Cloud migration is well underway as enterprises embrace the cost efficiency and operational flexibility of cloud solutions. However, organisations are moving at different paces according to their scale, requirements and sensitivities surrounding security and data sovereignty. The move to cloud in general is well advanced with recent research from IDG reporting that 90% of companies will have at least some part of their applications or infrastructure in the cloud by 2019, with the rest expected to follow by 2021.
Cloud migration encompasses all types of organisations from small to medium-sized businesses (SMBs), looking to gain large enterprise IT services through multi-tenant cloud propositions that aggregate the purchasing power of multiple SMBs, to large enterprises adopting private cloud technologies.
βAll types of enterprises are suited to moving to cloud-based infrastructure and cloud is disruptive to businesses of all sizes,β confirms Steve Forcum, the manager of cloud solutions engineering at Avaya.
βThe challenge weβre suited to solving is that multi-tenant cloud is not a panacea. Weβre cleaning up by helping large enterprises get what they wantβ
βFor some, at the larger end of the market, weβre setting up DevOps environments and theyβre ready to go to cloud. Others are looking at getting cloud benefits such as OpEX reduction and weβre able to use our OneCloud ReadyNow offerings to give them these benefits without having to take a traditional, over-the-top (OTT) multi-tenant service.β
Forcum points out that the OneCloud ReadyNow private cloud offerings, which feature pre-configured bundles of UCaaS and CCaaS solutions, offer the benefits of public cloud in terms of reduced cost and complexity while also providing the reduced risk associated with on-premise solutions.
βMoving to a public cloud environment from Avaya or anyone is a non-starter for enterprises,β he adds. βThey simply wonβt give up that level of control and I donβt see large businesses ever going to fully multi-tenant cloud propositions. For real-time voice and call centre communications I donβt think youβll see public cloud adoption but you will see aggressive moves to private and hybrid cloud, there are big drives from Microsoft and AWS in this area.β
Avaya sees the hybrid approach being attractive to organisations and expects them to adopt to blended solutions that utilise on-premise, private and public cloud infrastructure according to the applications involved. βIt will be a mix of all of these at the larger end β private cloud will be used for sensitive parts of the business,β explains Forcum.
βThe majority of the growth will be in OpEX-based private, blended cloud adoption. However, I donβt think on-premises will ever go away completelyβ
Forcum gives an example of a large bank in Florida that has thousands of seats for agents and has just acquired a competitor with 200 users at 20 branches which it needs to bring in as quickly as possible. Itβs using public cloud to accelerate on-boarding of agents while turning to private cloud solutions for the more sensitive areas of its business. Β βItβs a case of blending solutions so theyβre appropriate for the service being supported,β he says.
βDoes the phone in the kitchen need private cloud? No. Does fraud control need it? Yes.β
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