Courtesy of Bill Strong
Cloud computing is ready. But is business ready for it? In some
instances, small to medium sized enterprises might still need convincing
of its merits beyond the ease of use and affordability. So if you
haven’t considered it before, here’s five reasons to move to the cloud.
- First up is all about data backup. All the major cloud storage providers have robust backup procedures
giving a level of redundancy that most small & medium sized
businesses and personal users just can’t manage. That’s not to say you
ought to rely solely on a Cloud storage providers backup, but also
taking an additional backup of your Cloud data. And it’s worth bearing
in mind a simple rule at this stage; if it doesn’t exist in three places
then it doesn’t exist at all. But in the event of a hardware failure
who do you think is going to have your data back up faster; you or the
Cloud provider with massive server & 24 hour technical resource?
- The second reason is security. A major cloud provider has dedicated
security IT professionals tracking a very specific field of IT, knowing
where to close the gaps, provide regular updates to the software and
operating systems. A SME simply can’t resource wise afford to invest in
its own security professionals to maintain an internal system. Your
systems are going to be more secure with a dedicated Cloud supplier, so long as you know what you are looking for and the right questions to ask.
- In these money-saving times, price is likely to be the biggest
factor on whether you move from an internally hosted IT to a cloud based
IT. The competitiveness in the cloud market is really pushing down the prices
with half a dozen major brand players all fighting it out. The cost of
purchasing your servers, UPS and networking gear; the floor space to
store them; the electricity to keep them cool; plus an administrator to
keep them running all adds up to a hefty bill at the end of the month.
Conclusion? Cloud storage is going to be cheaper and it’s only going to
get even cheaper.
- Expertise that just can’t be sourced for love nor money.
Cloud providers have the experts to run your non intellectual property
based IT requirements. Cloud storage is probably the best example of
this with dedicated storage administrators running their systems so
really, why would you look to do it internally at a far greater cost?
- And finally there’s the scalability of cloud computing.
By the very mechanics behind it, there is an ability to build it up and
retract as and when is needed. Take current Pinterest who scaled
massively all on Amazon’s elastic computing cloud. They even scale at
different times of the day to meet demand and keep the costs down,
nevermind up scaling to meet their overall growth pattern. But it’s not
just expansion that cloud supports, when the good times roll and you
invest in more kit to meet demand all is good but what happens when
departments retract and sometimes have to get shuttered? You have
leftover hardware to offload that you wasted valuable resources on. The
Cloud takes care of all that.
Ben Jones is a tech writer, particularly interested in how
technology can help businesses large and small. He’s been assisting
businesses in setting up cloud based IT services to a number of
businesses around the south of England.
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