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2010: The Year for Governance Beyond IT

  
  
  
  
  

Like everybody else at this time of the year, we look backwith the hope that perhaps we've learned something in the past 12 months.  And if you're like me, we're alsolooking forward in anticipation to a new decade.

 The past year was certainly an interesting one and we havehopefully gotten through the worst of one of the worst recessions I canrecall.  We were also witness tosome major industry shifts including Oracle's purchase of Sun,Microsoft's launch of Windows 7 and Twitter's ability to bea viable source for breaking news.

When I first started blogging last February, the talk around the water cooler was whether or not SOA was dead and when the economy would fullyrecover.  The more things changethe more they stay the same.

As I thought about some New Year's resolutions, I started tothink about how we could all use a little more governance across theboard.  Not just for ourinformation technology infrastructures but across all other aspects of ourindustry such as media, the blogosphere, the analyst community, and our overallapproach to mitigating all the potential risks in our business. 

So here are three resolutions I've decided to adopt.  All are relatively easy and are probablynot too far from what you're already thinking about as next year approaches. In 2010 I resolve to do the following:

1.    In a recent conversation with industry analyst Dana Gardner from Interarbor Solutions, he aptlypointed out that you really can't successfully engage in cloud computing unlessyou have a sound SOA infrastructure so the notion that SOA is dead, is, well,dead.

2.    Tocarefully evaluate every trend that seems to catch fire in the blogosphere andassess it on its own merits with regard to industry relevance and what actuallyconstitutes news.  It's far tooeasy to read headlines without the actual story or take so-called news items atface value simply because they appear online.  It seems to me that the blogosphere could use a set ofgovernance policies to better mitigate the risks of inconclusive reporting.

3.    Along those lines, I resolve to also pay closer attention to critical issues andtrends that will have far reaching effects on our IT infrastructures.  Infoworldactually did a great round up on "The Top Underreported Tech Stories of 2009" citing the issues around the wireless spectrum and broadband availability as well as the dark side of cloud computing and its legal ramifications along with eight other under reported stories that will most certainly be part of our conversations in 2010.

Ah, three simple resolutions and none of themrequire that I restrict calories. If you have some resolutions to share, drop me a line at:jeff@weblayers.com        


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