Blog
Cloud News & Insights

Multiple Cloud Providers for Redundancy – What Vendors Must Provide

Using Multiple Cloud Providers for Redundancy

The importance of backing up data is something that all people involved in IT learn early, usually from a bad experience. It all comes down to redundancy: having multiple copies of everything and keeping them separated so they do not all fail at once.

When adopting cloud computing for your business, making sure that your data is properly backed up and that not all of your “eggs are in one basket” can save you money, time and risk. Most cloud service providers give options regarding cloud hybridization and avoiding risks with multiple locations. However, these are often all on the same cloud, which may itself pose a risk. Thus, using multiple cloud providers for redundancy is a better way to manage risk, since not all the responsibility for your data lies with a single vendor.

Even With Distributed or Hybrid Models, There’s a Risk When Using a Single Provider

Depending on a single cloud services provider has advantages. However, the negative effects of a single problem are compounded when this is the case. After all, if all of your data is residing on a single cloud, all it takes is one specific issue to affect the whole negatively. So, even a distributed cloud that attempts to provide ideal regional distribution can have issues. A more fluid operating model can help avoid these problems by adopting multiple cloud platforms. If well-implemented, multiple clouds need not be complicated to manage and actually make your cloud ecosystem richer thanks to the diversity of options and greater geographic distribution. All it takes is better up-front planning of your cloud ecosystem.

Managing Multiple Cloud Platforms

The critical aspect of managing multiple cloud platforms is a strong and well-implemented management platform. Regardless of the applications being used and the various nodes involved, without strong oversight, change management, and governance, moving apps to production can be a nightmare. It is therefore important that all clouds have a strong automation and management platform. This is even more crucial when dealing with multiple clouds. A common mistake is to keep many aspects of management manual, ultimately slowing everything down to a crawl. Learning to adapt to widespread management tools with high degrees of automation is crucial when managing multiple cloud platforms. This is often one of the hurdles that keeps companies from adopting a more effective cloud strategy.

What Your Cloud Services Vendor Needs to Provide

Not all cloud providers have services that are ideal for use with other clouds. A few important features that your cloud services vendor needs to provide include:

    1. Low data transfer costs. With multiple clouds, you will be moving high volumes of data from one to the other constantly. Does your cloud service provider give you a cost-effective way of doing this?
    2. Data portability. Can this data be moved with a few problems quickly and in a usable format?
    3. API. Since management is such an important part of using multiple clouds, making sure that your IT staff have the skills and resources to write effective management scripts is very important. Does the cloud service provider have a well-implemented API that allows your IT professionals to re-write management scripts?

In conclusion, building redundancy with the use of multiple cloud platforms means that you will be more resilient to disasters and outage risks. Depending on a single vendor may mean that all of your services will be halted until that vendor solves the issue. With multiple cloud platforms, issues in a single provider’s cloud become less critical to your operations. This strategy also allows you to take advantage of each provider’s strongest features while minimizing their weaknesses. For example, you can choose the vendor with the best storage facilities to ensure that your database performance is at its best while using a cloud services provider with weaker storage facilities to cover in case of problems with the primary cloud. That’s the beauty of using multiple cloud platforms.

Of course, fact still remains that you need to be vigilant about which cloud provider to choose. Regardless whether you have 2 or 5 providers, individual security measures must be kept in check. One of GMO Cloud’s strengths is its multi-level strategy that involves several security measures. Visit their cloud hosting security page to find out more.

Be Part of Our Cloud Conversation

Our articles are written to provide you with tools and information to meet your IT and cloud solution needs. Join us on Facebook and Twitter.

 

About the Guest Author:

Nida Rasheed

Nida Rasheed is a freelance writer and owner of an outsourcing company, Nida often finds herself wanting to write about the subjects that are closest to her heart. She lives in Islamabad, Pakistan and can be found on Twitter @nidarasheed.

Share on LinkedIn