{"id":54233,"date":"2018-11-30T09:00:13","date_gmt":"2018-11-30T09:00:13","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/content.n4stack.io\/?p=54233"},"modified":"2018-11-30T12:35:32","modified_gmt":"2018-11-30T12:35:32","slug":"azure-aws-vs-public-cloud","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/content.n4stack.io\/2018\/11\/30\/azure-aws-vs-public-cloud\/","title":{"rendered":"Is Private Cloud Being Replaced By Azure & AWS?"},"content":{"rendered":"

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I work for a Managed Services Provider (MSP). We own a UK-centric network, multiple datacentres and have many teams of highly skilled technical staff who manage customer systems which are hosted on our infrastructure. We have over 1000 customers and it’s apparent that a lot of them are talking about Azure and AWS as potential future platforms. So, should we be worried? Will we, as an MSP, be out of business in the near future?<\/p>\n

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What’s the reality?<\/h2>\n

The reality for customers that have been around for a few years is that they have many systems and applications that need ongoing feeding and watering to keep them healthy. Azure and AWS will quite rightly be seen as some form of utopia for future hosting as the level of engineering and development in these platforms is phenomenal. In practice though we are finding that varying degrees of systems and service transformation needs to occur to enable an effective move to a world of self-healing, autonomous platforming.<\/p>\n

A survey<\/a> conducted by LogicMonitor on the future of cloud found that 41% of workloads will run on public cloud in 2020, with 20% sticking to private cloud, 22% opting for hybrid cloud and 27% preferring to keep their workloads on-premise. So, the pace of systems moving to public clouds is undoubtedly picking up but the need to knit together systems across multiple platforms will mean the need for highly skilled MSPs is more important than ever.\u00a0<\/p>\n

\"2020<\/p>\n

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What technical expertise is needed?<\/h2>\n

It’s an overused term but businesses with established systems have ‘technical debt’ which needs deep technical expertise to ensure the application workloads will operate effectively on a new platform. This brings together a wide range of expertise including networking, infrastructure, data and security. If we consider the data migration in isolation, the ramifications of getting the database architecture wrong, or the cut-over of data out of sync, the business impact will be enormous.<\/p>\n

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What value do MSPs bring to the public cloud?<\/h2>\n

Public cloud management is where MSPs will continue to add value as the majority of mid-market enterprises are currently operating, or moving towards, a hybrid cloud model. There are some business-specific applications which will continue to work optimally within a tightly controlled managed environment, and there are other systems where moving the workload to the public cloud is absolutely the right decision.<\/p>\n

The CIOs\/CTOs of businesses that are starting to look to Azure and AWS for application workloads need to have the confidence that their chosen IT Managed Services Partner is equally comfortable in managing the systems whether they’re on-premise, within a managed datacentre, or on public cloud. As many customers are operating within a hybrid model, the need for uniformity of services is essential.<\/p>\n

In my experience, there are a number of essential services that customers will benefit from and should form part of the MSPs service catalogue:<\/p>\n