Experienced cloud adopters see public cloud solutions as a significant
improvement from their traditional on-premises counterparts, and cite the
cloud’s positive and strategic impact on their business and IT organization,
according to a survey commissioned by cloud solution provider Appirio. More
than 60 percent of cloud adopters surveyed said cloud solutions are better than
on-premises in terms of availability, total cost of ownership, ease of integration,
ease of deployment and time to value.
The survey targeted more than 150 IT decision-makers at mid-to-large sized
companies that had already implemented at least one of the leading SaaS
applications or cloud platforms. According to survey results, 83 percent said
they agreed cloud solutions have helped them respond faster to the needs of
their business and 29 percent “strongly agreed” cloud solutions have changed
the way they run their business.
Nearly 40 percent of respondents said they think future cloud adoption will be
part of an overall business transformation, and 65 percent said it would be
part of an IT transformation. In addition, adopters labeled many of the most
common fears about cloud solutions as "misconceptions." Twenty-eight
percent of survey respondents listed cloud security as the No. 1 misconception
about cloud solutions, with integration challenges (15 percent) and lock-in (13
percent) coming in a distant second and third choice.
More than 35 percent of respondents said IT leadership is the primary driver of
cloud misconceptions, more than triple the number who called out traditional
vendors (10 percent) or media and analysts (6 percent) as the driver. The
report also noted security, compliance and manageability remain priorities for
improving cloud applications, just as they continue to be priorities for
existing, on-premises IT solutions.
Survey results suggested cloud adopters are more aggressive in their near-term
and long-term adoption plans than what general market data indicates. Today, 22
percent of cloud adopters said they have more than 50 percent of their IT in
the public cloud, and 68 percent said they expect to have the majority of their
IT in the public cloud within three years. “While nearly every analyst group
predicts tremendous growth for cloud computing in the next three years, they’re
typically much more conservative about how much of IT moves to the public cloud
in that timeframe,” the report said.
More than 73 percent of respondents selected security, compliance and
manageability as areas that are an important or very important priority.
Overall, more than 65 percent of respondents said enhancing their cloud
applications was a high or essential priority in the context of their broader
objectives; only 3 percent rated it a low or non-priority. In addition, 70 percent
of cloud adopters say IT was a driver in the decision-making process to move to
the cloud, and nearly 80 percent said they expect IT will be a driver in the
future.
"Companies leading the charge on cloud computing can teach the broader
market a lot about what’s real, what’s hype and what to expect when you move
more of your IT to the cloud," said Chris Barbin, CEO
of Appirio. "Cloud computing is a highly valuable but disruptive
technology, and the enterprises that will be most successful with the transition
are those who can learn from the experience of others and look beyond the
challenges of today."