Organizations worldwide are increasing public cloud storage use and
budgets to accelerate innovation. According to the 2024 Wasabi Global
Cloud Storage Index, an astounding 93% of organizations plan to grow
their public cloud storage capacity in 2024. This rate of capacity
increase is up 9 points from last year's survey (which indicated 84%
expected an increase). Commissioned by
Wasabi Technologies, and conducted by Vanson Bourne, the
Wasabi Global Cloud Storage Index uncovers the changing attitudes toward
public cloud storage adoption, the factors that influence storage
buying decisions, and the market's top priorities when it comes to
budget, capacity, vendor selection, billing, features and satisfaction.
Cloud storage budgets increase as more enterprises move to the cloud,
but the market still suffers from expensive public cloud storage fees
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More than half of respondents say they exceeded their budgeted spend on
public cloud storage. The main reasons for budget excess include using
more storage than they planned (42%) and migrating more apps and data to
the cloud than planned (45%)
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90% of respondents expect their cloud storage budgets to increase in
2024, up from 84% in 2023, in part due to new data security, backup, and
recovery requirements, with 95% of C-level respondents saying they
expect cloud storage budgets to increase in 2024
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On average, 47% of cloud storage billing is allocated to data and usage
fees (including API calls, operations, egress, retrieval, etc.), this
finding aligns with last year's results, indicating that organizations
continue to struggle with complex and material fee charges
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53% of respondents exceeded budgeted spend for cloud object storage in
2023, 2 points higher than the previous year's average (52%)
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72% of new cloud storage adopters, those who purchased services in 2022
and 2023, exceeded budget spend, and interestingly, these respondents
cited high storage usage and growth, unanticipated egress fees and API
call fees, as the three main reasons they exceeded budget
"Results from this year's Wasabi Global Cloud Storage Index show cloud
storage use isn't slowing down, in fact, many organizations are asking
more of their cloud storage services; improved security, low-latency
storage for frequently accessed data, and tools to improve data
management," said Andrew Smith, senior manager of strategy and market
intelligence at Wasabi Technologies, and a former IDC analyst. "The 2024
Cloud Storage Index also assessed cloud storage adoption, deployment
and challenges associated with emerging AI/ML workloads, showing that
while nearly all organizations are planning to adopt or are already
implementing AI/ML apps and services, they are taking a low-risk
approach by applying new technology to internal operations first. Also,
coming as no surprise, Generative AI leads the AI/ML workload adoption
pack with 49% of enterprises already implementing, or planning to
implement this technology at their organization."
Over forty percent of respondents identify their organization as
"cloud-first" when it comes to IT services adoption, and much of their
stored data is considered "hot"
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The number of respondents self-identifying as "cloud-first" in 2024
(42%) - increased from 2023, illustrating a continued shift towards
cloud IT services adoption when it comes to infrastructure solutions,
including storage.
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Respondents ranked their cloud object storage performance requirements
on a scale of "cold" to "hot." Only 18% of cloud object storage data, on
average, sits within the "cold" category. The remaining 82% of cloud
object storage is classified as more active data (I.e., hot, warm, or
cool). This allocation is indicative of the growing applicability of
object storage across a wide range of enterprise applications; as well
as enterprise requirements to do more with their data
"The 2024 Global Cloud Storage Index shows organizations are vastly
underestimating the cost of egress and API call fees," said David
Friend, Co-Founder and CEO, Wasabi Technologies. "Our findings show
almost half of the average cloud storage bill is attributed to various
data access and usage fees. We believe this unfavorable mix practically
doubles total cloud storage costs. Even more concerning is the impact of
these fee structures as nearly every organization expects to store and
do more with their data. There is evidence that some of this growth is
being driven by the need to train AI models."
AI/ML workload adoption will catalyze infrastructure modernization to accommodate data sprawl across new environments
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99% of respondents plan to adopt, or are already implementing AI/ML solutions and services in 2024
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49% of respondents say AI/ML workload adoption will create new
challenges storing data across a wider range of locations (e.g., edge,
core, and cloud)
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Current or planned AI workload adoption is dominated by Generative AI
(49% of respondents), followed by AI/ML solutions for security and
compliance (45%) and product design (39%)
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This year the Cloud Storage Index asked specifically about
storage-related concerns and challenges associated with AI/ML solution
adoption; and 97% of respondents believe their organization has
storage-related concerns associated with AI/ML
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The top three concerns facing enterprises include: requirements to store
data across a wider range of locations (49%); new or increased data
movement/migration requirements, including hybrid cloud and multicloud
(44%); and the need for enhanced data security and compliance
capabilities (43%)
To read the 2024 Wasabi Global Cloud Storage Index in its entirety, please visit here.