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Why multi-cloud is already a top technology trend for 2023

By Fred Mitchell, software division head at Drive Control Corporation (DCC)

Johannesburg, 06 Apr 2023
Fred Mitchell, software division head, Drive Control Corporation (DCC).
Fred Mitchell, software division head, Drive Control Corporation (DCC).

Enterprises are increasingly customising their cloud infrastructures to readily meet business requirements. It is also this move that has seen multi-cloud emerging as one of the top technology trends for 2023.

As organisations continue to transition their networking and IT infrastructures to cloud, it is becoming harder to ignore the opportunities and benefits that come with multi-cloud environments.

For one, a multi-cloud approach provides a business with the flexibility to manage and protect data across different environments – private and public. Maintaining this freedom, choice, control and agility is crucial for future growth, as well as meeting regulatory and statutory requirements.

The move towards multi-cloud is driven by several requirements and resultant benefits:

  • Flexible - being locked into a single cloud vendor, or a single type of cloud infrastructure does not always provide flexibility needed to control costs, maintain control over information and the ability to evolve as more cloud operations become available.
  • Cost-effective – it provides enterprises with the freedom to select the best products and services for their business needs.
  • From technology to business – instead of reinventing the wheel each time businesses create their own cloud, there is a growing awareness of the value of sharing key components of multi-cloud infrastructures.

Key to this business-driven discussion is the acceptance and evolution of the idea some call industry cloud platforms or vertical industry clouds. These are multi-cloud infrastructures with built-in, modular functionality tailored to a specific vertical industry.

Verticals are leading the charge

We’re seeing vertical industries such as banking, healthcare, telco and manufacturing leading the multi-cloud movement. It allows these sectors to share an agile platform already supported by a portfolio of baked-in, industry-specific, pre-packaged business capabilities directly relevant for their individual industries.

These modular components can then be easily customised or swapped in-or-out to fit an organisation’s business operations or needs.

Furthermore, adopting a business or industry multi-cloud model will speed the transition to cloud for many organisations.

A vertical industry multi-cloud will in essence contain built-in yet customisable capabilities that a top CRM provider or HR software provider can offer customers. However, it goes far beyond any single vertical software-as-a-service solution.

Only multi-cloud infrastructures offer this kind of industry-specific or vertical cloud platform adaptability. Multi-cloud allows enterprises to make the leap from familiar cloud services to creating new cloud platforms with the agility to far more easily and quickly be adapted to new business opportunities, changing business circumstances, or technology innovations.

Industry-model, multi-cloud infrastructures offer many enterprises with the best solution for a decentralised networking environment. The benefits of these industry-specific clouds include:

  • Adaptability
  • Business functionality
  • Innovation

Multi-cloud is the future of enterprise IT; it delivers differentiated services at scale, while remaining secure and compliant with regulatory frameworks around the globe.

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Editorial contacts

Sasha Endemann
Liquid Letters
(082) 805 6302
sasha@liquidletters.co.za