Enterprise AI moves into production with multi-cloud governance challenges

The State of Application Strategy Report outlines AI’s progression into a production workload, alongside multi-cloud deployment complexity and increasing requirements for governance and control measures.

F5 recently released its annual State of Application Strategy (SOAS) Report, highlighting a shift in the use of artificial intelligence (AI). The report indicates that AI has moved from an experimental phase into production workloads. The findings emphasise AI’s increasing role in organisational environments and the associated need for operational and security standards similar to those applied to other critical systems.

Approximately 78% of enterprises now independently manage AI inference, reflecting a preference for control over convenience. This trend is particularly relevant in the context of growing multicloud operations. Around 93% of organisations use multiple cloud environments, reflecting increased complexity in managing and delivering AI workloads securely.

AI’s use has expanded from experimentation to a core part of business operations. Organisations deploy an average of seven AI models, with a strong focus on inference. This shift has increased attention on governance of AI systems, with integration into application frameworks that require architectural and security considerations.

However, AI-as-a-service strategies are viewed by many organisations as carrying higher risk, with just 8% relying solely on public AI offerings. Most organisations instead use a mix of models, which requires routing and policy controls to manage cost, accuracy, and availability.

The hybrid multicloud approach is widely used for delivering AI workloads. In line with broader multicloud adoption, enterprises deploy applications across multiple environments, which requires governance across these systems. Integration across environments and consistent policy enforcement are used to support security and help reduce operational disruption.

As AI is deployed at production scale, security considerations have become more prominent. About 88% of organisations have encountered AI-related security issues, and most are preparing for the development of agentic AI systems. This has increased focus on governance mechanisms, particularly around prompts, tokens, and API-based control layers.

The report also notes an increasing focus on control at the prompt and token layers, prioritised by 29% and 23% of organisations respectively. Governance in these areas is associated with managing cost, performance, and safety in AI workload operations.

Overall, the State of Application Strategy Report provides data on changes in enterprise technology adoption. It highlights the continued development of AI use in production environments, the expansion of hybrid multicloud architectures, and evolving approaches to security and governance.
An examination of how Atlassian’s Rovo and Teamwork Graph introduce AI-driven automation into...
Smartsheet extends its AI integrations, offering enterprise teams new capabilities with Smart...
NetApp and Cisco introduce updated solutions with FlexPod, aiming to empower enterprises in...
Checkmarx and Carahsoft have forged a partnership to enhance application security solutions for...
New capability aims to improve visibility, monitoring, and control of AI agents in enterprise...
Hack The Box and Semperis form an alliance to strengthen cybersecurity through hands-on skills...
Craig Wilson to take the helm of Sopra Steria UK, focusing on growth and innovation in technology...
Despite significant investments, UK industrial companies face divided views on digital...