The survey, conducted by Hornetsecurity, reveals that hybrid cloud solutions are the long-term target for 2 in 3 companies.
A hybrid cloud
adoption survey of 900+ IT professionals primarily
based in North America and Europe found that the majority of businesses (93%)
are adopting a hybrid of cloud and on-premise solutions, or migrating fully to
the cloud within 5 years. Half of respondents (51%) reported that they will be
‘mostly in the cloud' in 5 years, with one or two workloads remaining on
premise. 28% of respondents said they will remain ‘mostly on premise', with a
workload or two in the cloud.
67% of IT professionals see a hybrid cloud solution as a permanent
destination
While 29% of respondents said they are using hybrid cloud solutions
as a stepping stone to a full cloud environment, 67% of respondents see hybrid
as a final destination for their infrastructure due to workloads that must
remain on premise. The rest claim to be remaining 100% on premise.
When asked why companies were remaining on premise, many respondents cited data
control, security, and cost concerns with cloud technology.
34% of companies cite trust issues with cloud as reason for workloads
remaining on premise
The hybrid cloud adoption survey also found that trust issues with
the public cloud are present within companies of all sizes, with 31-36% of all
surveyed company size categories reporting concerns.
The survey also shows that with experience comes more distrust in the public
cloud. Respondents with 20+ years of experience were more likely to express
concerns with the trustworthiness of cloud platforms (34%) than those with 1-5
years of experience (24%). Half of all respondents mentioned ‘legacy systems or
software' as another major reason certain workloads must remain on premise,
while ‘application compatibility' was reported as a roadblock to cloud
migration for 4 in 10 companies.
Industry regulations such as GDPR, HIPAA and CMMC among others were also cited
as an obstacle for cloud adoption by 29% of respondents.
Multiple challenges blocking cloud adoption
Companies say they are holding back from full cloud migration due to
a lack of ‘technical knowhow or certified staff' (48%), difficulties with
‘application of best practices within the company' (33%), issues with
connectivity (33%), and ‘secured access' (29%).
The most common workload preventing IT departments from lifting all services to
the cloud was ‘Print & Imaging Services' (55%).
Databases, file storage and application services are also cited as reasons for
remaining partially on premise with 50%, 45%, and 43% of respondents indicating
such respectively.
Hornetsecurity's survey reveals that hybrid cloud solutions still bring with
them several challenges. Chief among them is ‘monitoring and security', with
half of respondents expressing concerns in this area. ‘Networking and
connectivity' is another concern shared by nearly half of all respondents
(48%). Finally, ‘training and certification', ‘manageability and tooling', and
‘resiliency and data recovery' also factor into the concerns shared by 35%,
35%, and 33% of respondents respectively.
Companies using MSP services more likely to use cloud solutions vs on
premise
47% of respondents who form part of internal IT teams reported that
they see their workloads ‘mostly in the cloud' in 5 years, versus 52% of
respondents whose company uses MSP services, and 54% of respondents that work
at MSPs. Internal IT departments report a lack of trust in cloud services at
almost the same rate as those using MSP services, with 34% and 33%
respectively.
For more details about the findings, here are the full results of the hybrid cloud
survey.
Next steps for IT Pros
These findings will
directly influence the educational webinar on 23 March, How Azure Stack HCI is Forcing
Changes in your Datacenter. Microsoft MVPs Andy Syrewicze and Carsten Rachfahl will break down
Microsoft's core hybrid cloud solution Azure Stack HCI, what it means for IT
Pros and how it will fit into their tech stack long-term. Register for this hybrid cloud
webinar.