CIOs increasingly prioritizing hybrid IT strategies to manage complexity of running applications and data across clouds.
Nutanix has released the findings of its sixth global Enterprise Cloud Index (ECI) survey and research report, which measures enterprise progress with cloud adoption.
This year’s ECI report revealed the use of hybrid multicloud models is forecasted to double over the next one to three years as IT decision makers are facing new pressures to modernise IT infrastructures because of drivers like AI, security and sustainability.
As organisations continue to grapple with the complexities of moving applications and data across environments, the ECI report highlights the growing importance of hybrid multicloud infrastructure.
The report found that security and innovation were the top drivers for moving applications from one environment to another over the past year.
As AI takes center stage for businesses, ECI respondents identified increasing investments to support AI strategy as their top priority, followed closely by investment in IT modernisation.
“Whether it be because of AI, sustainability or security imperatives, IT organisations are facing ever-increasing pressure to modernise their IT
infrastructure quickly,” said Lee Caswell, SVP, Product and Solutions Marketing, Nutanix.
“Eighty per cent of ECI respondents are planning to invest in IT modernisation, with 85% planning to increase their investments specifically to support AI. What this year’s ECI reveals is that organisations need to support the technologies of tomorrow by future proofing their IT infrastructure today. Hybrid multicloud continues to emerge as the infrastructure standard of choice because of the flexibility it provides to support traditional VM and modern containerized applications and movement between clouds and on-prem.”
Key findings from this year’s report include:
Hybrid multicloud infrastructure deployments will become an infrastructure standard. Ninety per cent of ECI respondents are taking a “cloud smart” approach to their infrastructure strategy – leveraging the best environment (e.g., data center, public cloud, edge) for each of their applications. Given the pervasiveness of this approach hybrid and multicloud environments have become the de facto infrastructure standard. Furthermore, over 80% of organisations believe hybrid IT environments are most beneficial to their ability to manage applications and data. This is now becoming an executive priority, with nearly half of respondents noting that implementing hybrid IT is a top priority for their CIO.
Ransomware protection is top of mind for both CXOs and practitioners but most organisations continue to struggle in the wake of attacks. Ransomware and malware attacks will remain existential threats to modern enterprises, with the cat-and-mouse game between malicious actors and enterprise security professionals set to continue throughout 2024. Yet, data protection and recovery remain a challenge, as 71% of ECI respondents who experienced a ransomware attack reported taking days or even weeks to restore full operations. To help address this, 78% of organisations say they plan to increase investments in ransomware protection solutions throughout this year.
As organisations seek equilibrium driven by security and innovation, application and data movement remains a complex challenge. Enterprise workloads – including their applications and data – often find their way into the IT environment which best suits their needs, whether that environment is an on-premises data center, the public cloud, a smaller edge location or a mix of all three. This diversity of application placement is part of the reason why 95% of ECI respondents say they moved applications from one environment to another over the past year, with security and innovation as the top drivers for this movement. Enterprises should expect application and data movement to remain constant and plan infrastructure choices accordingly – emphasizing flexibility and visibility. Organisations face significant roadblocks when it comes to executing complex application migrations, with 35% of ECI respondents saying workload and application migration is a significant challenge given their current IT infrastructure.
IT teams aren’t just planning their sustainability programs, they are actively implementing them starting with IT modernisation. Eighty-eight per cent of ECI respondents agree that sustainability is a priority for their organisation. However, unlike in the previous report where action was limited, many organisations indicate they are already taking active steps to implement sustainability initiatives, with the most common being modernizing IT infrastructure. This shows the direct impact of IT infrastructure on sustainability.
Infrastructure modernisation is becoming an imperative, driven by AI, modern applications and data growth. ECI respondents identified increased investment to support AI strategy as their top priority, followed closely by investment in IT modernisation. Furthermore, 37% of ECI respondents indicate running AI applications on their current IT infrastructure will be a “significant” challenge. To mitigate and overcome this challenge, organisations are prioritizing IT modernisation and edge infrastructure deployments, which can facilitate faster processing and access to data. This, in turn, can help improve their ability to link data from multiple environments to give better visibility into where data resides across their sprawling ecosystems.
For the sixth consecutive year, Vanson Bourne conducted research on behalf of Nutanix, surveying 1,500 IT and DevOps/Platform Engineering decision-makers around the world in December 2023.
The respondent base spanned multiple industries, business sizes and geographies, including North and South America and Asia-Pacific-Japan (APJ) region.