What do Virtualization and Cloud executives think about 2012? Find out in this VMblog.com series exclusive.
2012 Cloud Predictions
Contributed
Article by Denis Martin, Executive VP and CTO, NaviSite
In 2011, the hype around cloud computing subsided
and real adoption began to accelerate in the second half of the year.
Enterprises are more comfortable with the current levels of compliance,
security, and reliability and are deploying real applications, such as
financial applications, messaging applications and custom applications, in
cloud production environments. We expect cloud adoption to accelerate
throughout 2012 as IT organizations continue their transformation and as they
begin to realize financial and productivity benefits over performing all IT
functions in-house. In 2012 not only will security be an
enabling technology in cloud adoption, but large enterprises will rely on
cloud-based security technology to help ensure corporate security and
compliance in place of internal security technologies.
The cloud will continue to evolve and become more
"Enterprise-Ready." By this I mean that cloud infrastructure will evolve from
infrastructure, price, and self service to be an enabling technology/platform
that will create more urgency within the IT organization to migrate
applications to a cloud infrastructure.
Here is what to look for in 2012:
1. Cloud Will
Transform Disaster Recovery Services - The cloud will
not change disaster recovery fundamentals of having a solid disaster recovery
plan that have been through regular "disaster drills" but the cloud will greatly extend disaster recovery options that
yield significant cost savings and flexibility for businesses. Cloud-based
Recovery-as-a-service (RaaS) will include the ability to completely replicate
virtual environments in multiple data centers worldwide.
2. Security - Organizations will become accustomed
to relying on service providers to deliver enterprise class security at the
same level or a higher level than currently maintained in-house. Additionally, companies will move toward cloud-based
security in order to enable the cloud environment growth through compliance at
the same rate as the business growth.
3. IT Will Select Service Providers with
Application Expertise - IT organizations will look towards cloud providers for their
application expertise and their ability and flexibility to optimize their cloud
infrastructure for business-critical applications. Application optimization
needs to be addressed across the entire technology stack, from the physical
hardware to the service delivery architecture to the application. By selecting
cloud infrastructure that is already optimized for a specific application, the
assessment, optimization, testing and validation stages required to migrate to
cloud computing is much more efficient. Service providers with an in-depth
knowledge of enterprise applications, like messaging, will solidify their
position as a trustworthy partner to IT.
4. Infrastructure as a Service and
On-Demand Application Capacity Become a Reality - While businesses are now able to
quickly create new VMs to add capacity, even clone existing virtual machines to
reduce the time to production, there will be advancements in true dynamic
scaling. These advancements will be the
result of increased monitoring and management instrumentation from IaaS
providers as well as through the Application Programming Interfaces
(API's.) With these new capabilities
IaaS offerings will become more responsive to workload needs and applications
will have the opportunity to programmatically interact with the infrastructure.
These capabilities will support the next level of dynamic scaling for cloud
based workloads.
5. Visibility and Control Becomes
Simplified - One of
the basic premises of cloud computing is the ability to self-service. But as
more and more applications move into large fluid virtual environments, the need
for transparency, visibility and control becomes paramount. In 2012 we will see
more instrumentation that simplifies the management of these complex environments.
And finally, 2012 will be the year we see IT move to the
cloud as the core delivery for key in-house applications rather than
infrastructure augmentation.
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About the Author
Denis Martin, Executive Vice President and Chief
Technology Officer, NaviSite
Denis
Martin's role at NaviSite reflects his continued contributions to the company's
strategic direction, including product, service, channel development and
acquisition activity. Martin brings more than 20 years of business experience
and has served in several positions at NaviSite, most recently as Senior Vice
President of Corporate Development. He has extensive experience in
network-based computing and outsourced delivery of business solutions and
managed services.