Frost & Sullivan Architecting the Cloud-Industry Best Practices
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Transcript of Frost & Sullivan Architecting the Cloud-Industry Best Practices
Architecting the Cloud – Industry Best Practices
Agenda
1 Cloud – Evolution or Revolution?
2 Customer Trends in APAC
3 Architecting the Cloud
2
Business Speak:
Business Agility
Revenue Maximization
Cost Savings
Mergers & Acquisitions
Tech Speak:
Cutting edge technology
Vendor Consolidation
Optimizing IT efficiency
Compliance and Security
Business & IT – Never the twain shall meet ?
3
New product innovation
Workforce empowerment
Enabling Collaboration
Supporting new devices / technologies
Cloud Computing – An evolution in Automation
4
Characteristics Service Types Deployment Models
Software as a ServiceSoftware delivered through the public
or private network
A pool of compute, memory and i/o resources, applications or operating environments with seemingly infinite scalability, delivered as a service over a network, be it private or public.
Enterprise
Enterprise
Public
Cloud
Private
PUBLIC
PRIVATE
On Demand, Self-
Service
Pay As You Use, Metered
Consumption
Cloud Computing - Frost & Sullivan Definition
5
Platform as a ServiceDevelopment platform as a
service
Infrastructure as a ServiceCompute, storage as a service
EnterprisePrivate
Cloud
EnterprisePrivate
Cloud
HYBRID
Public
Cloud
COMMUNITY
Enterprise2
Enterprise3
Enterprise1
Community
Cloud
Rapid Elasticity, Scale
Up/Down
Shared Pools, Illusion of
Infinite Resources
Broad Network Access
using Standard Internet
Protocols
How Does Cloud Change the Conversation?
Cloud
Utility Computing
CAPEX to OPEX ; Predictability ; Pay as you Use
IT team can focus on innovation than mundane stuff
6
Cloud Computing
Provisioning Time
Ubiquitous Access
Automation
Business Agility ; Quick time to market
Anytime, Any device, Any network, Anytime, Any device, Any network, Anywhere Access
Agenda
1
Customer Trends in APAC2
Cloud – Evolution or Revolution?
3 Architecting the Cloud
7
5%
3%
16%
21%
33%
39%
35%
30%
11%
7%
There is more pressure on me from the top management to
I believe that Cloud computing is going to shrink IT teams
and make some jobs redundant
At this stage, the risks of cloud far outweigh the benefits
Perception of Cloud Computing
Cloud Computing Perception in APAC
8
6%
4%
8%
20%
19%
28%
36%
38%
33%
27%
29%
25%
11%
11%
6%
Cloud Computing is my # 1 priority for current/future fiscal
year
Public Clouds are less secure than private clouds
There is more pressure on me from the top management to
procure Cloud services
Strongly disagre Somewhat disagree Neutral Somewhat agree Strongly agree
Source: Frost & Sullivan
N = 600
Adoption level and type of cloud
71%
14%
8%29%
Cloud Computing Adoption in APAC
9
Source: Frost & Sullivan
N = 600
7%
Not adopted yet < 1 Year 1-3 Years > 3 Years
Order of priority of ICT components in building a Private cloud
3.6
3.3
3.2
3.6
3.2
3.2
3.4
3.1
Cloud Computing – ICT Building Blocks
10
Source: Frost & Sullivan
1 – Least Critical
5 – Most Critical N = 600
Server Virtualization
Storage Virtualization
LAN Switching
WAN Routing Network Security
Load Balancers/ Application
Delivery Controllers
WAN Optimization
Application Security &
Access Control
IT Service Management
Tools
3.1
3.1
Agenda
1
Architecting the Cloud
2
Cloud – Evolution or Revolution?
3
Customer trends in APAC
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•• Server, Storage, Network, Application Virtualization
• Data center consolidation
• Shared pools, Efficiency improvements, Dynamic workloads
Optimize •• Self-service provisioning
• Orchestration
• Lifecycle management
• Metering and billing • Monitoring
• Analytics
Manage
Cloud Computing – Implementation Journey
IT infrastructure needs to be prepared well before moving to cloud
12
Consolidate Automate
Source: Frost & Sullivan
Cloud Enablement – Architectural Framework
USERSUSERS
BillingService Service
ManagementReporting
Service CatalogueService
CatalogueSelf-service
PortalSelf-service
Portal
Business Support
13
Compute Network Storage
Resource ProvisioningResource Provisioning
OrchestrationLifecycle ManagementLifecycle Management
MonitoringCapacityPlanningCapacityPlanning
Analytics
BillingManagementManagement
Reporting
Operation Support System
Support System
Virtual Fabric
Automating the Cloud Environment
Centralized templates
Flexible service creation
Governance and Reporting
14
Cloud Automation
Self service provisioning
Chargeback / Billing
User management
Resource Lifecycle
Management
On-premise Private Cloud
- IT as a Service
- Automation reduces manual errors
- IT led template creation with control
- Metering and Chargeback
Hosted Private Cloud
- Effective consolidation, automation and delivery of resource pools
- Flexible template creation and rapid roll-out
- On-demand provisioning
- Micro-billing and chargeback
Cloud Automation
Cloud Automation Use Cases
15
Public Clouds
- Self-service portal
- Standard and custom template creation
- Dynamic resource assignment and efficient resource usage
- Micro-billing and chargeback
Hybrid Clouds
- Platform agnosticness
- Multi-cloud management
- Rapid control of resource pool, both on and off-premise
- Metering and Chargeback
Cloud Automation Use Cases
Source: Frost & Sullivan Analysis
Cloud Computing : User Migration Path
Awareness
• Awareness through attending seminars, networking, reading
Interest
• Talk with peers, BU heads / IT teams on viability, Discuss with vendors and service providers
Pilot• Choose “specific projects” to run pilots. Formulate best practices, lessons learnt
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Analysis
• Conduct IT baseline assessment, Internal/external outreach, Suitability of cloud types, Finalize “Cloud ready” data and apps
Implementation
• Organization wide outreach, Communicate clearly goals, progress, and benefits, Share success stories and analyze failures
Improvement
• Focus on continuous improvement, Cloud isn’t a destination but a journey
Security & Privacy Rapid Provisioning
Stringent SLAWeb App
Frameworks
Building a Cloud Framework - Checklist
Measurability and Monitoring
Centralized Management
17
Cloud Computing
Virtualization SOA Broadband
Browser as a Platform
Open Source
Source: Frost & Sullivan
Commoditized Hardware
Key Restraints that need to be addressed
Key Restraints
Privacy, Security and
Loss of Control Concerns
Integration ChallengesLack of Stringent SLAs
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Source: Frost & Sullivan
Limited Availability of
Reliable and High
Speed Internet
Regulatory
Compliance Issues
Resistance from IT
teams
Real-time visibility
and reporting
Lack of Standards
Implications of Cloud Computing
•Business skills such as project, relationship management will take front-seat
• Cloud will run on Commoditized, open source platforms with stringent SLA’s
It is all about Business
• IT automation will render several “dull” IT jobs obsolete
• Skills in demand will include technical architects, vendor relationship managers, risk management professionalsIT departments will shrink
• SMB’s have an unique ability to scale quickly and obtain access to enterprise class infrastructure
SMB’s will have access to
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access to enterprise class infrastructure
• Advent of start-ups that live in the “Cloud” with no infrastructure
SMB’s will have access to Enterprise class ICT
resources
•MNC’s and Conglomerates will offer “IT as a Service” both internally potentially to external customers as well
• Drastic improvements in efficiency, effectiveness and measurability of IT
Conglomerates will become “Service providers”
• “ Browser” is the software and “Internet” is the network
• Ubiquitous access from any device, anytime, anywhere, any networkBrowser is the software
For Additional Information
Donna Jeremiah
Corporate Communications
Asia Pacific
+603 6204 5832
Carrie Low
Corporate Communications
Asia Pacific
+603 6204 5910
20
Arun Chandrasekaran
Research Director
ICT Practice, Asia Pacific
Jessie Loh
Corporate Communications
Asia Pacific
+65 6890 0942
Global Growth Partnership Company
Arun Chandrasekaran
Research Director
Frost & Sullivan
21