How data centre products can build synergies with the public cloud

Today’s competitive digital enterprise needs innovative technology to drive organisational agility, resilience, and powerful decision-making. The cloud has risen as a great enabler of modern enterprise.

Once seen merely as a cheap storage location, the cloud has now become central to almost all organisational aspects and transformation endeavours of large and small organisations alike. Almost all organisations are now aware of how they can create better value with the cloud and stay ahead of the competition.

Today, the cloud is a part of almost every organisation’s vocabulary, especially as the public cloud becomes more secure and aligned to enterprise needs. Obviously, the rise of the public cloud has also impacted data centre products.

Data centre products have been around for quite some time now. These products were built considering the needs of the on-premises data centre in mind. However, with the rise of the cloud, these data centre products have had to work towards building synergies with the public cloud to ensure they keep delivering value to their enterprise customers.

The growing role of data in applications

New-age technologies such as AI are now rapidly becoming more mainstream. AI applications are data-intensive and demand faster data access more frequently along with robust data processing capabilities.

On-premises data centre applications do not have the capabilities to be as nimble since the enterprise can only store and process a certain amount of data in the on-premises data centre. The cloud is attractive as a solution to this challenge, as it helps enterprises expand their data capabilities by giving them more data storage and faster computational capabilities to drive real-time data-driven applications.

Complex, legacy application alert

Reducing the complexity of data centre products and making them more flexible to integrate with, has become imperative to leverage the power of the cloud. Organisations can no longer afford to remain tethered to inflexible stacks that do not support automation. Mission-critical, complex, legacy applications that remain in data centres thus need an upgrade and have to be modernised to leverage the capabilities of the cloud.

ISVs, thus, must look at product modernisation to add new capabilities into existing applications. This move entails product enhancement or migrating them from traditional architectures to current ones, re-platforming, re-engineering, re-coding, or replacing. It is also important to evaluate the effort required to further these initiatives and assess if the product should be retired.

Legacy application modernisation is crucial to building synergies with the cloud to be able to fulfill business needs.

Application assessment for application remediation

As organisations chase agility, flexibility, and performance, assessing the capability of existing data centre products becomes crucial as a first step to building synergies with the cloud. Conducting a gap analysis to identify whether the application should be renewed, refactored, or simply improved is where the journey begins.

This application assessment should include a review of the application architecture and identify specific components as part of this phase. Functional validation is another crucial step to track if all functionalities are up to scale. Finally, these application components need to be mapped to cloud-specific workflows to achieve efficient scale-out/scale-back of resources and be considered cloud-ready.

Consider application migration

Some data centre applications need a little more work than application remediation to be suitable for the cloud. This usually happens in the case of legacy applications owing to their architecture and associated variables. When application remediation can’t modernise the application to the desired state, organisations have to consider application migration to a more standardised ecosystem.

In this situation, having a strong application migration plan is essential to ensure business continuity and productivity among enterprise customers. Along with re-hosting, re-architecting, and re-factoring applications, the migration plan has to also make considerations for migrating applications from traditional architecture to a microservices-based architecture.

Evaluating architectural elements and development approaches like containerisation, cloud-native application development, and application integration with cloud platforms is crucial. Looking at application deployment, CI-CD pipelines, monitoring, intelligent analytics, UX/UI, etc. also become important aspects to consider during application migration.

Ecosystem integration is key

Consolidating legacy and new technology installations and processes into product plans are also key organisational imperatives to enable enterprise digital transformation initiatives. These consolidations are also essential to drive productivity by enabling easy automation of repetitive tasks. Building in the ability to integrate diverse systems and data sources also become important consideration points to help customers speed up time to market, improve efficiencies, and reduce costs.

To build synergy between the cloud and data centre products, organisations also have to manage storage subsystems seamlessly for easy storage provisioning and to address tasks without having to switch between multiple management interfaces. For ISVs building data centre products, this is an opportunity to create management interfaces to simplify the ecosystem. Developing customised plug-ins for hypervisors such as VMware, Microsoft, Linux, and Citrix enables management of these subsystems from a single UI, essentially becoming cogs in the wheel to drive ecosystem integration.

In a nutshell

IDC predicts that the global data sphere will stand at 175 zettabytes by 2025. To meet the demands of the data-driven world, ISVs have to evolve their data centre products to work well with the public cloud. Developing synergies with the public cloud thus does not seem like an option anymore, but rather an imperative that will help ISVs gain that necessary competitive differentiation.

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The post How Data Center Products Can Build Synergies with the Public Cloud appeared first on Storage, Networking, Virtualization and Cloud Blogs – Calsoft Inc. Blog.

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