Study: Enterprises Prefer Hybrid Cloud

The concept of the cloud may have been born with Amazon’s public cloud, but a new study shows that enterprises in both the US and the UK increasingly are interested in a hybrid cloud approach, melding both private and public components.

Sixty percent of respondents see a hybrid cloud solution as the right approach for cloud deployment, according to the study, which was sponsored by cloud hosting vendor Rackpace and conducted by research firm Vanson Bourne, with a random mix of 400 IT leaders in the US and UK.

Surprise

That finding surprised Rackspace CTO John Engates. “Sixty percent is a large number,” Engates told eWeek. “We thought pure public cloud would stand out as a larger option, but it appears that a big portion of the market is already aware of the benefits that hybrid cloud can provide to their business.”

As to why organisations see a hybrid cloud approach as the right way to implement cloud, rather than just using the public cloud, there are a number of reasons. At the top of the list is security, which was cited by 52 percent of respondents; 42 percent indicated that they are using a hybrid cloud because it offers more control, while 37 percent indicated they it provides better performance or reliability.

Forty-six percent of respondents said they have reduced their costs by moving to a hybrid cloud approach.

Security

The idea that a private cloud can provide better security than a public cloud approach is one that Rackspace also supports. With a hybrid cloud approach, a company uses both public and private cloud elements.

Rackspace’s private cloud is a true single-tenant offering, Engates said. In contrast, a public cloud is multi-tenant with resources being shared by multiple companies. With the Rackspace private cloud solution, customers get a dedicated infrastructure consisting of dedicated servers, dedicated firewalls and dedicated load balancers, Engates said.

“This physical segregation leads to the best possible situation to provide a high level of security isolation,” Engates said. “This also means that it’s often easier to meet compliance requirements because auditors can evaluate the environment from end to end.”

VMware

In many enterprise data centres, VMware is currently the server virtualisation technology of choice. The demand for a hybrid cloud solution is one that VMware has also seen. In May, VMware formally launched its hybrid cloud service as a way to help existing VMware users move to the cloud.

Rackspace is also capable of hosting VMware, and Engates explained that the company’s VMware offering is one of the pillars of its hybrid portfolio.

“Rackspace also offers a range of migration services that customers can use to move workloads from on-premises VMware environments to a Rackspace-hosted VMware environment, or even to cloud or dedicated servers,” Engates said. “We advise our customers as to which platforms are the most suitable for the workloads they are bringing on board.”

Hybrid Challenges

Some study results differ from the Rackspace findings. A recent study conducted by Palmer Research and eWEEK publisher QuinStreet found that while this hybrid model may eventually become commonplace, private clouds are currently the most popular deployment model, especially among larger enterprises.

Even though the Rackspace-sponsored study found that enterprises see lots of benefit in the hybrid cloud model, moving to a hybrid cloud model is not without challenges.

Often, the challenge is that it can take a new mindset to understand what the various cloud deployment options can provide a business, Engates said. Ensuring that an organisation understands how to address the new way of doing IT through avenues like programmable API access, cloud automation and multi-platform configurations can also be challenging, he added.

“Moving to a hybrid world can also lead to pushback due to inertia in the organisation, as [those accustomed to] the old way of IT could find it hard to change traditional models of doing business,” Engates said. “In many cases, new skill sets and processes are needed to adapt to the changes.”

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Originally published on eWeek.

Sean Michael Kerner

Sean Michael Kerner is a senior editor at eWeek and contributor to TechWeek

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