Cisco has released the findings of a global study, which revealed that while cloud adoption continues to accelerate, few organisations are maximising the value that cloud can offer.
According to the study, nearly 68 percent of organisations are using cloud to help drive business outcomes, a 61 percent increase from last year’s study. The increased cloud adoption is being fueled by cloud-native applications, including security and the Internet of Things (IoT) cloud-based solutions.
However, most organisations (69 percent) do not have mature cloud strategies yet and only three percent have optimised cloud strategies generating superior business outcomes.
The study further revealed that on average, the most ‘cloud advanced’ organisations see an annual benefit per cloud-based application of $3 million in additional revenues and $1 million in cost savings. These revenue increases have been largely the result of sales of new products and services, gaining new customers faster, or accelerated ability to sell into new markets.
“Our customers are dealing with increasingly diverse and complex environments as their hybrid and multicloud deployments grow. These customers want the freedom to choose the best environments and consumption models for their traditional and cloud native applications, which all drive a variety of business benefits. Yet, as this research bears out, while many customers are embracing cloud, most are still in the early stages of their journey to an optimised cloud model. That is where our new and enhanced Cisco Professional Services can help. Working with our partners, our joint services offerings are designed to help customers achieve a highly secure and optimised cloud environment specific to their unique business needs,” said Mike Weston, Vice President, Cisco Middle East.
The report also highlighted that 95 percent of those leading organisations with optimised cloud strategies have built a hybrid IT environment that uses multiple private and public clouds based on economics, location and governance policies.
The Cisco-sponsored InfoBrief “Cloud going mainstream: All are trying, some are benefiting; few are maximising value” was developed by International Data Corporation (IDC). The study is based on primary market research conducted with executives responsible for IT decisions in over 6,100 organisations across 31 countries that are successfully implementing private, public and hybrid clouds in their IT environments. This marks the second year of the study, nearly doubling last year’s sample size.
In the study, IDC identifies five levels of cloud maturity: ad hoc, opportunistic, repeatable, managed and optimised.
According to the study, organisations face a number of obstacles to achieving greater cloud maturity, including capabilities and skills gaps, lack of a well-defined strategy and roadmap, legacy siloed organisational structures, and Information Technology/Line of Business (IT/LOB) misalignment.
To address these growing requirement from the industry, Cisco is launching a new set of Cloud Professional Services to help businesses navigate the multicloud maze and optimise their cloud environments. These services will help customers bridge the skill-set gaps they may be facing as they accelerate their digital transformation strategies and cloud native initiatives. In the future, the company also plans to offer an integrated strategy workshop combining the Cisco DomainTen Service with Cisco Business Cloud Advisor Workshop.