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Topics - EvaSmith

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The cloud has quickly become the solution of choice for enterprises wanting to unify and process large quantities of data. With decision making reliant on analytical insights, the cloud provides the storage, processing power and scalability required and does so in the most cost-effective way, without the need for heavy capital investment in on-site infrastructure. Today, of course, there are several cloud options available to businesses: public and private cloud and a public-private hybrid. There’s also the option of multi-cloud solutions where separate vendors provide different types of cloud service. Perhaps the least understood of all these elements is the private cloud, and here, we’ll explain what it is and examine the advantages it offers to enterprises.

An overview of the private cloud

While public and private clouds use more or less the same type of advanced infrastructure, the key difference is in how those infrastructures are used. Essentially, in the public cloud, the vast data centre infrastructures are used to host the virtual servers of lots of clients in what is known as multi-tenancy hosting. With the private cloud, meanwhile, the hardware on which a virtual server is run is not shared. Instead, it is dedicated to a single organisation in what is known as single-tenancy hosting.

Improved compliance

By being solely for the use of one client, private cloud infrastructure can help enterprises comply with data privacy regulations. While exceptional levels of security are achievable in public cloud environments, it is the private cloud’s single tenancy that makes it highly suitable for enterprises that gather, store and process sensitive or personal data. Unlike in the public cloud, the system and the data it stores are isolated so they cannot be affected by threats that impact other users of the service provider’s infrastructure.

By being isolated, a private cloud customer also has greater freedom over how they deploy their cloud infrastructure. As a result, they can retain increased control over their data by ensuring deployment is fully aligned with company access-control and retention policies.

Continue Reading: The Advantages of Private Cloud for Enterprises

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According to recent studies, the main cloud challenges enterprises will face during 2022 include security, governance, compliance, finance and talent. Here, we take a closer look at the state of today’s enterprise cloud environment and give insights into these and other challenges.

Top challenges
Research shows that enterprises face eight major cloud challenges overall. In order of the number of respondents citing them, these were security (81%), managing finance (79%), governance (75%), lack of expertise (75%), compliance (75%), managing BYOL (73%), managing multi-cloud (72%) and cloud migration (71%). Noticeably, the figures for enterprises were higher in all areas than for SMBs.
The studies indicate that while companies have growing cloud experience, the adoption of multi-cloud and hybrid cloud strategies, together with an increase in cloud-based workloads still presents significant security, finance and governance challenges. And while managing multi-cloud/hybrid environments becomes easier as companies gain experience, ongoing changes (e.g., new regulations and emerging security threats) mean challenges with security, finance, governance and compliance remain constant.
How cloud maturity affects challenge
There are interesting differences in the challenges faced by enterprises that have recently become cloud users and those that can be considered as cloud-mature. For newcomers, the four biggest challenges cited by respondents were, in order, governance (79%), lack of expertise (78%), migration (77%) and security (76%). For cloud-mature enterprises, they were managing finance (81%), security (81%), governance (75%) and compliance (75%). For intermediate companies (those neither a newcomer nor mature) lack of expertise (87%) and security (86%) were, by some margin, cited as the major challenges.

Continue Reading: Major Cloud Challenges for Enterprises 2022

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