Intelligent Data Centres Issue 12 | Page 41

EXPERT OPINION the job you’re doing isn’t good enough anymore. In addition, with automation one of the core technologies enabled by the cloud, innovation can actually compound hesitation due to the perceived risk it poses to their job security. In reality, the opposite is true. The cloud stands to liberate employees from keeping the organisation’s core processes running and give them the time and space they need to grow their skillset. In fact, failing to retain staff is tantamount to undermining the resilience of the business, especially during periods of change. These are the people who understand where the challenges lie in the current system, as well as where the shortcuts are (i.e. system rationalisation) and existing best practices that should be retained. Businesses undergoing modernisation need to seize the opportunity to empower their staff not only with new digital tools, but through regular engagement and bespoke training programmes that reinforce an individual employee’s sense of worth to the business. www.intelligentdatacentres.com Applications With the freedom that cloud affords (i.e. public vs. private, scalable infrastructure, etc.) also comes the paradox of choice. With things like cost, security and regulation already muddying the waters when it comes to choosing which applications to host in public vs private cloud environments, businesses must also find the best execution venue from which they can be run. This is especially true for the myriad businesses with legacy IT looking to modernise using the cloud. Issues such as latency and shadow IT can lead to network paths being disrupted when legacy applications are migrated. This leads to businesses being bitten by early onset issues and a premature return to hosting applications in-house, dealing a massive blow to the momentum of modernisation strategies. It’s clear that the on-premises data centre is here to stay, bolstered by the bourgeoning number of partnerships between typical data centre providers and cloud providers offering hybrid cloud solutions. Hybrid gives businesses the flexibility needed to find the best location for the application, (i.e. where it will be secure and where it will encounter better application uptime). Crucially, hybrid breeds resilience, as it allows businesses to take an incremental approach to migrating to the cloud and mitigate the chance of disruption when moving high-risk applications. While no one wants change processes to drag on, it’s equally important that businesses BUSINESSES MUST NOT UNDERESTIMATE THE GRAVITY THAT MOVING TO A CLOUD-BASED BUSINESS MODEL ENTAILS. Issue 12 41