MariaDB Corporation today announced the results of a new global survey that
looked at the initial COVID-19 impact on businesses moving to the cloud
and IT professionals' attitudes on what has changed - and what they
think will change. Nearly all (99%) respondents worldwide indicated an
impact on their business today related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The
situation only slightly improves looking ahead to 2021, with 84%
expecting a continued impact. And 74% of respondents expect a second
wave of COVID-19 impact, with 51% planning to move more applications to
the cloud to prepare for it.
MariaDB
is one the top five most used databases globally, with availability on
all of the leading cloud platforms and 75% of Fortune 500 companies
running it. With this position in the marketplace, MariaDB is uniquely
able to bring a global perspective on technology trends facing
businesses worldwide.
The
goal with issuing the survey was to identify and put meaningful cloud
adoption statistics to trends the company noticed with regard to
COVID-19's impact on IT operations, such as increased interest in cloud
databases like MariaDB SkySQL, in-person events, outlook on the future
and more. Beyond the hard business numbers, the survey also looked at
the "human" impact of current and future changes.
Cloud Adoption Accelerating for Some, Slowing for Others
The
impact on businesses' cloud adoption plans - with 40% currently
accelerating their move to the cloud - has led to increases across a
range of related decisions as companies prepare for future COVID-related
shutdowns. When asked to select all that apply, the top choices on this
topic were:
- 51% are planning to move more applications to the cloud
- 39% expect to be 100% in the cloud
- 32% are starting a move to the cloud
On
the flip side, 24% of all respondents said they are slowing down their
move to the cloud because of COVID-19's impact. The U.S. indicated the
highest percentage of slowing (36%), while the U.K. had the lowest
(12%).
Specific
to cloud databases, when asked what would prevent them from going
"all-in" (choosing all that apply), the results showed:
- Security: 73%
- Price: 46%
- Compatibility: 45%
- Scalability: 35%
- Migration: 33%
- Lack of multi-cloud offering: 21%
Forever WFH
With
74% of respondents expecting new challenges because of a second wave of
the COVID-19 pandemic, technologists are implementing a variety of
technology changes to prepare for future shutdowns.
- The
two strategies being implemented most are (choosing all that apply):
Set up remote access for all employees (57%) and move more applications
to the cloud (51%).
- 46% of respondents are implementing "forever" work-from-home (WFH) strategies.
- European
respondents favor implementing remote access setups and permanent WFH
strategies as the top two priorities to combat the fallout from the
pandemic.
- U.S.
respondents agree on the top priority of favoring remote access setups,
but differ on the second priority, indicating that moving applications
to the cloud was #2.
In-Person Technology Events ... See You Next Year
One
of the early consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic was the cancellation
of in-person corporate and technology events. While an overwhelming
number of respondents miss these in-person events, 70% said the earliest
they would consider attending an in-person technology event would be in
2021.
- 73% of respondents indicated missing corporate and technology events "very much" or "extremely."
- 26%
of respondents would consider attending an in-person technology event
this year (2020), while 70% indicated the earliest they would attend
would be in 2021.
- U.S.
respondents were more evenly split compared to Europeans. In the U.S.,
41% said they would consider an in-person event this year while 58% said
next year would be the earliest.
- 95%
of respondents will change their ongoing technology event behavior as a
result of COVID-19, with 25% saying they will only attend online
events, 69% attending more online events, and 1% not attending any
events at all.
"The survey data surfaces trends we have been seeing with our MariaDB SkySQL cloud database business
over the last few months, such as the increased movement to the cloud
due to COVID-19's global impact," said Franz Aman, CMO, MariaDB
Corporation. "By default, cloud infrastructure is designed and secured
for access from anywhere, no need to enable or figure out remote
working, that is the native lifestyle. Companies realize that many
structural changes are here to stay and future disruptions - be it
another pandemic or an entirely different disaster - need to be
anticipated and planned for. The outcome is an acceleration to the cloud
for mission-critical applications, and the cloud databases and
analytics they rely on. An enterprise-grade DBaaS becomes the foundation
for any crisis-resistant, essential enterprise application."