“A stunning 95 percent of European companies in our recent survey say they’re capturing value from cloud, and more than one in three say they intend to have more than half of their workloads on cloud,” say McKinsey consultants Bernardo Betley, associate partner; Hana Dib, associate partner; Bjørnar Jensen, senior partner and Bernhard Mühlreiter, partner. That’s the good news.
The bad news? “The vast majority of the value companies have captured, for example, remains in isolated pockets and at subscale,” the consultants also say.
Some of that might be caused by the way European companies (the subjects of the study) have implemented cloud computing.
“The focus of their cloud efforts, for example, has been disproportionately on improvements to IT, which generate lower rates of value than improvements to business operations,” McKinsey says.
Somewhat oddly, “most companies (71 percent) measure it (benefits) in IT operational improvements, 66 percent in IT cost savings, and 63 percent in number of applications on cloud,” McKinsey says. “Only about one in three European companies, however, monitors non-IT outcomes, such as cost savings outside IT (37 percent) or new revenue generation (32 percent).”
That might seem odd for many observers, since those outcomes (cost savings or revenue enhancement) might seem the obvious way to measure outcomes. “Our research and experience are clear that about two-thirds of the potential value of cloud comes from revenue uplift and cost savings in business operations,” McKinsey says.
“Compared to U.S. companies, about five times more European companies are still pursuing an IT-led cloud migration, with significant emphasis on lifting and shifting existing workloads,” the consultants say.
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