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Powering Digitisation The Cloud First Way

While the advantages of multi-cloud architectures far outweigh the shortcomings, businesses often hesitate. Cloud providers recognise this and are addressing these needs with products that bridge the discomfort.

February 04, 2022 / 15:31 IST

Presenting The Cloud Enterprise, a special series led by Searce and Google Cloud, in partnership with Moneycontrol, which brings together leading voices to deliver insights on the adoption of cloud technologies and its success.

Cloud-first companies know best the power of Cloud and Cloud-enabled technology. Born in the cloud, many of these businesses have now grown to have phygital presence and omnichannel strategies that allow them to be wherever their customers are. Their first challenge, however, lies in growing their infrastructure quickly enough to keep pace with their customers. The decision between on-prem, public, hybrid, and multi-cloud is a critical one.

For mid-market and enterprise-level organizations, the strategic distribution of cloud management tasks between multiple providers can help achieve greater efficiencies, leverage economies of scale, and establish the resilient performance of infrastructure. It can also be a great solution when regulatory requirements determine where and how data can be stored.

However, what scares most businesses is the management complexity it brings. Each public cloud vendor has its own portal, its own APIs, and its own unique processes for managing its environment. Because there is no standardization across public cloud vendors, multiplying vendors means multiplying the management burden. The demand for personnel with mastery of managing specific cloud platforms or multi-cloud environments is high, but the supply is scarce. As enterprises migrate workloads from legacy platforms to the cloud or attempt to move applications or data among cloud platforms, the frustrating interoperability of platforms becomes apparent. IT teams must deal with siloed vendor tools, a lack of consolidated monitoring across cloud environments, and other interoperability challenges that multiply the administrative burden and drive-up cloud costs.