Change can be very stressful. With the Cloud,
you're talking about changing the way you do business. That's not
something to be taken lightly.
That's why we've pulled together the top 3 customer concerns for migrating to the cloud with Azure. This guide will help you ease your fears and concerns, enabling you to find the right architecture with the right balance of on-premises and cloud technology. Advised and serviced by:
That's why we've pulled together the top 3 customer concerns for migrating to the cloud with Azure. This guide will help you ease your fears and concerns, enabling you to find the right architecture with the right balance of on-premises and cloud technology. Advised and serviced by:
1. It's not
trustworthy
"Businesses and users are going to
embrace technology only if they can trust it." Satya Nadella, CEO,
Microsoft Corporation. Many companies don't always think about specific cloud
solutions and vendors. They just don't trust the cloud. Period.
Yet here's the reality - most people are already using the cloud in some sort of fashion in their lives today. Whether it's for binge watching their favorite TV shows, managing bank records, or making bill payments. The real message is that nothing is more important than a customer's personal information. If they're willing to use cloud services to manage their personal life, surely the business they're running can also realize some of those same benefits?
But just because they're using the cloud now, doesn't mean they fully trust it. Here's how you can debunk those perceptions and show that the cloud is safe:
Yet here's the reality - most people are already using the cloud in some sort of fashion in their lives today. Whether it's for binge watching their favorite TV shows, managing bank records, or making bill payments. The real message is that nothing is more important than a customer's personal information. If they're willing to use cloud services to manage their personal life, surely the business they're running can also realize some of those same benefits?
But just because they're using the cloud now, doesn't mean they fully trust it. Here's how you can debunk those perceptions and show that the cloud is safe:
·
Encryption. For data in transit, Azure uses industry-standard transport
protocols between user devices and Microsoft datacenters, and within the Azure
datacenters themselves. For data at rest, Azure offers a wide range of
encryption capabilities up to AES-256, giving
your customers the flexibility to choose the solution that best meets their
needs.
·
Control.
A hybrid solution lets the customer decide what gets stored on-premises and
what goes to the cloud. Information can be moved back and forth between these
options as they see fit. Microsoft
takes strong measures to help protect customer data from inappropriate access
or use by unauthorized persons, and to prevent customers from gaining access to
one another's data.
·
Global standards. Microsoft solutions and services are built on a Trustworthy computing foundation
consisting of security, privacy, and reliability. Microsoft creates,
implements, and continuously improves security-aware software development,
operational, and threat mitigation practices, and shares this knowledge with
government and commercial organizations.
Microsoft engages in industry-leading security efforts through
its own centers of excellence, including the Microsoft Digital Crimes Unit,
Microsoft Cybercrime Center, and Microsoft Malware Protection Center. Microsoft continually collaborates
with industry and governments to build trust in the cloud ecosystem.
2. The cloud is the same,
regardless of who I choose
In the broadest sense, yes, public clouds do
the same thing. But once you start to dig a little deeper, public clouds can be
very different. This is a great opportunity to position Azure above the
competition. And here are just a few pointers to help you have that
conversation:
·
Azure offers a complete hybrid solution, so you can debunk that
"all-or-nothing" customer assumption and explain how starting small –
such as email migration, or data backup and recovery – can be implemented
without forcing a complete overhaul of existing processes.
·
With Azure, you can move virtual machines "as-is" back
and forth between on-premises and the cloud. Companies get a consistent experience
everywhere without having to invest heavily in dismantling their existing
infrastructure.
·
Azure supports the broadest selection of devices, operating
systems, databases, languages, frameworks, and tools. Azure's integrated tools, unified services,
and proven solutions help you build enterprise, mobile, web, and Internet of
Things (IoT) apps faster, for virtually any platform or device.
·
There's no steep learning curve with Azure, unlike with Amazon Web Services (AWS). As you
can choose from a vast array of third party tools, solutions, and
partner-developed applications via the Azure
marketplace.
·
System management tasks are automated, enabling developers to focus on apps using
Azure's Platform as a Service (PaaS) solution, the underlying Operating System
(OS). This leads to faster on-boarding to the public cloud and lets customers
quickly develop apps.
·
Microsoft matches AWS pricing for all commodity public cloud
offerings. And, Azure brings
more compute capacity than AWS in the instances we offer; so Azure beats AWS on
a price-to-performance comparison.
3. We'll have to
redesign our applications
Moving any application into the cloud will
require some level of redesign or re-architecture of the solution, that's
inevitable. The beauty of leveraging hybrid cloud is that the same Hyper-V Virtual Machines
(VMs), for example, that is running on-premise or through another third party
cloud can easily be
moved to Azure, and will run without needing to make modifications on Azure VMs.
We can leverage the free 30 day trial of Azure Site Recovery to migrate your on-premises physical
Windows/Linux servers, on-premises Hyper-V VMs, and/or on-premises VMware VMs
up into Azure with ease. If they are migrating on-premises VMWare VMs then
Azure Site Recovery will convert the VM to a Hyper-V as part of the migration.
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