How Cloud Partners Can Help Clients Deliver Significant Business Outcomes
We’re at the start of a seismic shift away from viewing the value of cloud purely in terms of cost. Companies are beginning to view their cloud investment from the perspective of innovation, and this change is bringing a renewed sense of urgency to cloud adoption and strategy. Leaders in every industry are now pursuing aggressive transformations of their own. Cloud is no longer merely a matter of cost, it’s fundamental to your ability to compete and succeed.
The first wave of widespread cloud adoption ultimately was attributed to one driving force: cost savings. Organizations of almost all sizes, regardless of industry, began moving workloads to the cloud with the goal of reducing their spending on infrastructure and other technology needs.
This made sense: The potential for lower costs in the cloud is a bottom-line story that appeals to the CEO and CFO just as much as the CIO or CTO. Today, any company can access hyperscale compute, storage and other IT resources without a hyperscale budget. You only pay for what you use, when you use it, creating fewer idle resources and wasted capital expenditures.
Top-Line vs. Bottom-Line Drivers
This cost benefit remains a relevant cloud use case; more and more companies are getting out of the business of building and managing their own data centers. But cost reduction isn’t necessarily the main driver. Instead, organizations are turning to the cloud to be a catalyst for innovation and new revenue streams. To put it another way, cloud is now as much about the top line as it is the bottom line. Cloud is about far more than balancing the budget. It’s about creating tangible business value.
According to McKinsey, the cloud’s “trillion-dollar prize” is up for grabs, and 60% of future cloud spend will fall into an “innovate” category, including growth from new and enhanced use cases, accelerated product development and leveraging public cloud hyperscalability. In addition, many enterprises are looking to the cloud as a form of pioneering, adopting emerging technology by gaining experience in experimentation at low cost.
We see this shift occurring across industries, from health care to media and entertainment to retail and more. Take retail, for example: these businesses recognize the critical importance of being able to write great software as quickly as possible to engage their customers; they’re looking to leverage DevOps, continuous integration/continuous delivery (CI/CD) pipelines, automation and other tools and processes that have become synonymous with the cloud. They’re in a hypercompetitive sector where developer efficiency and the ability to deliver excellent customer experiences – both digital and physical – are table stakes. Modern data platforms and analytics are critical to their supply chains and ensuring their agility and efficiency. The cloud is the foundation for all of that.
Consider health care as another example: We’ve seen firsthand the benefit of leveraging cloud-based, application programming interface (API)-based tools (instead of legacy technologies) in transitioning from the Health Level Seven International (HL7) electronic health information interoperability systems to the Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) standard and modernizing applications and analytics for payers and providers in the industry.
In media and entertainment, the cloud is having a transformative impact on content distribution, and content creators, broadcasters and streaming networks are modernizing their revenue streams and operations as a result.
And the list goes on: financial services, food and beverage, insurance and so forth. As businesses in these and other industries shift their cloud strategies from cost reduction to revenue generation, we see a corresponding transformation in how partners meet their customers’ cloud needs.
Speed is the common denominator underpinning these use cases, yet the cloud learning curve …
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