Hybrid Cloud Trends of 2024

For the past five years, the DPR survey has routinely asked respondents what percentage of their production workloads were running on physical servers within the data center, virtual machines within the data center, or cloud-hosted, which includes IaaS, PaaS, and SaaS. Collectively, these five reports now represent over 13,000 organizations and span half a decade of survey work with surprisingly consistent insights. As we all know, one of the immediate IT ramifications to COVID-19 was a reimagining of the workforce and the production IT landscape, with an accelerated adoption of cloud-based services. But from 2021 through today, the distribution of “data center versus cloud” and the distribution within the data center of “physical versus virtual” has remained notably consistent for the past four years.  

What Is Hybrid Cloud: Benefits and Infrastructure 

As a continuing part of the data protection trends 2024 report series, let’s take a look at the hybrid and multi-cloud strategies that 1,200 organizations cited in this year’s research. In recent years, the realm of hybrid cloud infrastructure has proven to be a captivating fusion of innovation and versatility.

Hybrid cloud infrastructure benefits organizations by offering a more balanced approach to computing resources and enabling companies to tailor unique blends of public and private storage solutions to suit their precise needs, such as a private data center or cloud and a public cloud(s). Leveraging a public cloud allows them to expand or contract key offerings as needed and offer access to remote employees 24/7. Workloads can move between the myriad interconnected domains, ensuring hybrid cloud computing is an increasingly important option in modern IT ecosystems. 

Hybrid Cloud Infrastructure Defined: Hybrid Cloud vs. Multi-Cloud

The terms hybrid cloud infrastructure and multi-cloud infrastructure are often used interchangeably, but there are differences:

These are not mutually exclusive strategies and in fact, a hybrid cloud can technically be considered a multi-cloud, but a cloud-based multi-cloud isn’t a hybrid cloud 

What do Hybrid Clouds Look Like in 2024?

Specifically for 2024, 55% of workloads operate within the data center while 45% operate within clouds. Within the data center, it is nearly even numbers (28% versus 27%) of physical server workloads versus virtual machine workloads, respectively — with some variation across global geographies, often due to accessibility of cloud bandwidth and distributed workforce. This reveals a few key truths: 

Hybrid Cloud Use Cases

There isn’t a single vertical industry nor an organization size that is more or less ‘hybrid’ per se — most industries from healthcare, to financial, to public sector all run in hybrid modes, which simply means that they have a mix of physical/virtual within data center(s) as well as other workloads within clouds.  It is near impossible to find an organization of any size that is 100% cloud-hosted, nor is there any organization that has uses no cloud services at all.

The real evolution in use cases and methodologies has been IT’s shift from ‘cloud-first’ strategies to ‘cloud-smart’ strategies. Cloud-first used to imply, “if it can run in a cloud, we run it there — and only deploy new workloads on-premises by exception.”  The challenge with that approach is that there are real reasons why some workloads ought to run on-premises. And of those, some really ought to run as dedicated physical servers (by exception) or (otherwise) deployed as virtual machines. 

Hence the new and improved term of ‘cloud smart’ where one first assesses the performance or operational requirements for a workload, then the economic considerations of cloud vs. datacenter, before determining where each workload should run to best serve the organization. That same exercise should also be applied as organizations may initially deploy within one cloud but then later ultimately run in another, such as:

To hear more about how organizations are composing their hybrid clouds and how that make up has changed from 2020 to 2026, here is a short video:

What to Plan for in Protecting Hybrid and Multi-Clouds in 2024: Strategies for Success 

Before implementing a hybrid cloud infrastructure, you must develop a comprehensive hybrid cloud strategy. Much of your strategy will come down to doing your homework and planning. You’ll need to address potential challenges, such as the difficulties in unifying a private and public environment, looking for clouds that are as compatible as possible with each other, and implementing role-based access control (RBAC) to provide employees with appropriate access to sensitive data regardless of location. 

A learning related to multi-cloud strategies is the continued maturation of data protection rationales and motivations related to protecting cloud-hosted data. When considering the five years of responses, one can see a very clear maturation curve from early adopters to mainstream users of each of the various cloud-hosted archetypes: 

Best Practices Regarding Containers (Most of Which are in Clouds)?

Strategies and motivations for protecting containers continues to be the least prevalent compared to server-centric or application-centric (IaaS, PaaS, SaaS) with the extra nuance being, by which type of administrator is the container framework itself being managed by? Recent data suggests:

The earlier choices are somewhat analogous to if one had protected only one virtual drive within a VM or snapshotted the LUN’s within a virtualization host, but (in neither case) protected the entire hypervisor framework. Those with a datacenter IT pedigree will recognize the flaws in those two approaches that drove the need for holistic hypervisor-centric backup. One can only assume that those same realizations will occur for serverless infrastructures ask containers continue to gain mainstream adoption.

To hear more on what the research shows related to strategies and motivations of protecting cloud hosted data, check out this short video:

Feel free to download the entire Data Protection Trends 2024 report and stay tuned as we continue to delve topic by topic through this industry research. 

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