Welcome to the Cybersecurity Readiness Podcast Site
Sept. 28, 2022

Securely Migrating to the Cloud -- Insights from the American Cancer Society Experience

As more organizations embrace cloud-based services, securely migrating to the cloud is becoming an important capability. Keith Weller, former Vice President, Enterprise Technology Services, American Cancer Society (ACS), spearheaded a highly successful migration initiative where they transitioned a 5000-square-foot donation processing on-premise data center to the cloud. Keith and his team completed the implementation on time (in eight weeks), under budget, and helped the organization realize savings of $18 million in real estate and $2 million in technology costs (projected over three years). In this podcast, Keith shares some highlights of this cloud migration best practice.

To access and download the entire podcast summary with discussion highlights --

https://www.dchatte.com/episode-35-securely-migrating-to-the-cloud-insights-from-the-american-cancer-society-experience/

As more organizations embrace cloud-based services, securely migrating to the cloud is becoming an important capability. Keith Weller, former Vice President, Enterprise Technology Services, American Cancer Society (ACS), spearheaded a highly successful migration initiative where they transitioned a 5000-square-foot donation processing on-premise data center to the cloud. Keith and his team completed the implementation on time (in eight weeks), under budget, and helped the organization realize savings of $18 million in real estate and $2 million in technology costs (projected over three years). In this podcast, Keith shares some highlights of this cloud migration best practice.

To access and download the entire podcast summary with discussion highlights --

https://www.dchatte.com/episode-35-securely-migrating-to-the-cloud-insights-from-the-american-cancer-society-experience/

 

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Transcript

Introducer:

Welcome to the Cybersecurity Readiness Podcast

 

 


Introducer:

Series with Dr. Dave Chatterjee. Dr. Chatterjee is the author of

 

 


Introducer:

the book Cybersecurity Readiness: A Holistic and

 

 


Introducer:

High-Performance Approach, a SAGE publication. He has been

 

 


Introducer:

studying cybersecurity for over a decade, authored and edited

 

 


Introducer:

scholarly papers, delivered talks, conducted webinars and

 

 


Introducer:

workshops, consulted with companies and served on a

 

 


Introducer:

cybersecurity SWAT team with Chief Information Security

 

 


Introducer:

officers. Dr. Chatterjee is Associate Professor of

 

 


Introducer:

Management Information Systems at the Terry College of

 

 


Introducer:

Business, The University of Georgia. As a Duke University

 

 


Introducer:

Visiting Scholar Dr. Chatterjee has taught in the Master of

 

 


Introducer:

Engineering in Cybersecurity program at the Pratt School of

 

 


Introducer:

Engineering.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Hello, everyone, I'm delighted to

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

welcome you to this episode of the Cybersecurity Readiness

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Podcast Series. Our discussion today will revolve around

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

securely migrating to the cloud. Our guest speaker Keith Weller

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

is the Chief Information Security Officer at

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

International Market Centers. He has had some great experience

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

leading American Cancer Society's (his previous

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

employer), cloud migration initiatives. I've had the

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

pleasure of knowing Keith for a while, he's been a guest speaker

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

in my professional MBA class, he talked about this cloud

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

migration initiative in my class, and I felt that this was

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

a best practice that could benefit the wider professional

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

community. So I'm delighted that Keith is going to be spending

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

some time on the show today, talking about this initiative.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Keith, welcome! Before we get into the details, please share

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

some highlights of your professional journey.

 

 


Keith Weller:

Thanks, Dave. I'm really happy to be here. So

 

 


Keith Weller:

yeah, over the past 20 years, I've had experience in security

 

 


Keith Weller:

and infrastructure, primarily in the FinTech nonprofit, and now

 

 


Keith Weller:

currently real estate retail sectors. The last three years,

 

 


Keith Weller:

I've been focusing mainly on security and cloud. In previous

 

 


Keith Weller:

roles I have built out offshore BPO and an internal SOC

 

 


Keith Weller:

capability for FinTech, which was one of the Forbes fastest

 

 


Keith Weller:

growing companies list for over five years straight. I developed

 

 


Keith Weller:

infrastructure and security for a leading edge SaaS platforms

 

 


Keith Weller:

for the financial and health services customers. In my

 

 


Keith Weller:

American Cancer Society (ACS) role, I consolidated, cost

 

 


Keith Weller:

optimized, and made highly available infrastructure for a

 

 


Keith Weller:

segment at American Cancer Society, nonprofit that unified

 

 


Keith Weller:

organizationally for the first time in 100 years. With that I

 

 


Keith Weller:

saved over 20 million per year. And one of the big projects

 

 


Keith Weller:

which we're all probably talking about was migrating 5000 square

 

 


Keith Weller:

foot donation processing on-premise data center to the

 

 


Keith Weller:

cloud in eight weeks. As part of that, I help them mature the

 

 


Keith Weller:

speed of business capabilities and our security posture. And

 

 


Keith Weller:

the past year, I've been with International Market Center,

 

 


Keith Weller:

where I have greatly improved the security posture, including

 

 


Keith Weller:

security oversight for launch of a global buyer seller ecommerce

 

 


Keith Weller:

marketplace.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Fantastic. In fact, listeners might be

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

interested in hearing about some of the stats that I've gleaned

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

from the Flexera State of the Cloud report. It's the latest

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

report, the data was collected in late 2021. There were 753

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

respondents, the organizations range from ones with 100

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

employees, right up to once with 10,000 plus employees. So they

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

had a pretty broad cross section of organizations. The

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

respondents were global cloud decision makers and users. So

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

it's a very comprehensive and well done report. They publish

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

it every year, and I follow it religiously. A couple of things

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

I wanted to highlight here, just to further contextualize our

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

discussion, especially the significance of the discussion.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

First, the fact that cloud adoption continues to become

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

more mainstream, second, heavy users, that is those who are

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

running more than 25% of the workload in the cloud, are up to

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

63%, an increase from 59% in 2021. Also, another interesting

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

finding is that more than half of the respondents are planning

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

to move at least some of their sensitive data to the cloud. And

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

when it comes to cloud challenges, security continues

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

to be the number one challenge for the last 10 years. So

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

therefore, to have somebody like Keith, talk to us about cloud

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

migration, of migrating to the cloud, and how to do it securely

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

is a terrific opportunity. So Keith, coming back to you,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

provide the listeners with a context as to what led American

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Cancer Society to consider moving to the cloud.

 

 


Keith Weller:

Yeah. So before this major migration, we were

 

 


Keith Weller:

already in Azure for about three years. But it was not a

 

 


Keith Weller:

significant portion of our of our business processes, we did

 

 


Keith Weller:

migrate to Office 365, for our email moving off of Lotus Notes

 

 


Keith Weller:

previously, as well. But the big driver for this was, a lot of

 

 


Keith Weller:

this happened during the COVID 19 pandemic, American Cancer

 

 


Keith Weller:

Society is very dependent, or was at the time very dependent

 

 


Keith Weller:

on in person events. And because of that, we were looking at a

 

 


Keith Weller:

$200 million per year revenue shortfall. Wow. So across the

 

 


Keith Weller:

organization, we had to find ways to either make up that

 

 


Keith Weller:

money through additional revenue opportunities or reduce costs.

 

 


Keith Weller:

And at the time, we had an on- premise data center that was in

 

 


Keith Weller:

locally in our headquarters in downtown Atlanta. And it was

 

 


Keith Weller:

very costs not just the data center that we had, but also the

 

 


Keith Weller:

real estate that we were in was very costly. So in order to

 

 


Keith Weller:

vacate that real estate, we also had to vacate the data center.

 

 


Keith Weller:

By doing that, it would save us about 600,000 per month for

 

 


Keith Weller:

lease costs, and a data center reduction of 162k. Additionally,

 

 


Keith Weller:

we were the previous year, we did a digital transformation

 

 


Keith Weller:

where we moved a lot of our CRM and ERP to SaaS based solutions.

 

 


Keith Weller:

But didn't we wanted to make sure that we've kind of had that

 

 


Keith Weller:

that's speed of execution that cloud provided. There are a lot

 

 


Keith Weller:

of opportunities to overall increase and I feel being in the

 

 


Keith Weller:

cloud actually makes it a lot easier to govern your security

 

 


Keith Weller:

and have better visibility of your assets and, and make

 

 


Keith Weller:

quicker security improvements. So that was another big factor

 

 


Keith Weller:

of that. And it also allowed us to better enable disaster

 

 


Keith Weller:

recovery, because this was a systems that we had was for

 

 


Keith Weller:

primarily for donation processing. So we need a really

 

 


Keith Weller:

rock solid system. So it allowed us to improve our disaster

 

 


Keith Weller:

recovery and availability and things like that. So those are

 

 


Keith Weller:

kind of the big drivers for that project.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

That was quite an undertaking. And again,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

based on our discussion that we were having to plan this

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

podcast, you mentioned that you'll have to get it done in

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

about three months. Is that correct?

 

 


Keith Weller:

Yeah, that's correct. We were trying to make

 

 


Keith Weller:

quick decisions and find quick ways to reduce costs. Basically,

 

 


Keith Weller:

I got a call one day from our head of real estate wasn't

 

 


Keith Weller:

really super knowledgeable with technology and basically asked,

 

 


Keith Weller:

How can you get out of the datacenter by the end of the

 

 


Keith Weller:

month? And I said, Well, that's definitely challenging. I did

 

 


Keith Weller:

take some videos and pictures just to maybe give a conceptual

 

 


Keith Weller:

idea of what was in there, because it was 5000 square foot

 

 


Keith Weller:

data centers, there was a significant amount of work to

 

 


Keith Weller:

vacate that. But so we did have a aggressive timeline. At first,

 

 


Keith Weller:

I thought, hey, this is a good challenge. I think we can do

 

 


Keith Weller:

this. I think this could help the organization if we can do it

 

 


Keith Weller:

quickly. So I said, let me get back to you. And let's see what

 

 


Keith Weller:

we can do. The other part of that was that this was a

 

 


Keith Weller:

business critical system that was responsible for our donation

 

 


Keith Weller:

processing at a time where our revenue was down. So we cannot

 

 


Keith Weller:

afford any other kind of hiccups in our downtime. It was a PCI

 

 


Keith Weller:

DSS regulated environment. So there was a lot of security

 

 


Keith Weller:

links to that where we had to make sure where we were going

 

 


Keith Weller:

was set up very well from a security perspective and had

 

 


Keith Weller:

good security foundations. We actually before that, we didn't

 

 


Keith Weller:

have really good data and application inventory. So we had

 

 


Keith Weller:

to work on kind of rationalizing that environment. As you as if

 

 


Keith Weller:

you just move throw everything in the cloud, it can get quite

 

 


Keith Weller:

expensive. So the more we could kind of reduce that footprint,

 

 


Keith Weller:

the better. So we needed to make sure we were very clear on how

 

 


Keith Weller:

our data and our applications work. So, when we moved up

 

 


Keith Weller:

there, things would continue to flow. And the, just getting out

 

 


Keith Weller:

of that on-premise data center was probably the most complex

 

 


Keith Weller:

effort IT related effort ever undertaken. And it was the most

 

 


Keith Weller:

difficult part of actually exiting that that real estate.

 

 


Keith Weller:

So it was it was a big challenge. But I met with the

 

 


Keith Weller:

team. And I said, and I came up with three months. And I said,

 

 


Keith Weller:

why can't we do three months. And we basically talked through

 

 


Keith Weller:

all the blockers, and the options, and we determined that

 

 


Keith Weller:

if we did an all-hands-on-deck, we could accomplish that. It was

 

 


Keith Weller:

a challenge for everyone, but we we knew it was important. And we

 

 


Keith Weller:

basically stack ranked our options. And we tried to

 

 


Keith Weller:

quantify with the best approach. So that actually helped us think

 

 


Keith Weller:

through all the challenges and potential timelines. And we

 

 


Keith Weller:

actually ended up accomplishing the mission and doing it on time

 

 


Keith Weller:

and under budget.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Incredible. As you share this experience, it

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

brings back memories of a few other very successful technology

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

driven business transformations, which were done on time and

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

under budget. One commonality across these transformation best

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

practices is that they were all motivated by a critical business

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

need. In this particular case, as you mentioned, Keith, loss of

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

revenue was the primary driver. And that got everybody involved

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

and engaged. So there was an organization wide buy in. Also,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

when you say that it was an all hands on deck kind of an

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

operation. And I'm thinking about some of the details that

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

you shared with me earlier. It's very encouraging, that the team

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

comprised off not only the technology people, but also the

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

business people. So there was cross functional involvement,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

which is exactly how any kind of technology driven change must be

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

managed. And so this is so good to hear. Thanks for sharing. Is

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

there anything else that you would like to share, by way of

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

highlights when you all were planning the migration and then

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

implementing it?

 

 


Keith Weller:

Yeah. So I would definitely agree, agree that

 

 


Keith Weller:

buy-in is is key, if you're trying to do very challenging,

 

 


Keith Weller:

time constrained work, having everyone engaged and bought in

 

 


Keith Weller:

to the process. And having a clear vision and the goals

 

 


Keith Weller:

across the whole team is really important. So for sure, when

 

 


Keith Weller:

when we did this project, everyone was bought in, I was

 

 


Keith Weller:

the project sponsor, as well as the tech lead. So I was

 

 


Keith Weller:

responsible for bringing together all these cross

 

 


Keith Weller:

functional teams and included all of my all key members of IT

 

 


Keith Weller:

included security, quality assurance, the supply chain,

 

 


Keith Weller:

legal, then we had people from the business that had to do the

 

 


Keith Weller:

testing, we had to coordinate with them, we had to make sure

 

 


Keith Weller:

certain things were done during certain accounting periods of

 

 


Keith Weller:

the month, so that things wouldn't be affected. So that

 

 


Keith Weller:

was really important. Additionally, we engaged with a

 

 


Keith Weller:

migration vendor, because it was obviously a pretty big task, we

 

 


Keith Weller:

didn't want to kind of learn along the way in eight weeks, it

 

 


Keith Weller:

wouldn't work. So we engaged with them. And as a kind of a

 

 


Keith Weller:

combined partner with ACS, we had a combined team. And we just

 

 


Keith Weller:

had to keep focused, not get distracted. And so we were using

 

 


Keith Weller:

Microsoft Azure for about three years. A lot of people were

 

 


Keith Weller:

familiar with it. But there were also new people in IT that were

 

 


Keith Weller:

kind of learning and we didn't want them to be kind of like

 

 


Keith Weller:

asking a bunch of questions that weren't, like aligned with kind

 

 


Keith Weller:

of the mission, right? We wanted to just keep focused, not get

 

 


Keith Weller:

distracted. And a lot of times, there's decisions that come

 

 


Keith Weller:

along the way and you want to try and make those decisions

 

 


Keith Weller:

quick. So it doesn't sort of slow down the process. And we

 

 


Keith Weller:

try to go with as much as best practice and if there was some

 

 


Keith Weller:

discrepancy of using best practices, like why shouldn't we

 

 


Keith Weller:

use it, so it kept us a little focused, better focus that way.

 

 


Keith Weller:

And that really helped us we we tried to make sure that security

 

 


Keith Weller:

was ingrained in every step of the process. Again, it was a PCI

 

 


Keith Weller:

environment, and generally as a security professional, I want to

 

 


Keith Weller:

make sure that's a foundation of anything we do. Today. We had

 

 


Keith Weller:

our IT architects that were responsible for helping provide

 

 


Keith Weller:

the scope of work We had a hybrid environment and making

 

 


Keith Weller:

sure all the documentation was available. And just having kind

 

 


Keith Weller:

of that, again, that all-hands-on-deck mentality,

 

 


Keith Weller:

let's get this done, let's be focused, we had the help of the

 

 


Keith Weller:

project management team to keep us laser focused as well and

 

 


Keith Weller:

making sure that we're properly communicating with the business

 

 


Keith Weller:

partners. Sometimes when you're doing a project this complex,

 

 


Keith Weller:

you don't want to miss some communication, and people are

 

 


Keith Weller:

expecting something and then some some form of the business

 

 


Keith Weller:

comes, comes to a stop, especially one revenue

 

 


Keith Weller:

generation is so important. So yeah, it was it was I was

 

 


Keith Weller:

actually very proud of the whole experience just because we work

 

 


Keith Weller:

all together as a team that just get get important things done.

 

 


Keith Weller:

And it really helped from a financial standpoint.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Yeah, that's quite phenomenal. quite

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

phenomenal. Talking about the security aspect of the

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

migration, you mentioned following the NIST cybersecurity

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

framework, and complying with the PCI DSS requirements. During

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

our planning meeting, you shared some of the accomplishments

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

under the categories of identify, protect, detect,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

respond, and recover. Would you like to provide listeners with

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

certain specifics, like what they should be mindful of when

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

they have to undertake such an initiative?

 

 


Keith Weller:

Yeah, so I think the key thing here is making

 

 


Keith Weller:

sure that your asset, your application is fully documented,

 

 


Keith Weller:

your data flows are fully documented that you, you want to

 

 


Keith Weller:

make sure, especially when you're moving and we did a sort

 

 


Keith Weller:

of a lift and shift to the cloud, that you do not have,

 

 


Keith Weller:

you're not properly securing various aspects of that data

 

 


Keith Weller:

flow. So to make sure that proper foundations are in place,

 

 


Keith Weller:

when we move, move those applications and data to the

 

 


Keith Weller:

cloud, that's a key thing with and a lot of that is working

 

 


Keith Weller:

with architecture, application architecture team, working with

 

 


Keith Weller:

the security team, you know, it being a PCI DSS regulated

 

 


Keith Weller:

environment, we definitely worked very closely with our

 

 


Keith Weller:

migration partner, to make sure that we had the right blueprints

 

 


Keith Weller:

in place and the foundations in place, there's actually PCI DSS

 

 


Keith Weller:

blueprints that that we used to make sure the foundation was

 

 


Keith Weller:

right. And also make sure that all of your kind of your

 

 


Keith Weller:

security configurations are correct, in the firewall, and

 

 


Keith Weller:

the network security groups and things like that. We did do a

 

 


Keith Weller:

external pen test afterwards, just to make sure that we didn't

 

 


Keith Weller:

kind of miss some key NIST security controls. Because

 

 


Keith Weller:

again, it was it was very important to highly secure the

 

 


Keith Weller:

environment.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Yep. That makes a lot of sense. In fact,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

you mentioned about this migration vendor. I'm sure

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

listeners might be curious that how do you go about identifying

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

such a vendor? And what, what factors goes into the selection

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

process? And how valuable did you find their service?

 

 


Keith Weller:

Yeah, so, it sort of starts with the actual, I

 

 


Keith Weller:

guess from the start, we started with a concept, how quickly can

 

 


Keith Weller:

we get out of the data center. So we did explore four different

 

 


Keith Weller:

options. One was a virtual lift and shift to Azure, which was

 

 


Keith Weller:

our existing cloud partner at the time. Another was we had a

 

 


Keith Weller:

colocation facility in Austin, Texas, we were looking to

 

 


Keith Weller:

potentially migrate there. And then we were looking at a

 

 


Keith Weller:

physical and virtual lift and shift to new equipment in

 

 


Keith Weller:

Atlanta. And based on all those and kind of our quantitative

 

 


Keith Weller:

approach to comparing the options, we definitely decided

 

 


Keith Weller:

that moving to Azure was the quickest and most likely cost

 

 


Keith Weller:

conscious, the lowest risk, and a lot. And also, obviously,

 

 


Keith Weller:

being in the cloud allows you to be more quick to innovation and

 

 


Keith Weller:

things like that. So we started with that. And then since it was

 

 


Keith Weller:

a nonprofit, we had a Microsoft partner that works with

 

 


Keith Weller:

nonprofit and government and things like that. And they they

 

 


Keith Weller:

actually recommended a few migration partners, and we ended

 

 


Keith Weller:

up going with one that was very experienced with this and they

 

 


Keith Weller:

actually have they I think they actually created the the actual

 

 


Keith Weller:

migration tool that Microsoft uses for a lot of these

 

 


Keith Weller:

initiatives. So they definitely seemed like the right fit for

 

 


Keith Weller:

us. We were lucky, as a nonprofit, we were able to find

 

 


Keith Weller:

some funding to make the cost of migration, significantly less,

 

 


Keith Weller:

which obviously, that helped with the other part of the

 

 


Keith Weller:

financial discussion. So, yeah, that and they they did really

 

 


Keith Weller:

well, they were very methodical, you could tell that they've done

 

 


Keith Weller:

this many times before. And they they, like I said, they helped

 

 


Keith Weller:

keep us on track. They, they, they did these rapid pace

 

 


Keith Weller:

migrations. So it helped having that experience. They were very

 

 


Keith Weller:

technical, too. So there was really no period where we felt

 

 


Keith Weller:

like we were kind of stuck or kind of couldn't get past a

 

 


Keith Weller:

hurdle, because they've really had a lot of good answers.

 

 


Keith Weller:

Because of that experience.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

That's good to know. And this is very useful

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

information for folks who are planning such a migration. For

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

this particular migration initiative, you all decided to

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

go with Microsoft Azure. I assume that is because American

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Cancer Society was heavily invested in the Microsoft

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

platform, and it made logical sense to stay with the same

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

ecosystem to reduce application dependency related challenges.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Is that what your advice will be for organizations looking to

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

identify a suitable cloud service provider? How should

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

they go about the cloud vendor selection process?

 

 


Keith Weller:

Yeah, I think I think it depends on the

 

 


Keith Weller:

organization for for us to be honest, as a nonprofit,

 

 


Keith Weller:

Microsoft gave us very significant funding for this

 

 


Keith Weller:

project. In my view, there is some, since we already had O 365

 

 


Keith Weller:

(Office 365) as well, we were already using their identity and

 

 


Keith Weller:

access management solution. So there was sort of a tie in

 

 


Keith Weller:

there, it and again, since we already had that footprint, we

 

 


Keith Weller:

had eight weeks, obviously, Google and Amazon have great

 

 


Keith Weller:

products. But if you're trying to do this at rapid pace, it's

 

 


Keith Weller:

there's a lot less barriers, if you're using an existing vendor,

 

 


Keith Weller:

where you already have sort of that core foundation in place,

 

 


Keith Weller:

you already have that relationship in place. But I

 

 


Keith Weller:

think it's important for organizations to not be stuck on

 

 


Keith Weller:

one vendor and kind of look at it on a case by case basis, what

 

 


Keith Weller:

makes the most sense for them as a business. And again, you you

 

 


Keith Weller:

know, we did a lot of cost analysis. And for sure, in this

 

 


Keith Weller:

case, the Microsoft Azure was the was the best option. And

 

 


Keith Weller:

there was a the other thing was we already had some in house

 

 


Keith Weller:

experience with it. So that also kind of reduced some of the

 

 


Keith Weller:

barriers. So I think it really is sort of a case by case what

 

 


Keith Weller:

what fits with that specific business needs. There's a lot of

 

 


Keith Weller:

great options out there. So yeah, I would always be open to

 

 


Keith Weller:

looking at what fits best for you.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Makes sense. Makes sense. Maybe in

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

this context, I will again, share with listeners some

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

findings from the Flexera, State of the Cloud report. The top

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

four cloud migration challenges are number one, understanding

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

application dependencies, number two, assessing technological

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

feasibility, number three, assessing on-premise versus

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

cloud costs, and number four, selecting the right cloud

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

provider. And in fact, Keith kind of touched upon some of

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

these. And when he talks about going with their existing cloud

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

provider, because they've had good experiences, that hopefully

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

took away one of those challenges. Keith, what are your

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

thought of these challenges that I gleaned from the State of the

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Cloud report? Do you agree with them?

 

 


Keith Weller:

Oh, absolutely. Yeah, I mean, the application

 

 


Keith Weller:

dependency is is key to having a successful understanding that

 

 


Keith Weller:

application dependency is the key to having a successful

 

 


Keith Weller:

migration for us. It we did. So we didn't refactor anything

 

 


Keith Weller:

because of the timelines. But we did a lift and shift. So it was

 

 


Keith Weller:

basically a virtual machine, a virtual machine. So that did

 

 


Keith Weller:

help a bit. But there were scenarios when when we did that

 

 


Keith Weller:

migration up where as much as we try to document things ahead of

 

 


Keith Weller:

time, and you know how it is you can have a data center and as

 

 


Keith Weller:

around for years, and then there's certain things that

 

 


Keith Weller:

maybe something's not captured. And I think one as part of the

 

 


Keith Weller:

testing there was there was some functionality that wasn't

 

 


Keith Weller:

working. And it was just because there was some application

 

 


Keith Weller:

talking to another application, and it wasn't documented. And we

 

 


Keith Weller:

didn't have the right firewall rules allow that communication.

 

 


Keith Weller:

So I would say, overall, it's just obviously good practice to

 

 


Keith Weller:

have that document in real time and keep that for just general

 

 


Keith Weller:

good practice. The other things were, you know, like I said, I

 

 


Keith Weller:

already talked about the decision on the on the cloud

 

 


Keith Weller:

vendor. Sorry, what were the other over two?

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Sure, sure. The first one was understanding

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

application dependencies. The second one was assessing tech

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

feasibility. The third one was assessing on-premise versus

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

cloud costs.

 

 


Keith Weller:

Yeah, so So we, again, we already kind of had

 

 


Keith Weller:

experience with Azure, we knew a lot of the capabilities that

 

 


Keith Weller:

were there, we weren't necessarily taken advantage of

 

 


Keith Weller:

all them. But we did, like the future capabilities that we

 

 


Keith Weller:

could add. Like I said, we did do a sort of lift and shift. But

 

 


Keith Weller:

the as the next phase was kind of a refactoring and simplifying

 

 


Keith Weller:

and lowering the cost of our presence. One thing about the

 

 


Keith Weller:

kind of comparison of costs, is, a lot of times sometimes people

 

 


Keith Weller:

throw in the soft costs. And it's not a direct factor from a

 

 


Keith Weller:

financial perspective. But it is important to be very clear on

 

 


Keith Weller:

what your costs are. I mean, it took us about just maybe three

 

 


Keith Weller:

weeks just to firm up that kind of cost comparison and making

 

 


Keith Weller:

sure we itemize each one. it In our case, it was a little

 

 


Keith Weller:

easier, because we knew we were just eliminating that data

 

 


Keith Weller:

center, we were moving out of the facility. So we were able to

 

 


Keith Weller:

like save on internet costs and various things like that. So it

 

 


Keith Weller:

did make a lot easier. It can get quite expensive to be in the

 

 


Keith Weller:

cloud, if you don't manage it well, right. So if you're not

 

 


Keith Weller:

have good visibility on your costs, you're not using things

 

 


Keith Weller:

like micro services or partial compute you over over allocate

 

 


Keith Weller:

compute and things like that. It can be quite costly versus

 

 


Keith Weller:

on-prem. But I think if you have good visibility into those cost

 

 


Keith Weller:

factors it and in my experience, it's it's generally cheaper.

 

 


Keith Weller:

From a security perspective, it's it's easier to manage and

 

 


Keith Weller:

cheaper, because you kind of have a visibility of all your

 

 


Keith Weller:

assets, where sometimes in the on prem world, you can kind of

 

 


Keith Weller:

get the sprawl of systems. And it's just kind of hard to track

 

 


Keith Weller:

it all and make sure you don't have that security technical

 

 


Keith Weller:

debt. That happens a lot. So it definitely saved a lot of time

 

 


Keith Weller:

from engineers support perspective, which I think over

 

 


Keith Weller:

time allowed ACS to not have as much staff dedicated to the kind

 

 


Keith Weller:

of caring care and feeding of systems. And it allowed them to

 

 


Keith Weller:

do kind of more transformative work and help to grow the

 

 


Keith Weller:

business and things like that.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Awesome. In fact, I wanted to re emphasize

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

what you just shared, shared, or you highlighted the importance

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

of managing the cloud. When I talk about cloud in the

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

classroom, I associate cloud as a reflection of the technology

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

outsourcing phenomenon. And when you outsource something, though,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

cost is often the driver. But in my humble opinion, you outsource

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

something to a service provider, because they are better at it

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

than your organization is or wants to be because your

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

organization has a mission, that the reason they were formed, and

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

that's what they need to focus on. So if somebody else can

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

better manage the tech, let them do it. But having said that,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

it's also important to recognize that you still have to provide

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

oversight. It's not like out of sight out of mind. You still

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

have to stay on top of security, top of Cloud spend. And this is

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

where Keith I wanted your thoughts. When I look at these

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

breaches happening, like the Capital One, data was breached,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

they were residing on the Amazon web server. Obviously Capital

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

One is still responsible for their data. Amazon is providing

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

them the server providing them with the details on how to

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

secure it, but I am of the opinion that maybe the SLAs

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

should be written up in a manner and a fashion, whereby there

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

should be more joint responsibility and joint

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

accountability whereby the host, the service provider, and the

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

client work as a team to ensure the data is safe, secure, and

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

there's a constant review to make sure the security level and

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

posture is being maintained. What are your thoughts?

 

 


Keith Weller:

Yeah, I mean, that would be fantastic. I mean, as

 

 


Keith Weller:

it as it is, now, the core responsibility of securing your

 

 


Keith Weller:

data is on the actual owner of the data. So I guess, I guess

 

 


Keith Weller:

the one, so you said a good few good things. And I'll get back

 

 


Keith Weller:

to the like, the one good thing is, as a business, you want to

 

 


Keith Weller:

focus on your core things that you're good at. ACS, they're not

 

 


Keith Weller:

a IT company, there, so spending a lot of time patching servers

 

 


Keith Weller:

and, and various care and feeding of data centers was not

 

 


Keith Weller:

where we wanted to be. But it would be nice if the three big

 

 


Keith Weller:

cloud providers were more engaged in kind of as a team,

 

 


Keith Weller:

securing data and helping make sure that they partner with

 

 


Keith Weller:

their customers to make sure that's being done, right. They

 

 


Keith Weller:

do provide a lot of great tools for I've been using the SIEM

 

 


Keith Weller:

(Security Information and Event Management) on Microsoft Azure,

 

 


Keith Weller:

it's a great tool, but of course, it's very dependent on

 

 


Keith Weller:

configuring it right, and making sure you have the right logs

 

 


Keith Weller:

that you're ingesting, and then you have the right rules and

 

 


Keith Weller:

playbooks and things like that. So it's in there, again, that's

 

 


Keith Weller:

a lot of dependency on the customer to either do that

 

 


Keith Weller:

themselves or work with a partner to help with that. Say,

 

 


Keith Weller:

I think that would be fantastic. If the cloud providers were a

 

 


Keith Weller:

little more engaged in that, I would be totally for that.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Good to hear that. Good to hear that. So

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

we are kind of coming to the close of our discussion. So I

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

wanted to check off a few things. You may have mentioned

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

this Keith, but I wanted to maybe highlight it again. One of

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

the success factors of this initiative that we're talking

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

about, was also the very meticulous phased migration

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

effort. You describe the details in your slide deck, Keith. And

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

I'm going to read off some of the the phases, the first phase

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

involved Assessing Azure, the second phase was Assessment of

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Readiness, the third phase, entailed creating a landing

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

zone, and the final phase involved the actual migration,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

migration, plus having a good disaster recovery in place.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Would you like to and I know there's a lot of detail, we may

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

not have time for all the details, anything in particular

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

that you want to touch upon, in the context of the phased

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

migration effort?

 

 


Keith Weller:

Yeah, I mean, for me, just generally, in

 

 


Keith Weller:

technology, having the right foundations in place, sets you

 

 


Keith Weller:

up for success later on. Right. So part of part of that is the

 

 


Keith Weller:

actual assessment of your environment, and what the

 

 


Keith Weller:

architecture will be, and making sure that you have the right

 

 


Keith Weller:

standards and controls in place initially, because if you try to

 

 


Keith Weller:

do that later, then it becomes a more challenging effort. What's

 

 


Keith Weller:

nice about these all-hands-on-deck type efforts

 

 


Keith Weller:

is you get everyone engaged upfront, to make sure that

 

 


Keith Weller:

they're all aligned with that kind of foundation. And

 

 


Keith Weller:

sometimes if you do that a year or two later, it's already

 

 


Keith Weller:

sprawled, you already have the parts of your data that you

 

 


Keith Weller:

don't have visibility into and various, you don't have certain

 

 


Keith Weller:

policies applied to certain things. So again, I think, since

 

 


Keith Weller:

we had experience in Azure, but we weren't like experts in it,

 

 


Keith Weller:

that's why it was it was good to have that partner to help make

 

 


Keith Weller:

sure that's in place. And then as part of the kind of the

 

 


Keith Weller:

readiness is making sure that the team from your company is

 

 


Keith Weller:

able to support it. So and it's important for them to kind of

 

 


Keith Weller:

have a good understanding upfront. So as we're going

 

 


Keith Weller:

through the project, it moves quick, more quickly with

 

 


Keith Weller:

informed people. And then so we did have a lot of we had

 

 


Keith Weller:

significant training that was done from just first with Azure

 

 


Keith Weller:

101. And then Azure governance and Azure security because we

 

 


Keith Weller:

wanted to make sure we put those foundations in place, but we

 

 


Keith Weller:

wanted to make sure we kept with them We kept, kept governance

 

 


Keith Weller:

and kept that security mindset. And the understanding that we

 

 


Keith Weller:

again, we are responsible for the security of our data,

 

 


Keith Weller:

Microsoft kind of like and the other cloud providers kind of

 

 


Keith Weller:

like, let you go with that, it's up to you to, to manage that. So

 

 


Keith Weller:

it was important for everybody in the team. And it's not just

 

 


Keith Weller:

infrastructure people, it's not just security people, but it's

 

 


Keith Weller:

also important for Development and QA to understand those those

 

 


Keith Weller:

kind of core principles of security. So all those people

 

 


Keith Weller:

were engaged, to make sure that it was it was built into sort of

 

 


Keith Weller:

our DNA, I guess. And then having having a well defined

 

 


Keith Weller:

landing zone was important too, because if you don't have your

 

 


Keith Weller:

resources, some of its just tagging and naming and stuff

 

 


Keith Weller:

like that, if you don't name those, or tag them, and you kind

 

 


Keith Weller:

of just put them all over the place, it actually makes it

 

 


Keith Weller:

harder to manage the costs and things because you're not really

 

 


Keith Weller:

clear what, what what this resource is for. And it just

 

 


Keith Weller:

makes it harder for you to manage that. And then the

 

 


Keith Weller:

landing zone had kind of the kind of lockdown networking IAM

 

 


Keith Weller:

(Identity and Access Management) structures and Role Based Access

 

 


Keith Weller:

Controls and the Azure blueprints and things like that.

 

 


Keith Weller:

A lot of people just think about the migration phase, but those

 

 


Keith Weller:

those first three phases, I think, are core for long term

 

 


Keith Weller:

success. And then there's the migration phase, which in our

 

 


Keith Weller:

case, also included giving DR (Disaster Recovery) fully

 

 


Keith Weller:

functioning DR, which becomes much easier to enable when

 

 


Keith Weller:

you're in the cloud. And there's a lot of CISOs that try to do

 

 


Keith Weller:

implement DR on- prem, and sometimes it just drags out, and

 

 


Keith Weller:

it's just like knowing the environment and things like

 

 


Keith Weller:

that, especially as part of the migration, it actually sets us

 

 


Keith Weller:

up for DR. Because the migration configuration was associated to

 

 


Keith Weller:

the DR failover. So it helped a lot with that. And if you're

 

 


Keith Weller:

doing yourself or if you're doing it with a partner, again,

 

 


Keith Weller:

it's the migration, it's very important to kind of have steps

 

 


Keith Weller:

planned out, well, you're on the same page with things you're,

 

 


Keith Weller:

you're engaged with the business because there will be some

 

 


Keith Weller:

downtime, you're engaged with them as well to make sure that

 

 


Keith Weller:

the testing is done. And in our case, we wanted to make sure we

 

 


Keith Weller:

had enough testing during the migration because we were

 

 


Keith Weller:

shutting down the servers at the end of it. And if we miss

 

 


Keith Weller:

something, there's kind of no going back. So the testing was

 

 


Keith Weller:

pretty important for us too. So yeah, I mean, it was it was a

 

 


Keith Weller:

great project. And I was very happy that we were able to kind

 

 


Keith Weller:

of work together and kind of use that phased approach, methodical

 

 


Keith Weller:

phased approach because it allowed us to stay focused.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Yeah, absolutely. In fact that as

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

you're talking about testing, I'm looking at the timeline,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

where you mentioned about doing testing, right from week two,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

right till the very end, right, right, right till week eight. So

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

constant testing is a huge best practice, I would say. And once

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

again, we don't have enough time to go into all the security best

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

practice details, that you all were able to accomplish. But

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

basically complying with the NIST framework framework,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

complying with the PCI DSS framework, those are all great

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

accomplishments, and at a higher level bottom line, as you said

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

earlier, you all were able to complete the implementation in

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

eight weeks on time, under budget, and help the

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

organization realize a savings of $18 million in real estate

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

and $2 million in technology costs projected over three

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

years. That's phenomenonal. Working for an organization

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

organization like American cancer society that does so much

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

good. Much needed. I think it's it's indeed a noble cause. And I

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

want to recognize you and your team for doing such great work,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

which indirectly has helped the global population. Because you

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

want an organization like ACS American Cancer Society to

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

survive and thrive. And these initiatives are essential to

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

allow the organizational engine to be running and be running

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

efficiently and effectively for the long run. So Keith, I'd like

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

to give you the final opportunity to say a few final

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

words with before we close our discussion for today.

 

 


Keith Weller:

Yeah, thank you again, for allowing me to share

 

 


Keith Weller:

the journey on this podcast. Yeah, I mean, just just with the

 

 


Keith Weller:

American Cancer Society, every dollar that's spent on

 

 


Keith Weller:

operational costs is a dollar taken away from cancer research

 

 


Keith Weller:

or services, So, whenever you can do something like this and

 

 


Keith Weller:

help help the organization survive, it's rewarding and it

 

 


Keith Weller:

just It just helps with the overall goal of eliminating

 

 


Keith Weller:

cancer as a disease worldwide. So, yeah, I mean, I'll just, I

 

 


Keith Weller:

guess close with a few things. Again, just any, any rapid pace

 

 


Keith Weller:

projects, including cloud migration requires kind of that

 

 


Keith Weller:

all-hands-on-deck cross functional teams working

 

 


Keith Weller:

together, clearly defined roles and what's success. And when

 

 


Keith Weller:

that happens, like, really hard things can get done, like things

 

 


Keith Weller:

that you don't think. And just sort of reiterating, knowing

 

 


Keith Weller:

your application dependencies is really important. And the data

 

 


Keith Weller:

flows helps minimize downtime when you're doing this

 

 


Keith Weller:

migration, and even performance issues. Another thing that I

 

 


Keith Weller:

want just to close out that with this, this rapid paced

 

 


Keith Weller:

migration, sometimes you don't want to over test, right? So you

 

 


Keith Weller:

want to make sure you test the core functionalities and data

 

 


Keith Weller:

flows first. And then if you can worry about some of the smaller

 

 


Keith Weller:

or less important test cases later. That's one thing that we

 

 


Keith Weller:

kind of learned in this project that we're trying to, like, be

 

 


Keith Weller:

so thorough in our testing, that we start to fall behind in our

 

 


Keith Weller:

schedule. So what we did was we refocused and we focused on

 

 


Keith Weller:

those core tests. And then we did the other testing later once

 

 


Keith Weller:

the actual workloads were uploaded. So that was probably

 

 


Keith Weller:

one of the biggest takeaways that I got from that. And then

 

 


Keith Weller:

lastly, just from a security perspective, if you can't really

 

 


Keith Weller:

protect your, your environment, if you don't have good

 

 


Keith Weller:

visibility of it. So one of the one of the big things that was

 

 


Keith Weller:

helpful from a security perspective was adding a SIEM

 

 


Keith Weller:

tool, I would just say, well, and one thing I learned from

 

 


Keith Weller:

this is it can get very complex to set this up and make sure the

 

 


Keith Weller:

use cases and the playbooks are set up. So if if you are a small

 

 


Keith Weller:

security shop or a small IT shop and maybe consider utilizing a

 

 


Keith Weller:

partner for that, so yeah, but hopefully, hopefully that was

 

 


Keith Weller:

helpful in sharing some of my experiences. And it was it was

 

 


Keith Weller:

really enjoyable to talk about it.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

It was extremely helpful. I'm sure the

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

listeners will find great value in all your recommendations and

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

sharing your experiences with this cloud migration. Much

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

needed discussion. So thank you again, Keith, for your time, and

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

I look forward to future discussions with you. For sure.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Thank you, Dave. A special thanks to Keith Weller for his

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

time and insights. If you like what you heard, please leave the

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

podcast a rating and share it with your network. Also,

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

subscribe to the show, so you don't miss any new episodes.

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

Thank you for listening, and I'll see you in the next

 

 


Dr. Dave Chatterjee:

episode.

 

 


Introducer:

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