A survey of 1,300 technology and data executives found that more than a decade after the initial rise of cloud computing, organizations are still struggling to manage these environments.
Conducted by Wakefield Research on behalf of NetApp, the survey found 98% of respondents reported their business has been impacted by everything from the increasing complexity of data and heightened cybersecurity risk to lack of visibility into business operations and staff burnout.
Top challenges include cybersecurity risk (45%), staff not taking full advantage of business applications (44%), increased skepticism about the cloud from leadership (44%), lack of visibility into business operations (42%), going over budget (37%) and burning out staff (31%).
A full 88% continue to encounter technical challenges, including data mobility between clouds (33%), security risks (33%) and interoperability between cloud services (30%).
The top drivers of cloud investments are scaling artificial intelligence (AI) and automation (39%), followed by driving business innovation (35%) and creating digital experiences (34%).
Organizational challenges encountered include having a clear vision for cloud strategy (32%), establishing the right level of governance (31%) and managing costs (30%). A full 84% are under pressure to show short-term return on investments (ROI) in cloud computing platforms, with 76% noting CFOs and other business leaders are skeptical of savings. Nearly half of the tech executive respondents (49%) reported that when cloud strategy discussions occur, cost concerns come up often or all the time. As a result, nearly three-fourths of executives (74%) said tiered workloads are either very or extremely important, the survey found.
Other factors impacting multi-cloud strategy include environmental, social and governance (ESG) concerns (79%) and data sovereignty (74%), the survey found.
Ronen Schwartz, senior vice president and general manager for cloud volumes at NetApp, said as more organizations employ multiple clouds, total costs tend to rise. Each cloud platform requires mastering another control plane, which means someone in the IT organization must have the right skills to manage, he noted. IT leaders are attempting to exercise more control over cloud deployments, but developers, for a variety of reasons, have already deployed workloads across multiple cloud computing environments, added Schwartz. One approach to achieving that goal is to make sure data is stored on the least expensive tiered service possible for any given specific use case, he noted.
Less clear is whether an uncertain economy might push organizations to consolidate workloads on fewer cloud computing platforms. Even then, the cost of moving a workload is not trivial given the proprietary application programming interfaces (APIs) that many developers have likely invoked as DevOps built and deployed cloud applications.
Of course, there is no going back; the issue now becomes how to define a set of best practices for managing cloud computing environments in a way that minimizes costs. It turns out that cloud computing can be more costly than an on-premises IT environment simply because the infrastructure resources made available to developers are almost infinite. In the final analysis, however, that can turn out to be too much of a good thing—especially if organizations wind up spending more on IT to support these environments. Many of those environments are not rigorously managed because, for example, developers may not be inclined to spin down a development environment on a Friday because it takes too long to spin it back up the following Monday.
One way or another, however, a level of long overdue scrutiny of cloud computing costs may be on the horizon.