6 Cloud Computing Challenges Businesses Are Facing In These Days
1. Lack of resources/expertise
For the longest time, security was the 
number one voiced cloud challenge. In 2016 however, lack of 
resources/expertise inched ahead. Organizations are increasingly placing
  more workloads in the cloud while cloud technologies continue to 
rapidly advance. Due to these factors organizations are having a hard 
time keeping up with the tools. Also, the need for expertise continues 
to grow. These challenges can be minimized through additional training 
of IT and development staff. A strong CIO championing cloud adoption 
also helps. As Cloud Engineer Drew Firment puts it:
“The success of cloud adoption and migrations comes down to your people — and the investments you make in a talent transformation program. Until you focus on the #1 bottleneck to the flow of cloud adoption, improvements made anywhere else are an illusion.”
SME organizations may find adding cloud 
specialists to their IT teams to be prohibitively costly. Luckily, many 
common tasks performed by these specialists can be automated. To this 
end companies are turning to DevOps tools, like Chef and Puppet, to 
perform tasks like monitoring usage patterns of resources and automated 
backups at predefined time periods. These tools also help optimize the 
cloud for cost, governance, and security.
2. Security issues
Resource/expertise concerns slightly 
passed security cloud computing problems in 2016. We already mentioned 
the hot debate around data security in our BI trends for 2017,
 and security has indeed been a primary, and valid, concern from the 
start of cloud computing technology: you are unable to see the exact 
location where your data is stored or being processed. Headlines 
highlighting data breaches, compromised credentials and broken 
authentication, hacked interfaces and APIs, account hijacking haven’t 
helped alleviate concerns. All of this makes trusting sensitive and 
proprietary data to a third party hard to stomach for some. Luckily as 
cloud providers and users, mature security capabilities are constantly 
improving. To ensure your organization’s privacy and security is intact,
 verify the SaaS provider has secure user identity management, 
authentication and access control mechanisms in place. Also, check 
which data security and privacy laws they are subject to.
While you are auditing a provider’s 
security and privacy laws, make sure to also confirm the third biggest 
issue is taken care of: compliance. Your organization needs to be able 
to comply with regulations and standards, no matter where your data is 
stored. Speaking of storage, also ensure the provider has strict data 
recovery policies in place.
3. Cost management and containment
For the most part cloud computing can 
save businesses money. In the cloud, an organization can easily ramp up 
its processing capabilities without making large investments in new 
hardware. Businesses can instead access extra processing through 
pay-as-you go models from public cloud providers. However, the on-demand
 and scalable nature of cloud computing services makes it some times 
difficult to define and project quantities and costs. Luckily there are 
several ways to keep cloud costs in check including.
4. Governance/Control
Proper IT governance should ensure IT 
assets are implemented and used according to agreed-upon policies and 
procedures; ensure that these assets are properly controlled and 
maintained; and ensure that these assets are supporting your 
organization’s strategy and business goals. In today’s cloud based 
world, IT does not always have full control over the provisioning, 
de-provisioning and operations of infrastructure. This has increased the
 difficulty for IT to provide the governance, compliance and risk 
management required. To mitigate the various risks and uncertainties in 
transitioning to the cloud, IT must adapt its traditional IT governance 
and control processes to include the cloud.  To this effect the role of 
central IT teams in cloud has been evolving over the last few years. 
Along with business units, central IT is increasingly playing a role in 
selecting, brokering, and governing cloud services. On top of this third
 party cloud computing/management providers are progressively providing 
governance support and best practices.
5. Performance
When a business moves to the cloud it 
becomes dependent on the service providers. This partnership often 
provides businesses with innovative technologies they wouldn’t otherwise
 be able to access. On the other hand the performance of the 
organization’s BI and other cloud based systems is also tied to the 
performance of the cloud provider when it falters. When your provider is
 down, you are also down.
This isn’t uncommon, over the past 
couple of years all the big cloud players have experienced outages. Make
 sure your provider has the right processes in place and that they will 
alert you if there is ever an issue.
For the data driven organization real 
time data is imperative. With an inherent lack of control that comes 
with cloud computing, companies may run into real time monitoring 
issues. Make sure your SaaS provider has real time monitoring policies 
in place to help mitigate these issues.
6. Segmented usage and adoption
Most organizations did not have a robust
 cloud adoption strategy in place when they started to move to the 
cloud.  Instead, ad-hoc strategies sprouted, fueled by several 
components. One of them was the speed of cloud adoption. Another one was
 the staggered expiration of data centre contracts/equipment, which led 
to intermittent cloud migration. Finally, there also were individual 
development teams using public cloud for specific applications or 
projects. These bootstrap environments have fostered full integration 
and maturation issues including:
- Isolated cloud projects lacking shared standards
- Ad hoc security configurations
- Lack of cross-team shared resources and learnings
In fact, a recent survey by IDC of 6,159 executives found that just 3% of respondents
 define their cloud strategies as “optimised”.  Luckily, centralized IT,
 strong governance and control policies, and some heavy lifting can get 
usage, adoption, and cloud computing strategies inline.
In the End the Cloud Still Wins
It is no secret, cloud computing is 
revolutionizing the IT industry. It is also shaking up the business 
intelligence (BI) landscape, and well, pretty everything else it 
touches. As the cloud adoption exponentially grows,
 businesses of all sizes are realizing the benefits. For startups and 
small to medium sized businesses (SMEs), that can’t afford costly server
 maintenance, but also may have to scale overnight, the benefits are 
especially great.
While cloud computing challenges do 
exist, if properly addressed these 6 issues don’t mean your IT roadmap 
has to remain anchored on-premise. Business intelligence (BI) and cloud 
computing are an ideal match, as the first one provides the right 
information to the right people while the latter is an agile way to 
access BI applications. To make the best out of it, you should take a 
strategic iterative approach to implementation, explore hybrid cloud 
solutions, involve business and IT teams, invest in a CIO, and 
choose the right BI SaaS partner. All this will ensure that the benefits
 of cloud business intelligence will far outway the challenges.


Hello
ReplyDeleteWhile challenges like data security, privacy, and vendor lock-in can arise in cloud computing, organizations can mitigate these risks through robust security measures, data encryption, compliance frameworks, and carefully selecting reliable cloud service providers.
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ReplyDeleteRecognizing key cloud computing challenges like security, cost control, and data compliance is vital for smooth operations. To overcome these issues effectively, businesses should Hire Cloud Storage Specialists who can deliver secure, scalable, and well-managed cloud infrastructure solutions.
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