have to depend on a company creating the next Uber. The technology can create deeper relationships with existing customers. For instance, a retailer might develop an app that lets customers create a smart shopping list. Years ago, creating such an interface would have been an IT-led project that required separate funding. With the cloud, a company can let a few developers focus on the project, create an invitation-only version of the app and then bring in members of their user community to try it out. After working through the testing phase, the retailer will be able to scale up quickly if the app takes off. Demand could increase exponentially over the next several weeks, but your cloud infrastructure can handle that. That’s what it was designed for.

Cesare Mainardi, adjunct professor of strategy at the Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University says using innovation centers as launch pad for ideas isn’t usually the best approach to growth, especially when the ideas are only peripherally related to a company’s corporate mission (Google’s autonomous cars, for instance). Businesses that grow the fastest are the ones that establish and build on their existing niches. “Companies tend to let a thousand flowers bloom and they’re left with fields of weeds,” he says. For cloud-based growth projects to work, Mainardi says they should tie in to the elements that allow them to add value.

Businesses that aren’t built around technology often need to reassign roles. In particular, the IT department often needs to adopt more of a business mindset than in the past, while traditional business roles need to become more tech-focused.

That’s often where the challenges lie. Employees might become adept at a particular technical skill—like keeping an application running—and then realize they need to develop a new skill set to have a larger impact on the overall business. “It’s that notion of the self-image that’s embedded in every individual, but also in the organization fabric that is the biggest barrier to growth,” Mainardi says. “It takes leaders who know how to encourage change to be able to tackle it.” 

Adopting a cloud culture

Startups are often envied for their nimbleness. But companies that have been around for a decade or more have already adapted to changes in technology and consumer expectations. Even though a legacy company is going to be a bigger ship to turn, they at least often have a way to do that built into the culture - even if it takes a little longer.

Established companies have also dealt with the organizational calcification that can stop startups in their tracks once they try to scale to the next level. That’s part of the reason that startups end up selling to the big companies at a certain stage.  In a way they’re getting into that organizational capability that they might not have been able to generate on their own.

At the very least, thinking like a startup can prompt an established company to get more of an edge. If you spend enough time watching for disruptions, you might become a bit of a disruptor yourself.

 to learn more about how companies are making use of hybrid cloud to enable growth.

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