Cloud is quickly becoming the corporate norm, and is being used by companies to drive dramatic improvements beyond cost and scalability, including increased innovation, faster time to market and insights, and enhanced cybersecurity.

This is according to a global cloud services study recently completed by The Hackett Group.

The study, which examines results from more than 1,000 organisations and looked at more than 4,000 migrated applications in 15 different categories, found that 70% of all technology infrastructure will be cloud-based within two to three years. Typical companies are seeing post-migration reduction in technology infrastructure costs of 12%. Other significant benefits include:

  • A 36% increase in developer time devoted to innovation
  • A 45% reduction in time to market for new product features and functionality
  • A 53% reduction in the time to achieve actionable insights from data
  • A total of 44% fewer security and other critical infrastructure incidents
  • And a 52% average reduction in down-time

Top performers in the study saw even more dramatic benefits, including a 37% reduction in technology infrastructure costs (more than 3x of what typical companies achieved) and an average of 15 percentage points greater improvement across nearly a dozen objectives tracked in the study.

The Hackett Group principal, Michael Fuller, said: “This study was designed to look beyond the hype and truly quantify the benefits of both moving to the cloud and maximising the benefits of cloud infrastructure. And the results clearly show that companies are using the cloud to deliver broad strategic value. It’s about better security, improved speed, quality, and agility. At its best, cloud migration can be the foundation that allows companies to rapidly improve their products and services.”

The Hackett Group senior research director, Richard Pastore, added: “We also came to conclusions about the differences between typical companies and top performers. To truly drive the maximum benefit, top performers make the cloud part of their operating DNA and treat it as a core competitive strategy. They reject the easier application ‘lift and shift’ approach to cloud migration. Instead, they assess their workloads to determine the proper migration methodology and focus on optimising them in the cloud, which often means rearchitecting or redesigning their systems and processes to take best advantage of what the cloud can offer.”

The Hackett Group released the study as part of the launch of its new Cloud Value Assessment Services Offering, a service designed to help companies understand how to optimise the management of current applications in the cloud and future migration to the cloud. The assessment leverages The Hackett Group’s detailed performance metrics and benchmark taxonomy and takes just four weeks, as little as a third the time of a full benchmark assessment to complete.

A public overview of the study results, “The State of Cloud Adoption by the Numbers,” is available on a complimentary basis, with registration, at http://go.poweredbyhackett.com/ca2205sm.

The Hackett Group’s Cloud Services Study was completed in December 2021. The study is designed as the first step in a five-year investigation designed to help companies understand cloud migration and ongoing management of costs, value, performance, and experience.

Tags: Infrastructure



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