The strategy behind the cloud move was largely based on increasing demands to be able to identify and consume new technology more quickly. It simply wasnât sustainable to work with lead times of six and 12 months, as the IT department did for a long time. Speed became paramount in terms of getting access to new technology, generating revenue, and implementing infrastructure. Pre-work required In parallel with the entire sourcing process, other work was done to prepare the way for cloud, centering around risk, and robust information management and regulatory compliance. âWhat you have to do is go much deeper into your information management and classification,â says Hultin. The entire process was also continuously monitored by a review team looking at the commercial and legal aspects, and a new operating model was required. âWe introduced agile working methods and agile production, so it was in place when we started working with our service providers,â says Sporre. âIt was part of the cultural journey that laid the foundation. If itâs not done, the organization isnât ready for new ways of working, policies, and processes.â Ambitious targets An 80% goal was also set as to how much of the central applications would go in the cloud. âWe set this goal so everyone would have the right mindset, and that weâd challenge established processes and culture,â says Sporre. The target was set high but it was deemed within reach. âWe knew quite well what the potential looked like,â he adds. âWe verified the assumption about how much we could move by testing 10 suppliers, where we tested the technical feasibility of moving to the cloud, and how much the business was able to move and manage. Then we saw that 80% was realistic.â Above and beyond Two years after the initial move, over 90% of all applications are now in the public cloud. Around 30% of all applications are new and approximately 20% have been discontinued. âThe 10% that remains on prem is because of legal requirements or technical debt,â says Sporre. Using all three major cloud providersâMicrosoft, AWS and Googleâthe IT department at Ericsson consumes approximately half, and the other half outside the business, and an important issue has been to manage costs when itâs so easy to get access to capacity and tools. The financial processes in particular are among the most difficult to implement and have required a major cultural change. âIn the past, the responsibility for cost control lay with the infrastructure teams and now it lies with operations, and it requires a lot of management,â says Hultin. âThere are also measures such as limiting budgets that can be used.â Migrating the business system A large part of the migration has been about getting the business system from SAP to the cloudâa journey that took approximately six months. âOur SAP environment is one of the largest and most complex in the world, so it was a huge move,â says Sporre. In order to succeed, the planning was done in close collaboration with all partners. âWorking proactively with specialists has been a success factor,â says Hultin. âAnd we knew that SAP works well in the AWS cloud.â The core system itself was moved over a single weekend, with upward of 300 people working in shifts, and the rigorous planning worked. âThe following Tuesday, someone from finance said, âWhen you move next weekend, I want you to call every hour so I know if thereâll be any problems,â and we had to explain that the move had already been made,â says Sporre. The importance of speed Hultin believes that migrating as quickly as Ericsson did is a model of success. âWe havenât allowed any amount of tinkering with alternative infrastructure strategies,â he says. âEverything can be done much faster than you think. We set up a tough schedule and worked rather forcefully, but when you get over 50% in the cloud, you get a change in the entire IT organization. I think if you drag it out it becomes a more painful process.â Hultin also thinks itâs not enough to look only at costs. âThere was an element of cutting costs when we started, but we looked more at the whole,â he says, adding that the business in the cloud is much more cohesive now, with IT and the business in sync in a new way. Something that specifically saves costs is getting access to infrastructure and tools. âWhen new technology comes along, such as AI, we can use it immediately,â says Hultin. âWe can leverage our cloud providers' investments of many billions instead of developing for a few million ourselves. It's hard to compete there.â |