Today, for any businesses to stay ahead of the demands of digital transformation, including faster access to emerging technologies, on-demand capacity and for unlimited scalability, flexibility, reliability, adoption of multicloud strategy is exigency.
A growing number of enterprises already use more than one cloud provider and over 30% of them use upwards of four. It is believed that by the end of the decade nearly all enterprises will have adopted a multicloud strategy of some kind, as it gives them greater flexibility and even more potential for rapid innovation and deployment.
Multiple clouds makes businesses more scalable and agile, allows for the adoption of best-of-breed technologies, and provides far better disaster recovery, it can also improve data-loss resilience, make it easier to exploit pricing programs and consumption, help companies comply with data independency and geopolitical barriers, and enable organizations to deliver the best available infrastructure, platform, and software services.
Endow with Robust Security
Security is a top concern for businesses across every industry, and rightly so. Hackers can range from individuals to competitors to governments and if companies’ all valuable data is in one basket, a malicious attack can have disastrous consequences for business, even halting operations permanently.
When it comes to mitigating risk, multi-cloud solutions spread out a safety net in the event of a DDoS or another type of attack. If one of the cloud services fails, it’s easy to turn to one of the other providers and reduce the amount of damage done in as short a time as possible.
Ensuring Optimization of Solution
It might be easy to assume that cloud environments are all the same, which may be true on the surface. However, public cloud environments like Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud Platform are built with specific purposes in mind. While a majority of their services cover basic tasks and solutions that any cloud provider will offer, many are tailor-made to focus on specific verticals or processes. Microsoft Azure, for example, highlights several platform-as-a-service (PaaS) offerings, making it an ideal choice for program and application developers.
Efficient Costing
As public cloud vendors operate on a pay-as-you-use pricing model, a company will only pay for the cloud services they use, not an all-inclusive package. Thus, it’s easy for enterprises to pick and choose which offerings they want to use from each vendor. Though maintaining cost management for multicloud deployments is still important. However, some of the tasks, like data storage, computing, and app development are supported by multiple cloud providers. If a company needs or wants a cloud-based solution for such tasks, it has to figure out which provider offers the best service for the enterprise.
Evades Vendor lock-in
One of the biggest challenges of cloud computing for enterprises is vendor lock-in. This happens when a business becomes so reliant on one vendor’s solutions and services that they make it difficult for them to stop using their offerings. Enterprises running a single cloud deployment face this issue all the time, especially if they decide to switch cloud providers. The resources you build in one cloud environment might not work in another environment without reconfiguring or rebuilding it entirely. However,
deploying a multi-cloud strategy can lead to substantial benefits, using multiple cloud computing services such as infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS), platform-as-a-service (PaaS), and software-as-a-service (SaaS) in a single heterogeneous architecture offers the ability to reduce dependence on any single vendor, it’s become easier for companies to move data between cloud environments. Thus, operating multiple cloud deployments extends organizational ability to build, run, and maintain projects in the cloud.