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essential insights
Written By: Marketing Team

Blog

Essential Insights For Your Cloud Migration Initiatives

September 26, 2019 7-Minute read

Did you think Cloud migration is all about lifting and shifting alone? Well never! It requires a common language, a common understanding along with the ability of your organization to align technology solutions for meeting business needs. When you consider Migration, you need to think infra, application, data and process plays. What you need to focus on is optimization as part of the migration plan. Merely lifting or shifting the application and associated infrastructure will actually prove to be very dear and similarly cost of simple migration plans are often over the top.

Modern software efficiency is all about adopting Cloud services for speedy development, managing infrastructure by enabling teams to do this autonomously and most importantly improving customer experience. For instance, in case of speedy development or agility, enterprises can very quickly create and launch services (new) in the public Cloud, without additional investment in infrastructure, independently, therefore appealing to customers.

So when and how can technology solutions be aligned to business needs? The answer lies in optimization. Cloud-mature organizations typically hone and develop (optimize) their applications, ideally through DevOps. And this is exactly what you need to make a note of – this is where righteous cost benefits begin to show themselves, as it is completely designed to take full advantage of the public Cloud’s powerful capabilities. Therefore applications must undergo optimization and adopt services, including the data aspects.

The next concern with respect to aligning these needs to business, is that organizations that first begin using public Cloud services will only use 10%-15% of the compute capacity that they are paying for. However, mature organizations at the optimization stage use majority of the compute that has been purchased.

Optimization then leads to scalability because when organizations continually optimize, their applications will also be built for an auto-scaling world, which can help them run to maximum capacity so they can quickly scale up when they need to. In which case, application management and self-healing that is automated will only allow you to fully scale-up.

Similarly, private Cloud services may also be accounted for, specifically when deciding as to whether to migrate to public or private Cloud – by carefully considering:

  1. Type of application
  2. Data sovereignty issues being at play, or
  3. Level of security needed

Here’s what we do, when you choose to go with us - Sonata helps with the monitoring of your entire infrastructure (both on and offsite) and disseminating built-in migration reports, as well as, helping you to identify workloads that are primed for migration and check them before, during and after migration, ensuring your success with the Cloud.

One of the bigger advantages for those seeking to migrate, of course, is the opportunity thus offered for provisioning resources faster and with more dynamism in meeting real-time demands. This can help save money on infrastructure that is unused and alleviate the pain for a fretful developer waiting for servers. Appropriately managed, frequent, and comprehensive deploys could actually prove to be more stable. Whereas, a cascade of poorly managed deploys with shorter lead times can result in utter chaos.

So you choose. Don’t you want your Company to be the one to institute processes in managing and optimizing the tension between speed and stability in Cloud environments? You decide.

key aspects
Written By: Marketing Team

Blog

Key Aspects Of A Cloud Governance Framework That Is A Cut Above The Rest

September 26, 2019 7-Minute read

Governance is about providing clear direction, monitoring performance, allocating resources and meeting business objectives, sans parameter breaches of risk tolerance and compliance obligations.

Yet Cloud Governance isn’t mature enough in the market place. Organizations are grappling with implementing and seeding best practices effectively in their global operations.Instituting a Cloud Governance isn’t a trivial job and is not just about Cloud cost management alone, but is also about extending the ITIL framework.

Cloud has additional dimensions to be considered for management:

  • Evolving technology and rapid pace of cloud innovation
  • “As a Service” nature – delivering to demand and speed
  • From silos to Integrated, global yet conjoined data centers

Hence Companies have to draft/redraft policies and set best practices to enable people to manage the dynamic and flexible nature of Cloud infrastructure, Cloud services and Cloud hosted applications – while ensuring the organization goals of cost optimization, security, agility and compliance are met.

Organizations have adopted Governance models that incorporate Finance Management, Operations, Service Provider Management, Portfolio Management, Architecture, etc. In addition,organizations need to include 3 key aspects in adopting Cloud by instituting a Cloud Governance framework that has:

1. Cloud Assets and Resource Management

2. Cloud Strategy and Capability

3. Cloud Service Delivery

  • Provisions, Manages, Monitors and Assesses the organization’s Cloud landscape; this permits organizations to recognize Cloud silos, redundancies in services and shadow IT.
  • Designs and enhances Cloud solutions, by focusing on how the organization should govern them (solutions), so as to keep risks to the barest minimum and maximize the actual potential of Cloud services.
  • Design services, catalogues/ portfolio,
  • Manage service agility and self-service
  • Designs roles and responsibilities and operating model of the Cloud IT organization
  • Define policies, practices and standards
  • Cloud workflows
  • Service SLAs
  • Risk management
  • Metrics and reporting in place.

To stay abreast of the digital evolution, IT is seen to be more pronounced in shifting from its conventional role as an operator of systems, to strategic advisor, to business solution orchestrator.

The Cloud’s increasing ubiquity, combined with a facile procurement and deployment by just about anybody in the business, projects the reality of the role of IT which is more than significant for it.

One bold step that the organizations should take to firmly anchor this partnership, is to have a strongCloud Governance framework in place, that everyone must abide to.And what would the resultant effect be? A rich “Cloud-first” environment that eases into the architecture of the organization, leverages cost efficiencies and considerably lowers risk.