Singapore organisations have moved further into the cloud, with 90 percent having migrated critical applications and IT infrastructure over the past year, according to the SolarWinds IT Trends Report 2017: Portrait of a Hybrid IT Organisation.
However, nearly three-fourths (71 percent) spend less than half of their annual IT budgets on cloud technology. Furthermore, nearly two-thirds (61 percent) of IT professionals said the cloud and hybrid IT have had at least somewhat of an impact on their careers, while 11 percent went so far as to say it has altered their career path.
More than half (58 percent) of organisations have already hired/reassigned IT personnel, or plan to do so, for the specific purpose of managing cloud technologies.
Moving applications, storage, and databases further into the cloud
In the past 12 months, Singapore’s IT professionals have migrated applications (71 percent), storage (29 percent), and databases (27 percent) to the cloud more than any other areas of IT.
By weighted rank, the top three reasons for prioritising these areas of their IT environments for migration were greatest potential for ROI/cost efficiency, availability, and not being mission critical, respectively.
Experiencing the cost efficiencies of the cloud
Nearly all (90 percent) Singapore organisations have migrated critical applications and IT infrastructure to the cloud over the past year, yet nearly three-fourths (71 percent) spend less than 40 percent of their annual IT budgets on cloud technology.
Nearly half (46 percent) of organisations spend 70 percent or more of their annual IT budgets on on-premises (traditional) applications and infrastructure.
Nearly half (45 percent) organisations have received either most or all expected cloud benefits (i.e., cost efficiency, availability, and scalability).
Cost efficiency is at times not enough to justify migration to the cloud: 37 percent migrated areas to the cloud that were ultimately brought back on-premises due mostly to security/compliance issues and poor performance.
Cloud roles and skillsets for IT professionals
Nearly two-thirds (61 percent) of Singapore’s IT professionals indicated that hybrid IT has required them to acquire new skills, while 11 percent say it has altered their career path.
More than half (58 percent) of organisations have already hired/reassigned IT personnel, or plan to do so, for the specific purpose of managing cloud technologies.
The top cloud-related skill IT professionals improved over the past 12 months was vendor management, with more than two-fifths (42 percent) focusing on it, followed by hybrid monitoring/management tools and metrics (35 percent).
Fifty-two percent said an IT staff skills gap was one of the five biggest hybrid IT challenges, while 39 percent said increased workload/responsibilities.
Nearly half (48 percent) do not believe that IT professionals entering the workforce now possess the skills necessary to manage hybrid IT environments.
Increasing in complexity and lacking visibility
Two-thirds (66 percent) said their organisations currently use up to three cloud provider environments, with the largest percentage using two to three; however, 4 percent use 10 or more.
By weighted rank, the number one challenge created by hybrid IT is lack of control/visibility into security, followed by regulation/compliance issues and lack of control/visibility into performance, respectively.