All signs indicate cloud computing will be hotter soon, pushed by vulnerabilities identified during the pandemic. Will you be ready? Credit: Rawpixel It’s no secret that the recent COVID-19 pandemic has spurred increased cloud spending, and we’re starting to see the data. Most recent is a survey by Flexera of 750 executives, where more than half (59 percent) said their cloud usage will be leveraged more than planned before the pandemic. I always take these survey reports with a grain of salt considering that the vendors that sponsor them typically have a dog in the hunt. However, from this data, along with recent sales and usage data of cloud providers and technology in the cloud orbit, it’s clearly much more than a trend. My caution to those enterprises hitting the cloud computing accelerator pedal: A bit of pragmatic planning needs to occur along with the quick rush to cloud-based services. The most important areas of focus are security, governance, cloudops, databases, and cloud-based development technology. You need a handle on all five of these before you start pushing more applications and data into the hyperscalers or MSPs (managed services providers). Moreover, if you currently don’t have a good grasp on these issues now, it must be done prior to additional migration. Pragmatism is often the first casualty of panic. I’m seeing enterprises that have made little or no progress toward the use of cloud-based resources over the last few years, and are still suspicious of security and compliance issues. Suddenly, they declare that they are “all in” with cloud computing and direct an army of IT staffers to move workloads and data over to public clouds ASAP. As a cloud computing advocate, I agree these are steps in the right direction. However, as an architect, I worry about the shift in risk from not doing enough to leverage cloud computing to moving too fast and thus raising the risk of making strategic mistakes. One is just as bad as the other. The way to reduce this risk is rather easy to understand: continuous pragmatic planning that aligns with the mass migration into the cloud which is likely to take place during the next two years. It’s not hard and will keep most enterprises from having to migrate twice—once to the cloud platform and technology that they assumed was correct and a second time to the cloud platform and technology that actually is correct. Don’t be that company if you can help it. Related content analysis Generative AI won’t fix cloud migration You’ve probably heard how generative AI will solve all cloud migration problems. It’s not that simple. Generative AI could actually make it harder and more costly. By David Linthicum Jul 12, 2024 5 mins Generative AI Artificial Intelligence Cloud Computing analysis All the brilliance of AI on minimalist platforms Buy all the processing and storage you can or go with a minimum viable platform? AI developers and designers are dividing into two camps. By David Linthicum Jul 09, 2024 5 mins Generative AI Cloud Architecture Artificial Intelligence analysis The next 10 years for cloud computing Despite AI's explosive growth, the industry still needs to face facts that customers are unhappy about costs and vendor lock-in. By David Linthicum Jul 05, 2024 5 mins Amazon Web Services Google Cloud Platform Microsoft Azure analysis Serverless cloud technology fades away Serverless was a big deal for a hot minute, but now it seems old-fashioned, even though its basic elements, agility and scalability, are still relevant. By David Linthicum Jul 02, 2024 4 mins Serverless Computing Cloud Computing Software Development Resources Videos