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Should you be looking at public cloud, private cloud or a hybrid cloud approach, where should your data be stored and how do you protect your environment?
No matter the direction your organisation heading, innovation remains a necessity in the ever digital world we now live in. Whether you are aiming to empower your employees to be able to effectively work, collaborate and excel while working for home or looking to strengthen your infrastructure, it is important that you adapt now and build for tomorrow.
When preparing for tomorrow it is vital you have the correct digital foundation in place. Learn more about how to prepare you digital workplace for tomorrow here.
Digital workplace for tomorrowWe have created a series of videos, in association with Dell Technologies, to help you understand what the future holds for some of the technologies that can help empower you and your workforce.
When we talk about the public cloud, we already know the benefits it brings – scalability, improved security, increased efficiencies and even the ability to save time. But when we think about tomorrow, about the future – the benefits that the public cloud will hold by then will be even greater and our reliance on the public cloud will only have increased.
Over recent years there has been a constant battle between the public and private cloud in a bid to modernise the data centre.
But, as the years have gone, these views have diminished and the realisation that the fit relies on understanding the maturity of a business, the requirements of an organisation and how they operate.
As we look to the future, the private cloud is bound to be even more competitive than it is now. It will be more accessible, more scalable, more efficient, more affordable and enable you to adapt now and build for tomorrow.
According to Gartner around 90% of enterprise IT firms will adopt a hybrid approach to their infrastructure landscape over the next two years.
When we think about tomorrow, the hybrid cloud seems to be the destination and most will see ‘hybrid’ as an organisation leveraging IaaS or PaaS while still operating an on-premise data centre.
Beyond that when technology such as automation, machine learning and artificial intelligence are incorporated into the cloud, the hybrid form factor will play an even more crucial role in management and maintenance of those technologies.
Data driven, data insights, data governance … data, data, data.
We are all aware by now of the importance of data to any organisation for both its ability to operate and to provide the best services to its customers or users. However, what’s really important is how that data is managed and stored, because as time continues to pass – we’re going to see that data continually grow alongside its value.
Fundamentally – you can’t gain any insight if you don’t know what data you’ve got, where you’ve got it from and how reliable it is.
When we look at cyber security and governance, not all data is created equal. As technology becomes ever more prominent, as data becomes more important to the success of businesses, organisations must have robust risk plans, as well as a workforce that has an awareness of the possible threats to that data. Let’s face it – no one wants to be breached.
It’s about increasing your organisational resiliency using automated recovery workflows, adaptive analytics, machine learning and a robust toolset for forensics designed to detect, diagnose and accelerate your recovery in the event of an incident.
As the world looks to further increase efficiencies and organisations look to streamline processes, technology continues to drive innovation every single day. Containers are no different.
Containers are a streamlined way to build, test, deploy and redeploy applications on multiple environments from a local laptop to the public cloud.
Forrester reports that the organisations they surveyed now have an average of 165 different containerised applications, a number that they expect to rise by 80% in the next two years.