2023 Cloud Cost Series (Part 2 of 3): The Top 5 Workloads NOT Well Suited for the Cloud
Preface?
Thank you for joining us for Part 2 of this 3-Part series on Cloud Costs. Please reference the following 3 blogs to get the complete 2023 Cloud Cost Series:?
Part 2: Top 5 Workloads NOT Well Suited for The Cloud?
Introduction?
Since the mid-2000s, clients have been migrating workloads to the cloud with increasing frequency, but recently, we have seen clients start to repatriate previously migrated workloads back on-premises, due in no small part to the price-shock phenomena discussed in Part 1 of this series. In many cases, the causes of price-shock can be traced back to workloads that are not well suited for the cloud due to their characteristics which are often resource-intensive. In Part 2 of our 3-Part series on cloud costs, we discuss the Top 5 Workloads that are NOT well suited for the cloud. ?
Trailblazing SaaS (Software-as-a-Service) suppliers such as:??
...have become titans of the industry as major applications (CRM, HCM, & ERP) have migrated to the cloud largely because of product innovation, modern user interfaces, cutting-edge delivery mechanisms, and flexible ‘pay-as-you-grow' commercial models. This has resulted in massive customer adoptions and huge migrations of enterprise applications away from on-premises customer data centers to the cloud.? ?
Similarly, pioneering suppliers such as:??
...have led a revolution of sorts for IaaS (Infrastructure-as-a-Service) where customers have migrated more workloads to the cloud, largely with excellent results due to its consumption-based rather than capital-intensive resource utilization model. This has been especially great for workloads that are elastic in nature or where customers need a lot of computing power for short periods of time. As a result, clients have been migrating workloads to the cloud with increasing intensity and frequency since the mid-2000s.??
However, while there are certainly great cloud solutions for many client workloads, there are some workloads that are either not well suited for the cloud or have yet to be effectively migrated to public cloud platforms.??
Some of these challenges have been exacerbated by suppliers like:??
...who sell ‘over-the-top' (OTT) cloud-based services and applications that run on top of existing cloud infrastructure and consume underlying cloud-based resources in often surprising levels of consumption, resulting in charges that often shock customers into reconsidering cloud deployments for certain types of workloads.??
The halcyon age of cloud computing has recently shown some signs of distress, and the resulting Price Shock Phenomena we discussed in Part 1 often result from the 5 types of workloads that are not well suited to be migrated to the cloud:?
Here are the Top 5 Workloads NOT Well Suited for the Cloud:?
1.) Performance-Centric Workloads (those with high-performance computing (HPC) demands for real-time data processing and heavy computational power with low-latency communication requirements between nodes) are not well suited for cloud environments for several reasons:?
2.) Data-Intensive Workloads. Applications that require large amounts of data transfer, and/or storage are not well suited for the cloud for several reasons:?
3.) Compliance-Driven Regulatory Workloads such as those seen in the financial services and/or healthcare industries are generally subject to strict regulations & guidelines, and therefore, their requirements can sometimes not be easily met by a public cloud provider often making them unsuitable for the cloud. While cloud computing can offer many benefits, such as scalability, cost-effectiveness, and flexibility, it may not always be the best option for compliance-driven regulatory workloads. Here are some reasons why:
4.) Legacy Applications with workloads that were designed to run on specific hardware or operating systems may not be supported by cloud providers. In some cases, it may be difficult or costly to modify these applications to run effectively in the cloud, and it may be more practical to keep them running on-premises. Some legacy applications may not be well suited for cloud environments due to:?
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5.) Dynamic Workloads with highly variable and/or unpredictable resource consumption requirements can be difficult to performance manage and/or cost optimize in a cloud environment. These workloads can vary in their resource requirements, performance characteristics, and usage patterns, making it difficult to determine the appropriate level of resources needed to support them.
Final Word
It is important to note that while these Top 5 types of workloads may not be well suited for the cloud in certain circumstances, cloud providers are continually improving their infrastructure and services to better support a wider range of workloads. Additionally, organizations may choose to use a hybrid cloud approach, which combines on-premises infrastructure with cloud services, to achieve what is often viewed as ‘the best of both worlds’.?
Stay Tuned?
The Price Shock Phenomena of Part 1 often results from workloads like the ones identified above that are not well suited for the cloud. Hopefully, you enjoyed this post detailing the Top 5 Workloads that are NOT well suited for the cloud. We hope you stay tuned for Part 3 in our 3-part series: Top 5 Reasons Why Clients Are Repatriating Workloads coming April 15.?
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Summary??
Wholesale cloud migrations combined with a lack of adequate governance has often led to unrestrained resource consumption. This has enabled cloud costs to get completely out of control for many AWS, Azure, and Google customers, forcing them to consider repatriating workloads back on-premises; yet NET(net) clients routinely save 13-53% on their cloud costs even without forced repatriation.?
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Think your Costs are Optimized???
If you think your cloud costs are already optimized, you should suspend your disbelief and test your theory by Price-Benchmarking your public cloud costs right now. You might be surprised to see how much you could save.??
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Think Beyond Cloud Migrations??
These tips will certainly help you save money on your cloud costs, but they won’t answer the more interesting questions about whether you should migrate workloads, modernize applications, democratize cloud providers, develop a hybrid cloud strategy, or repatriate workloads back on premises; among other more advanced considerations.??
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Don’t Need Help? You are the Expert on How to Achieve Cloud Savings??
Okay fine, but just in case you want a refresher on industry best practices, you may want to consider downloading our free eBook: The Top 12 Tips to Save on Cloud Costs. These tips will certainly help you save money on your cloud costs, but like we said above, they will not answer the more interesting questions about whether you should migrate workloads, modernize applications, democratize cloud infrastructure providers, or repatriate workloads back on premises; among other more advanced considerations.???
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Maybe you do Need Help After All??
If you want help, you can:?
About NET(net)???
Founded in 2002, NET(net) is the world’s leading IT Investment Optimization firm, helping clients find, get, and keep more economic and strategic value in their technology supply chains. Over the last 20 years, NET(net) has influenced trillions of investment, captured hundreds of billions of value, and has helped clients cost and value optimize all major areas of IT Spend, including XaaS, Cloud, Hardware, Software, Services, Healthcare, Outsourcing, Infrastructure, and Telecommunications, among others. NET(net) has the experience you want, demonstrates the expertise that you need, and delivers the performance you demand and deserve. Contact us at [email protected], visit us online at www.netnetweb.com, or call us at +1 (616) 546-3100 to see if we can help you capture more value in your IT investments, agreements, deployments, and relationships.??
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Board Member | retired Chief Information Officer (CIO)
1 年Spot on….typically the realization comes after the cloud implementation and then efforts get focused on cost containment vs continuing to drive enhancements and business/customer value.
Chief Operating Officer | Board Director
1 年Another great piece Steve - even in tech, everything old is new again... Mainframe is still going strong and now that rush to the Cloud is experiencing a bit of a rebound effect....