Strata Identity announced
findings from a survey conducted by Forrester Consulting entitled
Distributed Multicloud Ecosystems Require A New Approach To Identity And Access Management.
According
to the commissioned Forrester study conducted on behalf of Strata
Identity, more than three-fourths (78%) of respondents said managing
user identities between multiple clouds is the number one challenge. The
study found that the top driver for migrating to the cloud is the need
to increase security and protect data - more than two-thirds (70%) of
respondents said it is very important. Meanwhile, nearly one-third (28%)
of companies are using four or more public/private clouds today, but
that is expected to more than double in two years to 65%.
"As
cloud service providers improve their security and data protection
offerings, decision-makers increasingly realize they can't protect their
firms' data on-premises as well as they can in the cloud. But migrating
existing IAM (identity and access management) tools and processes to
multicloud IaaS, PaaS, and private clouds creates problems that firms
must solve..." according to the Forrester study.
For
example, nearly two-thirds of IT decision-makers said the complexity of
their firm's current IAM causes its employees to spend less time on
innovation and impedes overall business agility.
"According
to the Forrester study, firms can't just lift-and-shift existing IAM
tools from on-premises to the cloud,'" said Eric Olden, CEO of Strata
Identity. "Multi-cloud ecosystems are complex and create a broader
attack vector, so companies must plan their IAM strategy carefully or
risk leaving themselves vulnerable."
Study Highlights
Forrester
Consulting canvased 221 North American IT decision-makers with insights
into cloud architecture and/or ID management at companies with at least
1,000 employees and using at least two public or private clouds. Some
of the study's key findings include:
- 71% say managing many identities across a highly distributed environment is challenging or very challenging
- The
most significant and commonly reported cloud IAM challenges are not
having enough time and money (66%) and a lack of skills to support
complex cloud-based IAM (62%)
- In
addition, organizations struggle to manage and enforce consistent user
policies (58%) and comply with changing regulations (56%), while lack of
interoperability between IAM solutions and different clouds (48%),
siloed identity user groups (40%), and rewriting apps to modernize or
migrate to the cloud (39%) were other key concerns
- Before
moving to the cloud, companies report facing significant hurdles that
include rewriting apps to modernize or migrate (64%), integrating legacy
on-premises systems and apps (62%), and deploying modern passwordless
multi-factor authentication (62%)
- Among
the top investment priorities for IT, decision-makers are deploying
customer IAM (59%), implementing Zero Trust architecture (56%), and
bolstering workforce identity to manage remote work threats (43%)
- The two top IAM cloud security practices employed by IT departments are IAM governance (65%) and IAM in the cloud (63%)
- Finally,
85% of respondents agree that having a low-code/no-code solution for
IAM would allow an easier adoption of a Zero Trust posture, and three of
the top requirements for cloud IAM cited by respondents were low-code
tools that don't require them to rewrite apps (60% said "very
important"), automate IAM across multiple clouds (55%), and integrate
cloud and on-premises identity platforms (43%)
The complete Forrester study, Distributed Multicloud Ecosystems Require A New Approach To Identity And Access Management, is available.