What's the right cloud service for your business?

Is cloud the death of the in-house server?
Head in the cloud? Keep your feet on the ground.

We're constantly told about the evolving cloud market and the benefits it can bring, but with so many different storage services available it can be a challenge nailing down what's right for your business.

What's more, does the proliferation of cloud solutions mean the in-house server is all but dead?

To get some answers, we spoke to Danny Major, managing architect at industry specialist Adapt.

TechRadar Pro: Is cloud still a trend or has it become the new normal?

Danny Major: Working in the service provider industry, cloud has become best practice for our customers - we work with them to find the right-fit cloud for specific tasks and workloads enabling seamless migration between platforms as and when required.

At the other end of the cloud scale we have 'Joe Public' with a collection of apps on his smart phone – this is abstracted away from the cloud yet is very much the leading consumer.

In a recent Cloud Industry Forum Survey, it was revealed that 75% of UK businesses are now officially in the cloud. Cloud has definitely become the new normal, but businesses are still only part way through their journey.

TRP: How does working with the cloud differ to working with an in-house server?

DM: When an organisation evaluates their IT strategy, I urge them to focus on the required business outcomes rather than technology.

With this in mind, the differences of cloud compared to in-house are around enhancements in flexibility, scale and peace of mind – all whilst performing seamlessly to maintain a 'business as usual' environment.

TRP: Is there still a role for the on-premise server?

DM: The idea of the on-premise server is not only eroded by the concept of cloud but also by the mindset of the modern worker, where a 'work from anywhere' approach has been adopted.

With recent developments in Desktop as a Service (DaaS) solutions, users can gain a consistent experience whether they work on a mobile device or home desktop. Couple this with enhanced bandwidth speeds and the need for localised file shares and applications become redundant.

Where an organisation has invested in on-premise infrastructure (to assist and stage the journey to the cloud whilst making use of their capital investments), I have seen on-premise equipment being used as a disaster recovery (DR) facility as part of a hybrid or distributed cloud.

This is a short-term fix and as the equipment ages, the business would need to decide where their resources are best placed to meet their security, DR and business continuity needs.

TRP: What's happened recently to signal this change?

DM: The access anywhere approach of today's workforce has been a significant driving force in the uptake of cloud services.

I would say the ease of the adoption of this new technology is a key factor of this change, benefiting both the system administrators who manage the environments and the business lines that the platform underpins.

Whenever there is this level of alignment between technology and business outcomes, a fast rate of change is inevitable.

TRP: What are the main advantages of cloud computing, from a business point of view?

DM: For me the main advantages of cloud are its flexibility, its transparency and its ability to enable business change. A great example is speed to delivery - the request process, business case and sign-off, and then the management, physical delivery and deployment of the server.

Today, in a cloud-based world, the approval and deployment can be streamlined, and most importantly, the value can be delivered back to the business in a far shorter time frame.

As businesses also look to leverage their data through warehousing and analysis, solutions can be deployed to the scale needed, when needed and then throttled back to balance the cost vs. benefit achieved.

Desire Athow
Managing Editor, TechRadar Pro

Désiré has been musing and writing about technology during a career spanning four decades. He dabbled in website builders and web hosting when DHTML and frames were in vogue and started narrating about the impact of technology on society just before the start of the Y2K hysteria at the turn of the last millennium.

Latest in Pro
Concept art representing cybersecurity principles
What businesses need for modern third-party risk management
An American flag flying outside the US Capitol building against a blue sky
Mass federal layoffs will have “devastating impact on cybersecurity, former NSA cybersecurity director warns
Half man, half AI.
How finance teams can avoid falling behind in the AI race
eSIM
Global eSIM shipment volume surpasses half a billion units as demand keeps on growing
woman sit on couch near laptop take break reduce stress do yoga meditation exercise to calm down self control get rid of negative emotions, bad e-mail, difficult task, problems at work concept
IT industry workers hit badly by burnout, stress - but there's still potential for success
Home internet connection. A wlan router on desk with notebook in background.
Cloudflare admits security tool is blocking some challenger browsers
Latest in News
An Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 resting on an RTX 5090 on a gray crafting mat.
Corsair tells us only one of its prebuilt PCs with an RTX 5000 GPU has suffered from chip-level fault, suggesting it’s as rare as Nvidia claimed
ChatGPT WhatsApp
New survey suggests the vast majority of iPhone and Samsung Galaxy users find AI useless – and to be honest, I’m not surprised
A hunter holds up a Grav Bowfin and smiles
How to catch a Gravid Bowfin in Monster Hunter Wilds
Quordle on a smartphone held in a hand
Quordle hints and answers for Friday, March 7 (game #1138)
NYT Strands homescreen on a mobile phone screen, on a light blue background
NYT Strands hints and answers for Friday, March 7 (game #369)
NYT Connections homescreen on a phone, on a purple background
NYT Connections hints and answers for Friday, March 7 (game #635)