“The results of the latest ECI survey are significant because, as a major commercial centre, the UK has long been at the forefront when leveraging new technologies and ways of working,” said Rowen Grierson, Senior Director and General Manager, UK&I at Nutanix. “Likewise, when it comes to identifying the challenges with, in this year’s survey, clear evidence of the need for a consistent cloud operating model to enable customers to get the best from the mixed IT environments they are building.”
Back in 2018, well over half of respondents said they envisioned running all workloads exclusively in either a private or public cloud one day. Since then, however, respondents' attitudes have drastically shifted toward the use of multiple IT environments. So, rather than working to consolidate on a particular infrastructure or operating model - as seemed desirable in 2018 - most enterprises now see the inevitability, and even benefits, of running workloads across clouds, on-premises and at the edge.
The goal now is to make this mixed model more efficient, especially when managing IT environments across the edge to the core. Greater diversity is leading to increased complexity, with nearly all respondents saying they would benefit from having a single, unified control plane to manage applications and data across their increasingly diverse IT environments.
Key findings from this year’s report include:
Most organisations use more than one type of IT infrastructure, and nearly all agree that having a single platform to manage them together and consistently would be ideal.
UK companies lead in their use of mixed IT infrastructure with 73% reporting the use of multiple IT environments compared to a 60% global average. In the UK that figure is expected to rise to 86% in one to three years (74% globally).
Data security and management considerations drive IT infrastructure choices. Data is driving infrastructure decisions for enterprises, with data security, protection and recovery, and sovereignty topping the list of key drivers. However, visibility is a growing challenge and while 94% of respondents agree that having full visibility is important, only 40% reported having complete visibility into where their data resides.
Cloud cost control ranks as a top IT management challenge. Among respondents, 85% consider cloud cost a challenging IT management issue with more than a third (34%) ranking it “significant”. More specifically, application migration across clouds is currently a pain point for organisations with 86% of respondents agreeing that moving applications between environments can be complex and costly. Additionally, nearly half of respondents (46%) plan to repatriate some applications to on-premise datacentres to mitigate cloud costs in the year ahead.
Nearly all companies developing their own applications have begun using open-source Kubernetes orchestration (96%). Those respondents, however, cite designing and configuring underlying infrastructure, storage, and database services as a key challenges of those deployments.
Interestingly, sustainability has become a much more pressing priority with nearly all respondents (92%) agreeing that sustainability is more important to their organisation than it was a year ago. A shift in priorities driven primarily by corporate Environment, Social and Governance (ESG) initiatives (63%), supply chain disruptions (59%), and customer purchasing decisions (48%).