Snow Software unveiled findings from its most recent survey, based on the
input from more than 500 IT leaders from organizations with over 500 employees
in the United States and United Kingdom to determine the current state of cloud
infrastructure. The study found that while 68% of IT leaders now have a hybrid
cloud strategy consisting of both public and private clouds, these
organizations are immersed in the realities of what this deployment means for
their organizations and are experiencing an array of cloud and infrastructure
management challenges despite making this move. The data suggests that while
cloud is positioned as a faster, more secure, and ultimately more affordable
alternative to private and on-prem infrastructure, it is one piece of the IT
management puzzle and not a one-size-fits-all solution.
Approximately one-third (33%)
of IT leaders stated that mounting cybersecurity threats are their greatest
infrastructure management challenge. Lack of integration between new and old
infrastructure technologies (26%), meeting governance and compliance
requirements (25%), and managing spend (24%) closely followed as additional
areas they're dealing with. Perhaps unsurprisingly, mitigating concerns about
cybersecurity protections (24%) is at the top of IT leaders' list of cloud
management challenges they'd wish to solve in the blink of an eye - along with
a lack of skilled IT staff (18%) and lack of cloud standardization (14%).
"Cloud infrastructure was
positioned to IT leaders as the ultimate solution to many of their management
challenges. While the promise of cloud-agile, fast, affordable, and more
secure-can be realized, organizations often underestimate the full scope of
what is needed to truly reap these benefits," said Alastair Pooley, Chief
Information Officer at Snow. "On top of that, organizations implementing a
cloud infrastructure are not only dealing with technological complexities but
are also challenged to find and retain the people with the right skills to
effectively implement and manage cloud. More than ever, the scope of the
challenge underscores the value of having end-to-end, hybrid infrastructure
visibility across spend, governance, compliance and security - such as that
provided by Snow's Technology Intelligence platform."
Additional key findings from
the study include:
- Cloud
proved its worth during the pandemic, with no end to its growth trajectory
in sight
- Nearly
half of IT leaders (46%) claim cloud services have been critical to
operations during the pandemic; as a result, seven out of 10 (71%)
executives have increased overall cloud spend in the last 12 months. This
is a 26.7% increase compared to the 2020 findings, with 56% of IT leaders expecting to
increase their cloud spend.
- Another
70% of IT leaders have increased the use of public cloud platforms,
including AWS, Microsoft Azure, etc.
- One-third
of IT leaders (33%) added an additional 26-50% capacity to their
organizations' cloud resources in the past year.
- Scalability
and flexibility are among the driving forces for cloud as we move toward a
hybrid work era
- Scalability
and flexibility (22%) are the main reasons organizations rely on cloud
computing, with another 17% of IT executives stating it is the best
environment to develop, test and launch products and services.
- 44% of
IT leaders believe they will add to cloud services to support demand as
hybrid working becomes the norm.
- Cybersecurity
protection is a driver for cloud adoption, but also a key concern
- 11% of
IT executives rely on cloud computing for built-in and tested cybersecurity
protections, in addition to backing up and storing data (12%).
- Cybersecurity
threats are also key management challenges that, as noted, IT leaders
would most like to solve. While the promises of cloud security can be
recognized, applications are where vulnerabilities are most likely to
occur. Many IT departments are not equipped with the right staff/skillset
to adapt their security approach at the pace needed for ever-evolving
cybersecurity threats.
- We need
to better enable IT staff with the right knowledge and skillsets required
for cloud infrastructure management
- 63% of
C-level IT executives rated themselves as experts in their knowledge of
the different types of cloud (private, public and hybrid), and view cloud
as critical to business operations, along with three-quarters of company
owners.
- However,
only 20% of IT managers, and just under one-third of IT directors (32%),
rated themselves as experts.
- This
disparity in understanding and skill related to cloud creates additional
challenges for companies as they move to hybrid and multi-cloud
architectures, indicating that greater education is needed for mid-level
executives to manage cloud infrastructure effectively.
For more information about
Snow's latest survey, please visit: https://www.snowsoftware.com/blog/study-reaping-benefits-cloud-begins-facing-realities.