The survey concludes that cloud FOMO is driving business leaders to move full-speed ahead on cloud strategies, with 93 percent of respondents stating that they are moving at least some of their processes to the cloud. In addition, 56 percent of respondents stated that they have moved or intend to move not just some, but all of their processes to the cloud.
"The survey unequivocally confirms that Cloud FOMO is real and on the mind of C-level and other IT leaders who are grappling with bringing the value of this new frontier to their organizations, from increasing IT outcomes to being a strategic driver for increased business agility,” said Dan Woods, CTO of CITO Research. “The research indicates the migration toward the cloud is underway in full force, even as companies struggle to understand cloud capabilities. Data protection and recovery was highlighted as a fundamental area where the cloud is having significant business impact."
“Implementing cloud technologies remains an effective way to advance digital transformation within your business. C-level and other IT leaders are rightfully concerned about keeping up with cloud developments,” said Don Foster, senior director of solutions marketing for Commvault. “To be innovative in this transformation, organizations of all sizes must have a clear understanding of how new cloud technology developments enable pragmatic and efficient means for how data is moved, managed, protected and most effectively used with cloud technology, either on-premises or with a cloud provider. These survey results revealing that Cloud FOMO is real are consistent with what Commvault is seeing from our growing customer base, who rely on us as a strategic and trusted partner with the only data management platform in the market today to enable them to move, manage and use data across on-premises and cloud locations.”
Research showed that 75 percent of business leaders viewed data protection and backup as one of the cloud projects that are most impactful to their business -- more than any other cloud project. However, despite seeing data protection and backup as the most impactful use case for the cloud, 63 percent were extremely concerned or very concerned about being able to recover data quickly from the cloud. “Our experience makes it clear that these concerns come from customers who understand they need more than native tools for basic level backup,” continued Foster. “Customers are increasingly aware they need holistic backup and recovery, ensuring that no matter where their data lives – on-premises or in the cloud – it is properly protected and recoverable.”
Other topline findings of the report include:
· Biggest barriers preventing moving more apps and data to the cloud:
o 68 percent cited sheer volume of data
o 65 percent struggle developing staff skills/acquiring talent to support the migration
o 55 percent cited policies across cloud and on-premises data as major barriers
· Cloud migration investment: 87 percent of business leader respondents plan to put more budget toward cloud next year. Meanwhile only four percent anticipate that they’ll be investing less.
· Data security & recovery: 91 percent claim to have implemented data protection for SaaS or cloud based applications.
· Primary customer reasons to move to the cloud:
o Customer focus through business agility: 33 percent
o Cost savings: 22 percent
o Innovation and development of new apps, products and services: 20 percent
For these executives, the journey to the cloud is as positive as it is important. Only one percent of business leaders described their cloud journey as Frustrating and 13 percent found it Expensive, while 51 percent described it as Innovative and 35 percent called it Exciting.
“In Government, we need a lot of flexibility to adapt to change,” said Jon Walton, CIO of County of San Mateo, California. “The business requirements are fluid, procurement and funding timelines are long, and we want the taxpayer to feel as though their money’s being well spent. Today’s cloud survey results are another validation of the forward thinking strategy we outlined years ago to adopt technologies that are on the forefront of disruptive IT trends. By creating a hybrid infrastructure that incorporated both the private cloud, its existing infrastructure, and public cloud services, workloads and data can be easily moved between infrastructures, enabling the County to use whichever infrastructure delivers the best combination of price/performance while ensuring enhanced access to critical information which allows the county to operate smoothly.”