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The future of multi-cloud

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The age of cloud trepidation is almost over as technological advances put paid to the concerns of old. Vincent Lavergne, RVP, Systems Engineering at F5 Networks discusses what’s next for multi-cloud and why the time for adoption is now.

The ability to keep pace with technological change and consumer demand will push many businesses to breaking point in the next five years. The multi-cloud presents a huge opportunity to innovate and stay ahead of the curve. However, it also presents a new dimension of strategic challenge.

Sponsored by F5 Networks and conducted by the Foresight Factory, The Future of Multi-Cloud (FOMC) report is the first of its kind, providing a unique perspective on multi-cloud as it stands today and charting out the future for both businesses and consumers across Europe, the Middle East, and Africa (EMEA).

Multi-cloud technology is a game-changer and our most powerful conduit for digital transformation yet. It will pave the way for unprecedented innovation, bringing cloud architects, DevOps, NetOps, and SecOps together to pioneer ground-breaking new services that traditional infrastructures simply cannot deliver.

Although challenges exist today related to cost, skills, legal constraints, and legacy infrastructure configurations, the outlook over the next five years is bright.

Technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning will be fundamental to driving higher levels of automation, rendering existing obstructions to multi-cloud obsolete and unlocking the future potential of cloud computing in all its forms and configurations.

The era of cloud apprehension is almost over. Those still wavering on the side lines risk becoming increasingly irrelevant or even extinct in the coming years.

Driving unprecedented agility, efficiency, and cost savings

Genuine profit and innovation yielding digital transformation can only happen at pace, with seamless fluidity and security. Complexity and cost are often trumpeted as impediments to a full multi-cloud embrace, but the tide is changing fast.

Technological progress continues unchecked and corporate cloud literacy is becoming an operational prerequisite. In five years, upfront cost concerns will be a historic, administrative footnote. If harnessed with intelligence and foresight, the expansive opportunities afforded by the multi-cloud opportunity can only benefit the bottom line and earn customer trust through service excellence.

Plugging the skills gap

We live in a security conscious, app-powered, multi-cloud world and the demand for expertise capable of deciphering advanced technology and adding strategic value is reaching fever pitch. It is time to explode the myth that the skills gap is an intractable problem and that cybersecurity and cloud computing are inaccessible career options.

Predictable doomsayers and statistical regurgitations are obvious media staples. We need to highlight the kaleidoscopic potential of youth, promote industry diversity, and deftly discuss how smart, context-driven and automated solutions can spark attractive new career opportunities, as well as free up existing workforces for more strategic and rewarding work.

Safeguarding the future and building trust

Attack surfaces are expanding at exponential rates. Cybercriminals are no longer tinkering hobbyists but instigators of a new “hacking economy” that can outpace businesses innovation. Organisations need to confront the issue head on without compromising on security and quality of service. The ability to quickly develop and deploy scalable applications and services anywhere, on any platform, is vital to meet customer demand and remain competitive.

Implementing a robust, future-proofed ecosystem of integrated security and cloud solutions will help to build end-to- end IT services that give key stakeholders greater context, control, and visibility into the threat landscape. It will also yield the confidence needed to remove the scourge and cost of complexity.

Coping with compliance

The EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is the most comprehensive and far-reaching piece of legislation of its kind. Data-centric reliability has now been elevated to the status of corporate kingmakers.

However, it is not enough. Within five years we need a global standard for data protection. Without it, there will be chaos. The challenge of regulating a borderless digital multi-cloud world is one of the biggest challenges facing governments worldwide and swift collaborative action is urgently needed. Meanwhile, businesses need to stay compliant with existing legislation, which is made ever more complex by cloud computing’s growing influence.

No single cloud solution will suffice

Within five years, most businesses will need to be multi-cloud savvy for compliance, security, customer service and basic survival. Wavering technological laggards are likely to fall by the wayside.

Automation, orchestration, and optimisation is now the mantra for today’s businesses and governments. Expect milestone multi-could moments in the coming years where industries are reshaped. Expect intense challenges from cybersecurity threats, looming skills gaps, and infrastructural deficiencies. Expect unstoppable innovation and change. Expect the future of multi-cloud.

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