Monthly Archives: December 2011

Cloud Computing Technologies Can Drive Economic Growth

Cloud computing pioneer and The Art of Service CEO Ivanka Menken

The cloud levels the playing field, giving smaller businesses the computing power of their larger counterparts, but at a fraction of the cost.

San Jose, California (PRWEB) October 06, 2011

Cloud computing may hold the key to economic recovery by fostering the growth of small businesses, according to cloud computing pioneer Ivanka Menken.

Menken, CEO of The Art of Service, said that while the government works to create viable job creation and economic growth, the rapid deployment of cloud technologies may serve as a driver for economic development.

In addition to her own research, Menken cites other recent studies. According to the Software and Information Industry Association, a study conducted in Europe by Federico Etro, a member of the Department of Economics, University of Venice Ca’ Foscari,, found that the rapid dispersal of cloud computing platforms may lead to as many as 400,000 new small and medium sized businesses forming within five years.

Another study, conducted by London’s Centre for Economic and Business Research, looked at the impact the cloud could have on the business environment in five European countries – France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom. The estimated impact by 2015 is the creation of more than 2 million jobs with an economic impact of more than 177 billion Euros (U.S. $241 billion).

“The cloud empowers small and medium-sized businesses by controlling IT costs and offering flexibility in computer infrastructure, software, and services that might otherwise be financially out of reach,” said Ivanka Menken, founder and CEO of The Art of Service, the leading education service provider for IT professionals.

She said cloud computing also allows small businesses to scale as needed, deploy projects more quickly, and reduce the need, and expense, of maintenance.

“The cloud levels the playing field, giving smaller businesses the computing power of their larger counterparts, but at a fraction of the cost,” said Menken. “This allows smaller companies to do what they do best, which is focus on being innovative and serving their customers.”

Just as in Europe, these cost factors can drive a growth in the creation of small and mid-sized businesses in the United States, just as they are doing in Europe. The “business backbone” of the United States is small business, so cloud computing can provide a powerful impetus for strengthening the economy, noted Menken.

Menken said companies seeking to reap the benefits of cloud computing will need trained and educated IT professionals who know how to navigate and successfully deploy cloud platforms. This is the reason The Art of Service developed the Cloud Computing Foundation Program, which has become the leading certification for IT professionals seeking to be successful with managing cloud computing services.

The Art of Service has a comprehensive offering of education solutions geared toward the busy IT professional. AOS instructors are experienced in classroom-style delivery, boardroom-style executive coaching, on-the-job training and online virtual support for remote students.

About The Art of Service
As a cutting-edge IT service framework company, The Art of Service is leading the way in providing high end, client-focused books, toolkits and online and classroom education programs. The company is one of the most trusted sources globally for the career-driven IT professional. For more information, visit www.theartofservice.net.

About the Founder
Ivanka Menken is the founder and CEO of The Art of Service. Menken has spearheaded the company’s Cloud Computing Certification Scheme that is becoming the industry benchmark.

Regain control over your career, with the help of Cloud Computing training

Regain control over your career, with the help of a Cloud Computing Foundation training program

Not only can you regain control over your career (with the help of cloud computing foundation training), but you can also secure and ensure it.  For those already working in the technological sector, ‘change’ should come as no surprise.  It happens nearly every day in at least some small way (be it through the design or development of new software or hardware component(s); or the establishment of new principles or methodologies).  The point is, new developments take place constantly, and this is also good thing, because development(s) means progress, which is usually translated into profit at some point (I’m sure you get the picture).

So, if you’re employed in the tech sector (IT, for example), you absolutely must have a system or mechanism for keeping yourself up-to-date with developments, literature, and information.  This isn’t really something that’s up for debate; if you don’t stay on the cutting edge you might become hopelessly outdated.  Which brings us to our next point, cloud computing.  It’s growing in popularity and general use every single day, and many experts predict that it will eventually integrate with conventional systems, perhaps even overtake them entirely in the long run.  There is much disagreement when such a thing might occur, but it could be feasibly triggered at any moment.  The real question is, what are all the individuals trained and educated solely in grid computing, networking and IT going to do when cloud computing comes knocking?

The true purpose of the cloud computing foundation training program is to thoroughly familiarize its participants with virtually all aspects of cloud computing, inside and out.  This of course means the components, infrastructure(s), processes, philosophy and potential utilization scenarios for cloud computing systems (all or in part).  When cloud computing becomes more widely implemented, the person armed with this knowledge (from the program) will be in a great position career-wise.  Wouldn’t you agree?

TOGAF Metamodel: A Key to a Good Start

Planning, scheming, execution, and governance in the field enterprise have never been an easy endeavor specifically when entrepreneurs deal with Information Architecture. AI makes complex systems as comprehensive as possible since it uses a metamodel initiated by the support of The Open Group Architecture Framework or TOGAF. The TOGAF Metamodel offers key business processes in business architecture, data architecture, applications architecture, and technology architecture. The framework components of TOGAF metamodel which include designing architecture, evaluating architecture, and building architecture has one major objective and that is to achieve the right architecture for the enterprise.

For a brief overview of TOGAF metamodel that includes design, evaluate, and built each will be defined respectively. The design component aims to answer the question, “What to design?” and the answer would be based on the baseline and target of each architecture domain of the business. Moreover, under this framework another question would be asked and that is “how to design?” using different resources available. On the other hand, the evaluate component deals with doing the review of different models to obtain significant details that would be helpful to the whole metamodel. And finally for the building component, a step-by-step method of eventually developing, implementing, and governing the architecture enterprise is formulated so that the end goal which is achieving right architecture of your business will be attained.

For the conclusion, one should be aware of the fact that: an effectively conceptualized TOGAF metamodel should have the five foundations which are necessary to make the metamodel feasible. These are the business architecture metamodel, information system architecture metamodel, technology architecture metamodel, requirements management metamodel, and consolidated reference metamodel.

ITIL 2011 Exams Explained

Ivanka Menken says: “I’ve been getting a lot of questions on the ITIL exams. store.theartofservice.com is a great online store with information about ITIL training and ITIL certification.

But what about the exams?”

  • How do the ITIL exams work?
  • Where can you sit the ITIL exams?
  • How many exams do you need to do?

All these questions are answered in this Free instant accessible and downloadable slideshow presented to you by The Art of Service.

For more information, please contact The Art of Service or check out our website: theartofservice.com

 


ITIL 2011 Exams explained

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