Why you need a multi-cloud strategy for ubiquitous data sharing

Why you need a multi-cloud strategy for ubiquitous data sharing

Geoff Soon, Managing Director of South Asia, Snowflake, tells us about the major challenges businesses might face when implementing a multi-cloud strategy and the importance of delivering cross-cloud capability.

Geoff Soon, Managing Director of South Asia, Snowflake

By 2022, IDC predicts that 55% of Asia Pacific excluding Japanese enterprises will deploy multi-cloud management processes and tools, and unified virtual machines (VMs) Kubernetes to support robust multi-cloud management and governance across on-premises and public cloud.

A multi-cloud strategy enables companies to avoid vendor lock-in while capitalizing on the differing services that the major cloud providers offer, especially around security, application migration, and analytics and application development services.

Other benefits of implementing a multi-cloud strategy includes:  

  • Negotiating rates with cloud providers and maintaining cost management through choice and flexibility
  • Enabling different business units to use a public cloud that best matches their needs and promotes productivity
  • Capitalizing on regional footprints to leverage the best cloud provider by region based on presence, capacity and services for local teams
  • Protecting against a single cloud provider’s multi-region outage, ensuring uptime and SLA adherence

However, companies won’t realize the real value of adopting multiple clouds until cross-cloud capability exists to enable secure data sharing across cloud providers and regions. There is much discussion about where data should be stored and retrieved, from an analytics viewpoint. One thing is for sure, that in the modern era, there is an awful lot of data floating around that might be useful. While data lakes are a prime example of storing masses of data in cloud storage and retrieving it via different means, the next question is – what happens if we have data that is being generated across multiple cloud solutions or in different geographies? Do we move all this data to a single data lake or leave it in the different clouds where it already exists?

Here are some of the major challenges that businesses might face when implementing a multi-cloud strategy.

As soon as data exists in a public cloud, cloud silos are created. As each major cloud provider has created a unique offering with proprietary application programming interfaces (APIs) for data management, there is no easy way to copy or share data from cloud to cloud.

Making matters worse, it is hard to find DevOps employees who have the skill set to work in multiple clouds, which often leads to separate cloud teams within an organization (yet another silo).

Geographical distance also plays a role in creating data silos by region, especially for organizations that operate in multiple locations (regions, countries and continents) – cloud services work best when users are in close proximity. Lastly, data portability could be a problem for all organizations, including those that use open-source technologies and open data formats. Today, there is no easy way to lift multiple petabytes of data to change clouds, open source or otherwise.

Cross-cloud data sharing bridges the multi-cloud divide

The true benefits of a multi-cloud strategy will not materialize until data can be shared and replicated across clouds and regions. Fortunately, cross-cloud capability is the answer. Two basic requirements exist for cross-cloud capability:

  • A cloud-agnostic layer must provide a unified data management platform, which sits on top of each cloud region and all cloud infrastructure regardless of which cloud platforms are used. By providing identical functionality across all cloud platforms, the data management platform enables a cost-effective and seamless method to share data securely.
  • Data must move anywhere easily, which requires a high-throughput communication ‘mesh’ that enables complete data portability.

With cross-cloud capability, organizations will be able to securely share data across regions and cloud accounts while adhering to the same rules of data sharing: Data exists locally in a single source where it’s accessed rather than moved. Plus, the platform will make cross-region asynchronous data replication possible without impacting the performance of accessing primary data.

Global data at your service

In short, a cross-cloud capability removes all barriers to data so businesses can:

  • Analyze all data for decision-making, no matter where the data is located
  • Ensure Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery through cross-cloud replication
  • Perform account migration without data portability concerns

Cross-cloud capability delivers the unified data management platform needed to enable secure data sharing, fully execute multi-cloud strategies and provide organizations with a single source of truth. By enabling data to move freely, cross-cloud capability delivers on the promise of multi-cloud strategies. After all, the true power of data lies in its ability to move freely and securely without borders in order to influence decision-making. With cross-cloud, global data will finally have its say.

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