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Blog · 12 Feb 2021

The silver lining of mass public cloud migration

Has the recent surge in off-premises services been the giant technology leap we’ve all been waiting for?

Gartner predict that global spending on public cloud services will be up 18.4% in 2021 and that this acceleration will continue until 2024.

They also suggest that around 70% of organisations using cloud services, plan to increase their adoption even further in response to the recent changes brought about by the pandemic.

It seems, despite all the business cases and proof of concepts, the pandemic has served as the best and quickest way to ‘validate the cloud value proposition’. But is it all as good as it looks?

Now, many months down the line, businesses are starting to discover that relying solely on public cloud is a gamble that’s only partly paid off. Yes, business has continued, but it’s not without issue.

Just the other day, I was talking with a financial services customer who said bottlenecks on their network was becoming commonplace with those working the furthest away from the servers (which equates to most of their staff) experiencing real latency issues. Capacity issues are an ongoing concern and we saw the major public cloud providers, like AWS, put out statements during last year’s peak to reassure customers of their ability to meet demand.

And to make matters worse, a rise in coronavirus related security threats and a lack of visibility in public cloud is making managing security an even bigger headache. I didn’t even begin to talk to them about how much money they’ve had to throw at it.

It doesn’t sound like there’s much of a silver lining, but actually, there is.

For many organisations, like the financial services customer, what’s happened has shown them the importance of having a solid strategy in place for cloud, not least to ensure ongoing resilience and agility. It’s made IT leaders focus on the things that really matter; preserving cash by being more efficient, enabling and supporting remote workers, and ensuring proper measures are in place for continuity. And it’s accelerated their digital strategy quicker than anyone could have ever hoped for.

They’ve been able to see first-hand how the cloud can benefit their business, making now the perfect moment to get the support needed to accelerate digital strategy, transform customer experiences, and get ahead of the market.  The pandemic has also taught IT teams an important lesson in ensuring a more structured plan is in place for migration and how taking a hybrid cloud approach, using private as well as public cloud, can deliver them the best of both worlds, delivering the outcomes they need now with a clear path for the future.

Time to re-harness IT

We’re working with Dell to help customers around the world re-harness their IT and develop a more sustainable approach that provides much needed agility now and a path to hybrid cloud in the future; ideal for a climate of uncertainty.

Find out more

To learn more about how Private Cloud, get in touch.

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The SolarWinds incident that became apparent in December 2020 has had a huge impact across the entire technology ecosystem – and it continues to unfold.

Now no one can assume they haven’t been breached, how do you secure your organisation and data on a ‘dirty’ network? How do you put strategies and technologies in place to cope with the fact that you may have already been successfully attacked, and just not know it yet?

You need to ‘assume breach’ – expecting a sophisticated and motivated attacker will find a way into your estate and manage to stay hidden for some time.

Download our whitepaper to investigate how the following six recommendations can help you ‘assume breach’:

  1. Know the personas on your estate
    Understand who’s on your network, coupled with high confidence audit, reporting and alerting.
  2. Understand your assets
    Know what you have, what is vulnerable, and resolve the risks.
  3. Prioritise endpoint solutions
    Use Endpoint Detection and Response solutions to bring together next-gen antivirus, threat hunting and threat intelligence on the endpoint device.
  4. Make it difficult to move between zones and workloads
    Go beyond flat with a Zero Trust model using network segmentation and micro-segmentation.
  5. Take a systemic approach to detecting threats
    Use SIEM and audit to detect compromises in your estate quickly.
  6. Be curious
    Use your human firewall and give your analysts room to explore.

Download our paper to find out more.