DERBY – 1st November 2022 — Cloud-led digital transformation Managed Services Provider (MSP) Node4, has released its Future of Hybrid Cloud report. Based on independent research, it finds UK IT managers have a generally positive view of public cloud platforms.
They identified improved security posture, a greener and more sustainable IT infrastructure, more efficient IT team operations and less downtime as principal advantages.
However, half of respondents said that despite these benefits, they have had to migrate a workload back off a public cloud platform — and called out several potential shortcomings that could be behind this trend:
- 51% of the leaders we spoke to said that public cloud was more expensive than initially forecast
- 22% identified service issues or capacity constraints
- 21% reported a lack of control around usage and access
- 21% cited performance issues
- 17% experienced workload incompatibility
The report’s findings suggest that these factors are also contributing to the retention or increase in non-cloud IT infrastructure. Indeed, 41% of UK organisations using public cloud still have applications and workloads running on company-owned hardware — and 37% rely on a platform provided by a hosting company.
PREDICTING THE FUTURE OF HYBRID CLOUD ADOPTION
Looking to the future, the country’s IT managers think they will still be running applications on company-owned hardware (44%) and using a platform provided by a hosting company (42%) in three years. Just 12% of respondents expect to host more than 75% of applications and workloads in a public cloud environment. This makes a more formalised long-term hybrid cloud usage strategy a likely scenario for most UK businesses.
When asked why they’re considering a hybrid cloud strategy, nearly half (46%) of respondents said it was to retain existing infrastructure and assets. The same number (46%) said they would adopt hybrid cloud to support applications that don’t suit public cloud. Over a third said it would help them tackle latency, edge and performance issues they’d experienced with public cloud. Respondents do, however, have a few concerns about hybrid cloud adoption, citing the need to support multiple platforms (39%) and the complexity of integrating those multiple platforms (36%).
The Emergence of a new hybrid cloud model
Commenting on the report and its findings, Andrew Slater, Practice Director – Cloud at Node4, says: “Our research underscores that many UK organisations have encountered challenges in getting the final 20-30% of their production workloads into public cloud environments. This is probably not what they envisaged when they began their public cloud adoption journey. IT departments were working on a vision where all workloads sat neatly within a public cloud environment, delivering significant cost savings — that all security, compliance, monitoring, updates, backup and disaster recovery could be centrally managed. But as our research demonstrates, things don’t always work out exactly as anticipated for many organisations.”
Andrew continues: “We have seen the emergence of a new hybrid cloud model where organisations bring the public cloud providers’ software into their controlled IT environments. Tools such as Azure Stack HCI and Azure Arc meet the core challenges of operating a hybrid cloud model head-on, providing centralised management, compliance and security alongside the ability to run PaaS services outside of the public cloud. While respondents identified potential barriers to longer-term hybrid cloud adoption, we’re confident that these can be overcome with developing hybrid cloud technologies. This would deliver a cost-effective, long-term strategy for UK businesses to manage their IT infrastructure without worrying about migrating incompatible or inappropriate workloads to public cloud environments.”
To download a full copy of the report, please click here.
METHODOLOGY
The Future of Hybrid Cloud is an independent piece of research carried out exclusively for Node4 by Censuswide between 25th May 2022 and 1st June 2022. It explores some drivers behind the current and planned use of hybrid cloud environments amongst UK businesses. The findings are based on the views of 302 IT decision-makers from various vertical markets with 1,000-10,000 employees and a broad spectrum of annual turnover.