New ISACA Guidance Calls for BoD Involvement
Rolling Meadows, IL, USA (1 May 2013)—The many benefits of cloud computing include helping enterprises become more efficient, agile, innovative and flexibile, but achieving those benefits depends on a number of factors, including the involvement of the board of directors. ISACA, a nonprofit, independent association of more than 100,000 governance, risk, security and assurance professionals worldwide, has issued
new guidance outlining key questions for boards of directors to ask to ensure their enterprise’s cloud initiative is in line with business objectives and the organization’s risk tolerance. “Board members need a clear understanding of cloud computing benefits and how to maximize them through effective governance practices,” said Marc Vael, CISA, CISM, CGEIT, CISSP, an ISACA board member and chief IT audit executive at Smals. “This requires the board to see cloud computing not as an IT project, but rather as a business strategy.” According to ISACA’s
Cloud Governance: Questions Boards of Directors Need to Ask, boards should address the following five questions to determine the strategic value that cloud services are expected to provide and the impact that the cloud may have on resources and controls:
- Do management teams have a plan for cloud computing? Have they weighed the value and opportunity costs?
- How do current cloud plans support the enterprise’s mission?
- Have executive teams systematically evaluated organizational readiness? For example, are the right skills available? Do cloud processes conflict with other established processes? Do cloud plans conflict with enterprise culture?
- Have management teams considered what existing investments might be lost in their cloud planning? Does the adoption of a cloud service nullify already-made technology investments that have not reached their planned end date, and is that noted and approved?
- Do management teams have strategies for measuring and tracking the value of cloud return vs. risk?
“The answers to these questions will help determine the enterprise’s readiness to adopt cloud computing and also help ensure that the necessary governance is in place,” said Vael. “The COBIT 5 framework for governance and management of IT can also help enterprises manage investments such as cloud services. COBIT 5 helps ensure consistent practices to maximize value and manage risk.” ISACA’s white paper, “Cloud Governance: Questions Boards of Directors Need to Ask,” is available as a free download at
www.isaca.org/cloud-governance. The COBIT 5 framework is a free download at
www.isaca.org/cobit. ISACA’s
INSIGHTS 2013 conference, to be held 10-12 June 2013 in Berlin, Germany, will include the session: The Future of Cloud Computing. Issues including how cloud strategies have changed and who is leading innovation vs. who should be leading innovation will be addressed in this open forum. Panelists include Nick Colemna, IBM, Danielle Jacobs, INTUG and Ramses Gallego, International Vice President ISACA. The conference, held over two-and-a-half days is designed with thought-provoking sessions, interactive panels and interviews and open discussions with the audience. For more information on INSIGHTS 2013, visit
www.isaca.org/insights. More at
www.isaca.org