Intelligent Tech Channels Issue 16 | Page 34

INTELLIGENT CLOUD Last year Verizon suffered a breach that resulted in the personal data of six million customers being leaked online. The cause? A misconfigured setting on a cloud server owned by a third-party. That’s six million people, potentially more, unhappy with Verizon. Then Verizon itself unhappy with a vendor. And the media swirling around all of them, with questions aplenty and blame to apportion. Similarly, when GitLab suffered a database outage, 5,000 projects and 700 customers were affected, according to their own postmortem statement, causing huge problems for a sizeable chunk of the provider’s user base. The problem for cloud service providers is that expectations around the quality and Mohamad Rizk, Manager System Engineers, Middle East at Veeam. major global business, it is vital that providers stop the tide of damaging outages, and place as much emphasis on availability and backup for customers as they do growth and acquisition. That is tomorrow’s cloud battleground. Cloud provision is a vast and growing market. Forrester estimates that it will be worth $178 billion in 2018, up from $146 billion in 2017, and things are getting fiercely competitive. For all that, it remains the case that AWS is dominant, with some experts predicting ownership of approximately 35% of the market. Meaning that prominent incumbent brand name providers and ambitious newcomers are all competing for comparatively small portions of the pie. This explains the ambitious business growth and customer acquisition plans many providers have been executing over the past couple of years. A spate of recent mergers, including ANS acquiring Webantic and McAfee taking on Skyhigh, demonstrates how leading tech firms are trying to diversify their cloud offering and strengthen their arm in a market that is demanding more and more. The question everyone involved in cloud has to answer, however, is how do you support the customers who are already on board? 34 The question everyone involved in cloud has to answer, is how do you support the customers who are already on board? availability of cloud services are on the rise. Countless individuals and businesses are placing their trust in specialist cloud service providers, and they expect their data, tools and applications to be stored securely and available precisely when they need them to be. The upshot of those expectations is that errors, such as those encountered by Verizon and GitLab, quickly become viewed as unacceptable. Businesses let down by cloud partners are liable to take their customers elsewhere. While individual customers who suffer availability issues and have projects derailed by issues with their cloud service provider are likely to do the same. Breaches, outages and hacks can quite easily lead to the flight of enterprise and SME customers, particularly as provider switching gets easier and competition fiercer. So, it is up to cloud service providers to ensure that their service will not let customers down. As it becomes more important to differentiate in the cloud provision market, one of the primary areas a cloud service provider can sell itself is in making assurances about service availability, data protection and backup. In other words, removing the risk of things that let customers down and make the news in the process, as much as possible. For example, were Verizon’s unfortunate cloud partner to have had a cloud backup solution decoupled from its primary infrastructure, perhaps the human error that led to the six million user leak might not have had such profound consequences. Similarly, had GitLabs’ data been supported by an immediate database recovery solution, those 5,000 projects might have remained on track. While, on the smaller end of the spectrum, if HitChat’s cloud tier had been better supported, service disruption might not have been so bad after the service was hacked. Of course, it is easy to provide wisdom with hindsight. But these counterfactual examples of what might have been are all about giving cloud service providers the best chance to survive problems with their service in the future. And helping them to retain the customers they have worked so hard to acquire. In the simplest terms, we cannot do anything about the hacks that continuously disrupted 2017 now. However, we can learn from them, so that 2018’s biggest outages lists might be harder to compile. And when the solution to so many of the biggest challenges in technology is simply harnessing the power of cloud backup to support cloud provision, it seems foolish not to take some positive action.  Issue 16 INTELLIGENT TECH CHANNELS