Thursday, July 8, 2010

Hybrid Cloud: The Preferred Approach

I've been a big believer for awhile now that 'Hybrid cloud' was where the industry needs to be going.  It's the big idea that truly allows companies and their IT organizations to seamlessly knit together their internal resources with those of their technology vendors.  And I'm a little biased these days working for a networking company, where it has been painfully obvious for some time that the Network is the key to unlocking a lot of latent demand in external cloud computing... with concerns over data Security, Availability and Performance as the biggest barriers to adopting externally-based Cloud services.

But aren't these insurmountable barriers, only leaving companies able to do 'Private Clouds'?  Well what is a Private cloud?  Some would say it doesn't exist - it's just a new label for what a lot of companies have been trying to accomplish within their data centers for some time now, with key capabilities being Server Virtualization, Automation, Self-service provisioning, and Chargeback for usage-based cost allocation.  Gartner called this Real Time Infrastructure. Others termed it Data Center Automation.  Others Utility Computing

The reality is that Hybrid cloud computing is already the preferred approach for organizations as seen in this chart from The Info Pro.  Almost 60% of companies expect to be using Both external cloud services as well as developing internal cloud capabilities.


Hybrid computing is getting top vendor support from the likes of Intel, Microsoft and others.  So we can expect to see the ability to connect across data centers -- safely, efficiently and in a manageable way -- becoming an embedded capability within the component resources that we purchase in the future.

The move to Cloud computing is happening today and the only question is at what rate. A recent Brocade study showed that 60 percent of enterprises expect to have started the planning and migration to a cloud computing model within the next two years, with key business drivers being to reduce cost (30 percent), improve business efficiency (21 percent) and enhance business agility (16 percent).  Other interesting Cloud findings included:
  • More than a quarter of large organizations are planning to migrate a cloud model within the next two years; 11 percent within one year
  • A quarter of organizations stated that the ability to consolidate the number of data centers was also a critical driver
  • The availability of bandwidth was also a deciding factor amongst 14 percent of respondents
Conclusion: Embrace the concept of the Hybrid Cloud, and team with technology vendors that are delivering a roadmap allowing you to execute on that vision as soon as possible.

1 comment:

  1. Logicalis seem to have this right – they offer a Hybrid, or as they call it, a Cooperative Cloud offering. See more at http://www.ca.com/us/solutions/collateral.aspx?cid=227646

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