Today’s cloud adoptions are wide and varied. Large enterprises are composed of vast, hybrid multi-cloud strata, often incorporating legacy technology acquired at various times and haphazardly equipped from department to department. But a fractured cloud approach can leave IT wanting in terms of shared automation and standard security policies.
Not all organizations have addressed best practices around common areas like CI/CD, resource optimizations, or common policies for multiple clouds. And many teams are just getting the hang of the new cloud-native stack. But studies show that a mature approach to cloud operations can pay dividends in the long run—and this approach hinges on cloud platform teams.
HashiCorp recently released the findings from its third annual State of Cloud Strategy Survey, which surveyed 1,000 technology practitioners on their cloud adoptions. In short, the report discovered that increased cloud maturity equates to increased overall value. Below, I’ll distill the major findings from the report to better understand how cloud-native operations are maturing.
State of Cloud Maturity
Most organizations are moderately increasing their cloud investments. Overall, 56% increased their cloud spending in the last year. Increases were much higher for higher cloud-maturity organizations and stilted for lower-maturity organizations. The findings demonstrate general confidence in cloud adoption, even amid economic uncertainties.
There is also persistent optimism in multi-cloud strategies. In fact, 73% of companies said a multi-cloud strategy helped advance or achieve their business goals. And to successfully accomplish a multi-cloud strategy, respondents ranked security, uptime and availability, infrastructure scalability and regulatory compliance as top factors.
However, there is still a lot of waste in the cloud. Nearly all organizations (94%) said they have avoidable cloud spending. These expenses most commonly stem from areas like over-provisioning resources, idle or unused resources, cost premiums or a lack of expiration date on cloud resources.
Benefits of Maturing Cloud-Native Operations
Overall, there are many reasons for adopting a multi-cloud approach—the report found reliability, cost reduction, security and governance and digital transformation as top motivators. And on average, high-maturity cloud adopters tend to reap the rewards more often, the report found. Some of these top rewards ranged from a stronger security posture to better visibility and increased automation. Furthermore, half of high cloud-maturity organizations reported successfully saving money using multi-cloud.
Most interestingly, perhaps, is that high-maturity cloud adopters said they are better equipped to attract, motivate and retain talent than lower-maturity cloud adopters (74% compared with 48%). It’s generally easier to pull in talent when operating with attractive cutting-edge technologies that look good on a resume.
Spotlight on Platform Teams
Even then, skills shortages remained the top bottleneck in most organizations’ ability to operationalize multi-cloud and set up platform teams. This can be side-stepped by reskilling or upskilling staff, incorporating more consultants or increasing the budget. But the best strategy is to standardize on a common operating model.
In that vein, investments into the platform engineering concept are rising. In fact, 92% of organizations are adopting, standardizing or scaling platform teams. Low cloud maturity firms tend to lag on platformification, most likely due to lacking the necessary skills to build and maintain internal developer-facing infrastructure, like the tools used to measure and improve developer productivity and satisfaction at LinkedIn. Others are still on the cusp of exploring how to implement it.
The idea of platform engineering is still taking root, so it was interesting to see how organizations described the platform teams’ roles and responsibilities. The results showed platform engineers commonly take the reins on everything from architecting solutions to tooling acquisition and internal evangelism. Here are the five top-cited roles for platform teams:
- Develop and standardize a cloud infrastructure strategy (95%)
- Architect cloud solutions (95%)
- Create and distribute cloud management, operational policies and best practices (94%)
- Determine which cloud vendors and/or technologies are used in production (93%)
- Define and measure site reliability (91%)
The Path to Cloud Maturity
In general, companies are still confident about their cloud trajectories. But, getting to a mature multi-cloud state will take work. One area that needs further scrutiny is cybersecurity, as password or credential leakage is now seen as the most prevalent cloud security threat. Organizations will require better DevSecOps best practices to avoid such leaks. That, and certain open source cloud-native tools could also aid security and compliance efforts.
A mature cloud strategy will also require localizing development efforts through shared platforms and increasing infrastructure automation. On that note, 83% of organizations say automation tools are important or extremely important to operationalize their multi-cloud infrastructure. More automation for cloud-native areas like CI/CD, observability and Kubernetes management could also abstract complexity and fill the skills gap.
As the HashiCorp study clearly showed, those organizations that have matured their cloud strategy are far better off because of it. They tend to understand their workflows better and can more seamlessly introduce new automation. Now, it’s only a matter of getting there …