CoreSite announced the publication of its 2024 State of the Data Center Report,
which examines the latest data center and cloud computing trends,
strategies and requirements. Now in its fifth year, the 2024 report
finds a growing consensus among forward-looking IT leaders that data and
related management and processing requirements are becoming more
varied; they also require highly customized IT solutions. More than
ever, IT executives have options for strategically locating computing
resources across multiple environments, with an eye toward
interconnected digital ecosystems that deliver value, performance and
flexibility. These specialized digital ecosystems are being
strategically designed via combinations of colocation, cloud and
on-premises resources aligned with business objectives.
The new research shows that although C-suite confidence in the economy
remains high, a VUCA (volatile, uncertain, complex, ambiguous)
environment has many business leaders proceeding with caution when it
comes to their IT and data ecosystems, with an emphasis on cost control
and predictability, flexibility and risk management. However, this
cautious approach also must accommodate a growing volume of
resource-intensive artificial intelligence (AI) and other high-density
workloads critical to organizational growth and innovation. The result
of this dichotomy is an accelerated embrace of hybrid IT ecosystems to
support varying types of data and workload needs. Specifically, 98% of
organizations say they have currently adopted or plan to adopt a hybrid
model using colocation, private cloud and public cloud to manage their
workloads.
"The 2024 data demonstrates that IT leaders are increasingly relying on
hybrid IT environments to support business objectives, including better
cost control and predictability, and to efficiently deploy specific
workloads to maximize benefits," said Juan Font, CoreSite President and
CEO and American Tower Senior Vice President. "Underscored by the
evolving needs of AI and other high-density workloads, modern hybrid IT
strategies allow for the type of flexibility that can reduce
infrastructure footprints and focus IT resources and talent on growth,
while delivering the performance organizations need to remain
competitive."
High-level insights and key data points from this year's report include:
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Connection Reigns Supreme: Companies
need to directly connect to the cloud and interconnect systems and
locations to transfer large-scale amounts of data, while keeping
latency, cost, security and quality in mind. In fact, cloud
interconnection was the No. 1 reason for using colocation for nearly
half of the 22 workloads included in the survey. However, only 31% of
respondents say their current colocation provider offers interconnection
to a variety of cloud providers. Additionally, 95% of respondents said
the ability of colocation providers to offer native, direct connections
to the major cloud providers is important, with 69% citing it as very
important.
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A Public Cloud Exodus: The public
cloud has historically been seen as an essential platform to replace
legacy technology or quickly add new capabilities to improve agility and
flexibility. However, "cloud smart" hybrid IT infrastructure
environments are increasingly valued over an "all in" cloud approach for
their ability to effectively and efficiently address cost concerns
while meeting performance and compliance requirements. Most participants
in the survey say they have considered a move from public cloud to
colocation across 22 different workloads, led by generative AI (GenAI)
applications, BI/analytics, and IoT connectivity and management.
Compared with the 2023 study, the use of public cloud is trending down
across all workloads.
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AI is a Hybrid IT Accelerant:
Heightened use of AI - which requires more computing resources and high
data volumes - is forcing IT leaders to re-evaluate options for hosting
these and other high-density workloads within current budget
constraints. The 2024 results show a shift of AI-specific workloads from
on-prem environments, primarily to colocation data centers.
Additionally, at least three-quarters of respondents in this year's
survey said they are considering moving AI-related workloads from the
public cloud to a colocation data center, including GenAI applications
(91%), chatbots (81%), predictive analytics (79%) and augmented AI
applications (76%).
"IT executives have more options than ever for locating computing
resources, and the CoreSite 2024 State of the Data Center Report
demonstrates how highly customized hybrid environments that include
colocation are becoming the option of choice for organizations that must
remain highly competitive while continually managing cost predictably,"
said John Gallant, Enterprise Consulting Director at CIO. "These
often-competing pressures only will become more salient with AI's
explosive growth in the coming years. Adopting an ecosystem - and
regularly optimizing that ecosystem - with a mix of colocation, private
cloud and public cloud capabilities is a trend that likely will continue
to remain dominant in the coming years."
Download the 2024 State of the Data Center Report to dive deeper into these insights and more HERE.