Seven key attributes public storage cloud must possess to earn the confidence of enterprises.
One of the primary values of a public storage cloud is that network and storage resources can be aggregated while simultaneously shared among multiple clients. Securely sharing these resources requires the introduction of multi-tenancy into the public storage cloud. This enables each client’s data to be logically and/or physically separated so only that client can access its data.
Multi-tenancy should be available in such a way that only that client can access its data without negatively impacting other applications or data that is stored in the public storage cloud. Further, if a client does make changes to the data that it stores in the cloud, these changes should not have a cascading or ripple effect such that it negatively impacts the applications or data of other clients stored in the cloud.
One of the primary values of a public storage cloud is that network and storage resources can be aggregated while simultaneously shared among multiple clients. Securely sharing these resources requires the introduction of multi-tenancy into the public storage cloud. This enables each client’s data to be logically and/or physically separated so only that client can access its data.
Multi-tenancy should be available in such a way that only that client can access its data without negatively impacting other applications or data that is stored in the public storage cloud. Further, if a client does make changes to the data that it stores in the cloud, these changes should not have a cascading or ripple effect such that it negatively impacts the applications or data of other clients stored in the cloud.
There is no longer any doubt that enterprise organizations will eventually adopt public storage clouds as part of their overall storage management strategy. So the question becomes, “What will serve as the flash point that will initiate the broader adoption of public storage clouds by enterprise organizations?”
Enterprises are put off both by the lack of enterprise features found in current public storage cloud offerings as well as by the missteps of today’s storage cloud service providers. Today’s offerings lack many of the configuration options and reporting tools that enterprises expect and demand while reports of outages and service providers terminating services only add to their concerns about adopting storage cloud services now.
Changing this perception among enterprises requires that service providers first understand what objections that enterprise organizations have to current storage cloud offerings and then offer a storage cloud solution that addresses these objections.
This slideshow highlights seven key attributes, identified by NetApp and DCIG, that a public storage cloud must possess to earn the confidence of enterprises.