ITBusiness.ca

Look before you jump into the cloud

The benefits of moving to a cloud computing hosting provider can be enticing – a more resilient IT infrastructure, moving the expense from your capital expenditure budget to your operating expenditure budget and freeing up IT resources to focus on more strategic initiatives, to name just three.


The Enterprise Connectivity Series
Future-proofing your business

Why managed Wi-Fi makes sense for business

Reducing the cost and complexity of network security

How upgrading your network can deliver a competitive advantage

Keeping it simple: Tackling infrastructure complexity

Three ways businesses can shed the burden of managing mobile devices and data

However, as with any new IT initiative, it’s important to look before you leap. The cloud may not be right for every part of your IT infrastructure, and not every cloud service provider is created equally. Before you sign on the dotted line, carefully consider which of your applications are right for the cloud, and make sure you ask the right questions of your potential hosting partner.

Consider if the cloud is right for you

There’s a lot of buzz around cloud computing, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s right for you. There may be some workloads and applications that, for reasons from compliance to peace of mind, it makes more sense to keep in house. Conduct a careful inventory of your IT infrastructure, and carefully consider what you can outsource and what should stay home – Rogers has a professional services group that can help you make this evaluation.

Among the things to consider are if your application usage patterns are predictable – the more predictable, the better suited to the cloud. Even if they can be unpredictable, carrying workloads can be something a service provider can handle better than you, given their dedicated resources and expertise. Do you need a global presence for these applications – if so, make sure your potential provider is equipped to handle it. If you have applications that need access to services within your secure network, would moving the application to the cloud raise complications? Can the hosted model meet your security and regulatory requirements? And does business agility gained justify the disruption to your users and operations that will come with the transition?

Be sure you’re confident in the answers to these questions before you go shopping and sit down to talk turkey with your cloud service provider to be.

Key questions for your cloud service provider to be

Handing over the keys to your business critical systems is not a decision to be taken lightly, so make sure you do your homework and ask some key questions before you sign a contract.

As long as you do your homework and ask the right questions going in – and a quality cloud service provider will be more than willing to address all your concerns — your cloud hosting relationship should be a long and successful one for both parties.

Exit mobile version