According to IDC FutureScape: Worldwide Cloud 2016 Predictions, at least half of IT spending will be cloud-based by 2018 and grow to as much as 70 percent of all IT infrastructure spending (all software, services, and technology) by 2020. That growth is being largely driven by infrastructure as a service (IaaS), which has transformed the way IT departments around the world function and has changed the way business is done.
Essentially, IaaS brings the benefit of the needed computing power and the desired computing capabilities without the added burden and costs of equipment, maintenance, and housing. Although that’s a very big deal, its benefits and impact are much further-reaching as it continues to rise and transform all facets of business for everyone from the SMB to the global enterprise. To understand its rise and importance to every business, it’s crucial to understand the many potential benefits that it brings to the business.
In the digital business era, data is the engine fueling the business, so data growth and its associated needs have made it untenable to rely solely on in-house data centers. Whether public, private, or hybrid, Infrastructure as a service has completely transformed the business landscape by enabling cost reductions while drastically improving agility, scalability, flexibility, and security.
Managing a traditional data center and its complex infrastructure is costly. That’s one reason why the current maturity and dominance of IaaS is rooted in its ability to dramatically reduce costs in ways that enable businesses to reduce or even eliminate their data center footprint. The virtual nature of IaaS means that businesses can:
Businesses must struggle with viable means of securing data at rest and in transit while also dealing with data growth. Cyber threats, as well as other disasters that can mean downtime at best and data loss in the worst-case scenarios, are increasing in lockstep with a shifting mix of regulatory compliance needs for customer and client data. With IaaS, the leading providers maintain state-of-the-art facilities, security, firewalls, and higher operating standards that meet or exceed SOX, FDA, PCI, and HIPAA requirements.
The rise of IaaS has been fueled by the fact that any disaster, whether man-made or natural, that threatens operational uptime and data availability must be avoided. In the on-site data center world, necessary redundancy comes at too high a cost, so IaaS provides a consolidated business continuity and disaster recovery infrastructure that:
While cost reductions and increased security have played a major part in the rise of infrastructure as a service, these are just some of the benefits that are tied to its ability to enable greater business flexibility, agility, and elasticity. Some of the more salient ways that IaaS increases these attributes for business are:
Infrastructure as a service has reached a maturity level that removes the doubt of adoption by large and small businesses. As it continues to mature, it also continues to evolve to be compatible with the evolution of technology, as well as the needs of businesses across sectors operating globally. While IaaS is not a ready-made panacea for all challenges and goals, its building blocks hold the key to customized cloud services approaches that fit the needs of every business today and tomorrow.