Veeam Backup Replication Delivers Scalability And Performance To The Hybrid Cloud

Veeam Backup & Replication is a powerful, easy-to-use and affordable backup and Availability solution. It provides fast, flexible and reliable recovery of virtualized applications and data, bringing virtual machine backup and replication together in a single software solution with award-winning support for VMware virtual environment.

Veeam Backup & Replication:

  • Ensures Availability for ALL your apps and data, anywhere — on premises, or in the cloud
  • Helps you exceed your SLAs and cut downtime. In 9.5, Veeam offers additional storage integrations and new backup and restore technologies to help you meet and exceed your SLAs
  • 9.5 also allows you to optimize your investment in IT spend — with FULL integration with Windows Server 2016, vCloud director enhancements and more

And we have good news for you! For every new subscription Veeam Cloud Connect Backup  we will give you FREE Cloud Backup 12TB for 30 days. Contact us now at sales@zettagrid.id or fill these form and our sales team will follow up your request.

For further information Zettagrid Indonesia cloud product and service please visit www.zettagrid.id

*some information from this article is originally taken from Veeam Propartner Portal

 

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Monitor Your Infrastructure With Real Time Metrics, How To?

Proactive IT environment monitoring is essential in an online world where business success is equal to system uptime. Proactive monitoring means improved availability.

Organisations need to monitor their IT environments to ensure they are running optimally and identify any issues which could cause a failure down the line. In addition, IT environment health monitoring gives organisations the peace of mind they are providing an efficient and consistent service to their end users.

Total visibility of all interdependent systems is vital

In any IT environment problems which may cause service interruption are not immediately visible and tend to build up over a period of time.

Having total visibility of IT infrastructure services and their interdependencies is paramount in preventing issues and helps organisations make informed decisions about their IT environment.

Monitoring helps gather data and set performance benchmarks

IT infrastructure monitoring is not the only key to ensuring proactive alerting of negative incidents. Monitoring and gathering performance data over time is a key input into shaping IT strategy. As technology changes and business needs evolve monitoring IT infrastructure enables organisations to benchmark their IT systems performance and then use this information to plan for upgrades, enhancements and migrations.

Proactive analysis of IT system means organisations have a better chance of preventing major disruptions. Regular health checks on infrastructure and alerts which indicate where certain measurements are deviating from historical benchmarks can identify any discrepancies within systems and assist in proactively rectifying issues before they negatively impact business operations. The key outcome of proactive monitoring is the focus and effort of IT operations have shifted from fighting fires to preventing outages.

IT monitoring can also aid organisations in fine-tuning their infrastructure to ensure peak performance and efficiency is achieved. Close monitoring can highlight how systems interact and proactively identify any areas that are vulnerable or underperforming. By identifying bottlenecks and potential areas of danger, organisations can then use this information to enhance their services and prevent any system outages.

Monitoring is not an IT activity, it’s a business tool

Effective IT infrastructure monitoring enables data driven decision making, identifies issues early, improves the productivity and performance of IT systems, helps organisations plan for growth and ultimately helps prevent or reduce the negative effects of system downtime.

Zettagrid monitoring delivers insights

Zettagrid gives customers access to real-time monitoring of their entire environment through their status page. This service also gives customers the option to subscribe to updates which proactively alerts them should any incident occur which may have an impact on their environment.

The Zettagrid real-time status reports give customers a view of the current state of the primary Zettagrid services such as the operations centre, internet transit and DNS status. In addition, this dashboard also monitors the principal services at each of the Zettagrid locations in Australia and Jakarta.

Scheduled maintenance notices give customers prior notice to any maintenance being done on the Zettagrid platform which may affect their running services and real-time system metrics provide insight into the current bandwidth network utilisation.

Zettagrid also posts past incidents on their status page which give details into incidents which have affected the Zettagrid platform and how these were resolved, giving their customers full transparency into the environment running their critical IT services.

Real-time monitoring and historical metrics, 24/7

Customers are also able to monitor the real-time metrics of their Zettagrid services via the Zettagrid self-service portal.

Real-time and historical metrics are available at any time, so customers can monitor the performance of their virtual machines.

Ready to get your finger on the pulse with real-time monitoring?

Contact us to discuss how real-time monitoring metrics can improve your business decision making.

We’re happy to help.

Find out more information about Zettagrid cloud service by visiting the Zettagrid Indonesia website.

*This article originally taken from blog.zettagrid.com

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How Scalable Licensing And Infrastructure Benefits Your Business

Scalability = Operational Flexibility

Scalability is a systems characteristic which enables a platform hosting a system to automatically muster additional computing resources as the system workload increases.

In a cloud world, a scalable system is a system which is able to automatically provision additional computing resources such as processor, memory and bandwidth as the demand for computing resources from the hosted system increases.

Scalability meets user expectations

Users interacting with online services expect systems to be perpetually available, function at peak performance levels and have a user interface design which is aesthetically pleasing, intuitive and simple to use.

Scalability’s purpose as a feature of online services is to ensure a system is able to function at the performance levels expected by its users.

Scalability and its impact on availability

Downtime in an online world is not good for business. Ensuring systems availability has multiple real-world business benefits which impact the profitability and brand reputation of an organisation.

In today’s business world, all revenue-based transactions are processed via an IT system or application. This is true for both online e-commerce type transactions as well as traditional invoice runs on an in-house financial application. If a revenue-generating system is down the business cannot make money.

Scalability ensures online systems availability during periods where services are under heavy load. Services which are not able to scale will ultimately stop responding and go offline when all the allocated computing resources for the system have been consumed. The system can only start responding again if existing locked resources are released or additional resources added.

Scalability, therefore, benefits businesses by ensuring services and applications stay online and functional.

Poor performance and unavailability are punished in an online world

Most modern organisations interact with their customers through some form of online platform.

Social media has enabled organisations to interact with their customers on many different levels which have strengthened customer relationships. However, social media has also given consumers a platform to voice their grievances to the organisation while broadcasting these to other customers.

Poor application performance and service unavailability are heavily punished on social media. Businesses should, therefore, ensure they constantly strive to deliver an online service which performs well above the expectations set by its users.

By configuring their applications with a scalable architecture, organisations can ensure their applications perform admirably under heavy load.

Zettagrid’s cloud is built for scalability

Delivering Australia’s most advanced self-service cloud hosting platform with solutions such as application hosting as well as public, private and hybrid cloud offerings, Zettagrid is well placed to resolve scalability issues for businesses.

Organisations have the option to provision their services on Zettagrid’s cloud platform by subscribing to their virtual data centre or virtual server services which are built on VMware.

Zettagrid virtual servers have the added benefit of being fully customizable and give users the option to configure the computing resources of their virtual machine as they see fit with no templates or images which lock them down to specific configurations.
Should customers ever need to scale a Zettagrid virtual server they can easily do so at any time via the Zettagrid self-service portal.

Create a hybrid cloud with Zettagrid to facilitate on-premise scalability

Organisations could opt to create a hybrid cloud between their on-premise private cloud and the Zettagrid platform. This configuration gives customers the flexibility to move workloads between their two environments as demand fluctuates.

For periods of high demand, they can run their workload on Zettagrid’s platform which can scale to the resource requirements required.

Once demand decreases customers can simply migrate their workloads back to their private on-premise private cloud.

Scalability is good for business

The business benefits of scalability are clear and tangible. Scalability ensures you can make money and keep your customers happy when your systems are at their busiest.  Scalability is a major business benefit delivered by Zettagrid cloud. Organisations can rest assured that their systems stay online and responsive when they need them to.

Find out more information about Zettagrid cloud service by visiting the Zettagrid Indonesia website.

*This article originally taken from blog.zettagrid.com

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Multiple Availability Zones. What Does This Mean For Your Business?

Risk is inherent in any undertaking and the risk of IT failure in business is a threat organisations need to take seriously. There are dire consequences for not having some form of risk mitigation in place for IT failures.

Data Protection + High Availability = Business Survival

IT failures are unpredictable and could originate from anywhere

There are many potential failures which could affect an IT environment. These failures could be as a result of local failure incidents such as user errors, hardware component or full system failures. Failures could also result from full environment-wide disasters which could range from a full data centre or site failure to a catastrophe negatively impacting an entire city or region.

Backups first

Data and System backups are the bare minima an organisation needs when implementing a risk mitigation strategy for IT failures and disasters. However, in a world where uptime is directly related to profit and reputation, legacy backups will no longer suffice.

Disaster Recovery next

Businesses today at very least need an enterprise-grade disaster recovery solution. However, to ensure maximum uptime and true resilience in the face of a disaster, businesses should augment their disaster recovery solution with a robust and resilient business continuity service enabled and delivered through high availability.

Ultimately you need Business Continuity

True disaster recovery business continuity solutions must mitigate all downtime risks and ensure systems remain available. Each risk, no matter its size, origin or impact affects the availability of online systems.

Failures which impact the availability of online systems have a real business impact and could affect the viability of a going concern due to the negative effect system down time has on revenue and brand reputation.

Cloud Disaster Recovery is resilient and affordable

Cloud service providers like Zettagrid offer industry leading cloud-based disaster recovery business continuity solutions at a cost affordable to most organisations.

Service providers must ensure they build redundancy into their platform

True enterprise cloud disaster recovery business continuity service providers need to have their own built-in redundancy to ensure they can offer their customers true high-availability.

Zettagrid meets these criteria and guarantees its service through its multiple availability zones.

Service providers also need to have geo-redundancy

Enterprise disaster recovery solutions commit to high levels of redundancy and availability to mitigate against predictable downtime risks such as user error or hardware failure.

However, it is often large-scale unpredictable disasters such as floods, earthquakes, tsunamis etc. which could have the largest negative impact on most businesses. To mitigate this risk, cloud service providers need to ensure they have a geographically dispersed redundant platform.

Zettagrid leads the way with geo-redundant availability zones

Zettagrid runs multiple availability zones, located in Perth, Sydney, Melbourne, and Jakarta, with each running separate isolated instances of their infrastructure to mitigate the risk of a large-scale disaster affecting an entire city or region.

These multiple availability zones not only protect the Zettagrid cloud but also contain key benefits for Zettagrid customers.

Find out more information about Zettagrid cloud service by visiting the Zettagrid Indonesia website.

*This article originally taken from blog.zettagrid.com

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Do Not Have Disaster Recovery, How It Risk For Business?

Written by Nicki Pereira, Chief Technology Officer of Zettagrid  : Unplanned outages have a real business impact. Your business is impacted when IT disasters and system outages occur and these impacts have a direct or indirect cost associated with them.

A revenue generating system such as an e-commerce website has direct financial consequences when it goes down. Non-revenue generating systems such as your email service may have indirect costs when it fails such as the inability to send invoices to your customers. Either way a system outage is bad for business and must be mitigated through careful contingency planning.

Organisations must have a disaster recovery plan in place so when the inevitable happens they are able to recover swiftly and thereby reduce the business impact and cost.

Unplanned outages are not a rare occurrence

This infographic shows 47% of companies experienced and outage of downtime in the last year and 95% of these outages were unrelated to natural disasters such as fire or flood.

Research conducted by Zerto shows there are many root causes for unplanned outages. These include hardware failures, environmental failures, human error and cybercrime.

Hardware failures

According to the research conducted by Zerto, hardware failures such as failures in the electrical supply or uninterrupted power supplies accounted for approximately 31% of reported outages in 2016.

These outages would have affected entire IT environments due to the loss of power to all systems. In addition, power failures in IT environments often result in data loss and data corruption.

The downtime impact the business’s revenue stream. Compounding this is the time, effort and cost of recovering from such an event that can be a substantial hit to the bottom line.

Cybercrime

Cybercrime accounted for 22% of outages in 2016 according to Zerto. Ransomware as a category has grown exponentially from 3.2 million incidents in 2014 to over 638 million incidents in 2016.

Earlier ransomware malware variants usually affected individual end users so the impact was limited unless the users inadvertently infected and encrypted an organisation’s file server. Newer variants can now affect entire networks by propagating through vulnerabilities on unpatched computers.

Either way, the impact of a cybercrime incident such as ransomware resulting in a system outage has both direct and indirect costs. Organisations with no effective disaster recovery solutions have paid millions in ransom.

If you add the losses due to the downtime to these numbers, the financial impact is substantial.

The human error factor

The research conducted by Zerto reported that human error accounted for 22% of unplanned outages in 2016.

As with other causes of unplanned outages these may have been environment wide and could have taken days to recover from. For example, a systems administrator applying an untested patch to several production servers may have resulted in data loss or data corruption.

Entire systems may have needed to be rebuilt and restored which would have had a financial impact due to the loss in productivity and availability.

Environmental incidents

Environmental factors such as water, heat, CRAC failures accounted for 11% of outages reported in 2016 according to Zerto. These types of outages would also be system wide.

Depending on the damage, the time to recover from these types of events could be significant due to the damage caused. Recovery times for these environmental incidents could be days or even weeks.

The business impact from being offline for such a prolonged period would be catastrophic.

The cost of each hour of downtime

According to Zerto research, one hour of downtime has a substantial financial impact to businesses of all sizes when factoring all of the various impacts, costs and losses.

For small businesses, each hour of downtime costs $8,000 on average.

For mid-tier organisations, each hour of downtime costs $74,000 on average.

For large enterprises, each hour of downtime can cost $700,000 on average.

Conclusion

Unplanned outages are clearly a threat to any organisation. Disaster recovery solutions should not only be undertaken to meet a compliance obligation. The costs of unplanned outages are real and affect the profitability and sustainability of businesses.

Organisations must invest in a robust and scalable disaster recovery solution which is able to ensure business continuity.

Careful consideration must be given to the Recovery Time Objectives (RTOs) and Recovery Point Objectives (RPOs) to ensure data loss and operational downtime is kept to a minimum to meet business uptime objectives..

Find out more information about Zettagrid disaster ecovery solutions by visiting the Zettagrid Indonesia website.

*This article originally taken from blog.zettagrid.com

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Moving To Cloud. It’s As Easy As 1-2-3

 

Why Zettagrid Cloud

Zettagrid delivers Indonesia’s most advanced self-service cloud infrastructure platform and helps customers realize the true benefits of Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS), offering true cloud flexibility.

From a commercial standpoint, you don’t get locked into any contracts and from a technical standpoint, Zettagrid gives you the freedom to configure your environment exactly as you need it.

The Zettagrid platform operates in more data centres than any provider in Australia with the largest VMware cloud footprint. In addition, multiple availability zones in Perth, Sydney, Melbourne and Jakarta give customers regional flexibility and a fully redundant platform for peace of mind.

Although Zettagrid’s world-leading cloud service platform is packed with features, migrating to any of Zettagrid’s cloud services is also easy and straightforward.

To highlight this fact, below are some examples which illustrate how easy it is to get started with Zettagrid.

Getting Started with the Zettagrid Product Catalogue

The Zettagrid Product Catalogue is an easy to use and intuitive interface where you can order and configure any number of Zettagrid cloud services.

This online service gives you the power to set granular requirements for virtual servers, a Virtual Data Center (VDC), a SecondSite Disaster Recovery and other services such as Veeam Cloud Backup and Replication.

Unlike other cloud service providers who force you to use predetermined virtual machine configurations, Zettagrid allows you to specify the virtual hardware settings of your services from the vCPU count to memory and storage. This freedom to choose gives you true flexibility as you can configure your Zettagrid services to match your requirements and budget. You simply configure your service and once you are ready click on the ‘Add to Order’ button.

Veeam Cloud Connect Replication to Zettagrid

To create a Veeam Cloud Connect replication service on Zettagrid you only need a Cloud Connect endpoint, a username and a password.

To configure the service, you simply log in to your account and then click on the security tab of the Cloud Connect replication service. Once the service has been provisioned by Zettagrid you can then setup the necessary using the dedicated Veeam Backup and Recovery console.

On the Veeam Backup and Recovery Console, you configure the service by selecting your service provider and deciding on the license cost, CPU, RAM and storage requirements. You then configure the host, resource pool, datastore, network and IP address of your Network Extension Appliance.

Once you have completed this, the service is rapidly provisioned for you. Quickly, easily and efficiently.

Using VMware vCloud Director to create a Hybrid Cloud with a self-contained Zettagrid Virtual Data Center

If you are already using VMware as your virtualisation platform you can rapidly and effortlessly transform your environment into a hybrid cloud by extending it to Zettagrid’s Virtual Data Centre offering.

To take advantage of this feature you simply download the VMware vCloud Director Extender. Once installed and configured you can use this VMware plugin to simply and efficiently view, copy and operate virtual machines, vApps and templates from your own VMware environment to Zettagrid.

Conclusion – It really is as easy as 1-2-3

From these few examples, you can clearly see that moving to a powerful Zettagrid cloud solution is a simple, efficient and effortless process.

*This article originally taken from blog.zettagrid.com

 

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Achieve Amazing Business Resiliency, How To?

Written by Nicki Pereira, Chief Technology Officer of Zettagrid  : Business resilience is a something that everyone knows the importance of, but most organisations fail to see its value until it’s too late. However, as the digital landscape continues to evolve, it has become incredibly dangerous and foolhardy at best to maintain this mindset.

The unavailability of tools such as Trello, Slack, Adobe Cloud and Grammarly crippled the creative industry during the widespread outage. Equally, even Microsoft’s Office 365 recently left European users unable to access Exchange Online leaving many unable to access their email accounts. Meanwhile, security breaches at Equifax have left their reputation in tatters.

These are just a few examples of high-profile incidents that have highlighted how any business can go offline and become invisible to their customers at any moment in time. In a world of endless options, fickle users will then visit your competitor. These are the inconvenient truths that businesses are facing and why reputation is increasingly topping the list of business priorities.

However, to prepare for the unexpected and the inevitable impact on your business to ensure that all IT services are up and running within minutes is much easier than you might think. The days of needing expensive secondary data centers, duplicate IT equipment and lengthy wait periods interrupting your operations and impacting your business are thankfully behind us.The problems of having an always online business are well documented. But how to achieve the elusive business resiliency and disaster recovery strategy is a topic that often leaves more questions than answers.

Understanding that business continuity is critical to your commercial survival is the first step that will set your organisation on the road to stability. With SecondSite, we provide an affordable real-time replication solution that will seamlessly integrate into your disaster recovery plan.

Rather than having one single point of failure, we replicate your virtualised IT environment into Zettagrid’s cloud and do the heavy lifting for you. Failing over to a different zone takes away the risk and ensures that all services remain online until your primary site recovers.

The most attractive feature for IT departments is that users will be blissfully unaware that you have failed over into the cloud. Rather than wasting time managing communications or appeasing key stakeholders with regular updates, IT can concentrate on resolving the issues at hand while its business as usual for everyone else.

Although many organisations already have a disaster recovery plan, recovering from a backup is traditionally a painful and time-consuming process. In an always-online economy, businesses no longer have the luxury of going offline in a world where time is the new currency.

Ensuring that data synchronisation, accessibility, and a recovery site is in place for your virtual environment is the new belts and braces approach required to increase the availability of all services and applications. But, there is much more to achieving business resiliency than having a virtual get out of jail free card when disaster strikes.

Ensuring that you can determine and communicate compliance across your company, boardroom or even auditors is equally as important. Regular reports that highlight exactly what information and applications are always available is one of the most important aspects of achieving high availability and amazing business resiliency.

A neglected recovery plan that is tested or revisited every few years has never been an effective strategy. Equally having all your eggs in one basket whether it be in-house or cloud only is also a recipe for disaster.

The secret sauce to effective business resilience is having the ability to deploy, test and recover faster when the inevitable happens. It is imperative that any real-time disaster recovery replication solution should replicate into multiple zones to avoid going offline in an always-online digital world.

It has become crucial to understand the costs and implications of downtime during an outage. We understand that the top of businesses wish lists will be a scalable and quick disaster recovery solution that is both reliable and affordable for organisations of any size.

Can you say with confidence that your operations will be free from interruption for the foreseeable future? Is your organisation’s productivity and reputation safe from harm? And are you prepared for a disaster?

Zettagrid’s award-winning Disaster Recovery Solutions is bringing much-needed innovation to the disaster recovery space to efficiently deliver organisational resilience. But what are your experiences and insights in this area? We would love to have a conversation to understand what challenges your business is facing and how we can help you overcome them.

Find out more information about Disaster Recovery Solutions by visiting the Zettagrid Indonesia website.

*This article originally taken from blog.zettagrid.com

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What Is VMware vCloud Director? And Why Is It Relevant To You?

VMware vCloud Director is an offering from VMware which enables cloud providers to provision Software Defined Data Center services which are ready for consumption in a matter of minutes.

A Software Defined Data Centre (SDDC) is the final destination of a cloud migration journey. This journey of evolution starts with virtualising hardware followed by storage and finally networking and security.

The primary business benefit of a SDDC is simplification for cloud service providers enabling them to provision secure IT resources and applications and having these available for consumption in a matter of minutes.

The business agility which a SDDC provides is an important competitive advantage in the digital age where speed to market is often the difference between success and failure.

Business agility delivers benefits

A SDDC, enabled by VMware vCloud Director, creates greater business agility for cloud service providers such as Zettagrid who in turn pass on this benefit to their customers.

In a world where an accelerated rate of change and multifactor business forces are constantly driving dynamic and fluid business requirements, businesses need to be able to respond with rapid agility to ensure they meet the objectives set by the market forces at play.

The business benefits of organisational agility cannot and should not be underestimated. Business agility creates a competitive advantage, leads to higher customer satisfaction and retention and increased employee productivity. In addition, agility can also lead to a reduction in cost and creates the opportunity for businesses to react rapidly to new opportunities.

Enabling vCenter customers to extend their existing data centers to the cloud

Existing VMware customers can easily migrate their existing data centers to the Zettagrid cloud using a vCenter plugin, aptly named vCloud Director Extender, which enables simple, secure virtual machine migration and data center extension.

In essence, vCloud Director Extender is a vCenter plugin that enables VMware customers to directly connect to Zettagrid’s vCloud Director environment for workload migration.

This simple yet powerful vCloud feature simplifies the complex process of extending your existing infrastructure or migrating your infrastructure to the cloud. It allows for user-driven workflows, seamless connectivity, and cold or warm migration options.

Improved Security

Any technology solution, from infrastructure application planning to implementation and operational maintenance, must take security seriously. Confidential information, hosted on online systems, is only a single authentication credential or system vulnerability away from being compromised by malicious actors who could use this data for nefarious purposes.

By utilising vCloud as an extension to their existing VMware environment, VMware customers can maintain security and control over multi-tenant environments with policy-based user controls and VMware vShield security technologies such as vShield Zones, vShield Edge, vShield App and vShield Endpoint.

Application portability

According to a recent white paper published by the Cloud Standards Customer Council, an end user advocacy group dedicated to accelerating cloud’s successful adoption, interoperability and application portability between clouds is a critical success factor for any cloud extension service or cloud service platform.

Zettagrid and the VMware VCloud Director solution offering from VMware subscribe to these principles and standards which include the Open Virtualization Format (OVF) as well as industry standard API specifications such as LDAP, OAuth, and SAML.

VMware vCloud Director and Zettagrid

Zettagrid delivers Australia’s most advanced self-service cloud infrastructure platform. We provide the easiest, fastest and most highly available cloud through their full network integration and have the largest VMware cloud footprint in Australia operating data centers in Sydney, Melbourne, Perth and Jakarta.

To use VMware vCloud Director with Zettagrid simply provision a Zettagrid Virtual Data Centre which offers superior business benefits such as fully customised sizing, simple management, no contract lock-ins and a simplified costing engine.

To move your infrastructure to the next level of evolution, sign up for the Zettagrid Virtual Data Centre and then transform your environment into a hybrid cloud simply and efficiently by using the vCloud Director Extender plugin.

Find out more how Zettagrid VDC can benefit your business.

*This article originally taken from blog.zettagrid.com

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Cloud Migration Mistakes You Need to Avoid

Written by Nicki Pereira, Chief Technology Officer of Zettagrid  : Migrating to the cloud, like all other strategic projects, should be a methodical planned exercise.

As with all technology undertakings, proper due diligence, planning, testing and re-testing should take place before the actual migration starts. A good migration strategy should always contain:

•    A full analysis of the undertaking with a detailed project plan with all the necessary project management controls

•    A financial analysis of the true costs before the migration commences which should include the once-off project costs as well as the regular cloud costs that the business will incur.

•    Analysis of all the applications and services that will be running on the new cloud platform to ensure the user experience is not degraded in any way.

•    A deep understanding of the cloud migration process to ensure a smooth transition with very little impact to the business and its users.

•    Security standards and compliance regimens.

•    Real-time, in-depth monitoring of the new cloud environment to ensure visibility during the migration.

These activities aren’t always undertaken by organisations who want to incorporate cloud into their strategy.

Here are five mistakes to avoid when migrating to the cloud:

1. Having no plan

The popular adage of ‘failing to plan is planning to fail’ is true for most undertakings but is crucial for cloud migrations.

Due to the complexity involved and the many moving parts of IT environments today, simply starting a migration without carefully planning each step will lead to some form of business disruption or at the very least a migration that takes longer than it should.

Systems today are interdependent and the project team must take cognisance of these dependencies when planning which systems, applications or servers to move first and in which order. If the environment is going to be migrated live then some solution should also be put in place to ensure the two environments co-exist and communicate to ensure no interruptions.

2. Not understanding the costs

With the proliferation of cloud service providers on the market comes a proliferation of pricing models which are often very complex and make costing estimations at the outset of a cloud migration strategy very difficult to calculate.

It’s important to calculate your costs based on resource usage, something that is very difficult to do when you come from an on premise environment. For example, do you know how many read/writes your database server performs in each month?

This is an important metric to know if you choose a service provider who is going to bill you per read/write transaction. A busy month for your database server will blow your budget. Where possible choose a service provider with a predictable billing model or keep daily checks on your subscription costs so that you can pre-empt billing surprises at month end.

3. Having no clear process

As mentioned previously, migrating an IT environment with many moving interdependent parts which may also need to remain in production while migration takes place is a complex process to manage.

The cloud migration market over the past few years has spawned multiple cloud migration technology solutions and cloud migration services organisations which understand this complexity and help you migrate to the cloud while keeping risk to a minimum.

As these organisations have already performed multiple migrations and learnt lessons along the way they are in a good position to guide you through this to ensure you achieve project success while mitigating your project risk.

4. Making security and compliance an afterthought

Often organisations migrate IT workloads to the cloud leaving essential components such as security and compliance as matters that will be dealt with once the migration has been completed. As with all IT projects security and compliance must form part of the planning phase and be baked into the solution before it is moved to production.

Trying to retrofit these crucial elements once the project has been delivered is more costly and increases your project risk. In a worst-case scenario, you may have migrated your entire infrastructure to the cloud only to find out the cloud you selected is non-compliant with legislation that you must comply with. This would mean you would have to migrate elsewhere.

5. Not maintaining visibility into and control over your cloud based services

Moving to the cloud means that you will be relinquishing some control of your critical infrastructure to the cloud service provider. Management and monitoring systems are now more critical than ever to ensure your IT environment runs smoothly and any incidents are responded to proactively and efficiently with as little disruption as possible.

With parts of your infrastructure not visible to you any longer it is key to have a monitoring solution that measures service availability and is also able to span hybrid cloud environments so that you are able to monitor on premise infrastructure as well as cloud infrastructure from a single console. This ‘single pane of glass’ is especially key during the migration phase when you have multiple moving parts migrating at different times and you need to ensure minimum disruption and an efficient migration.

Success is 20% Skills and 80% Strategy

In conclusion to successfully migrate to the cloud and avoid the five mistakes we have covered you need a cloud migration strategy. This strategy should include a detailed plan, accurate forecasted costs, a good process with security and compliance built in and a solution to ensure you have insight into your systems while the migration is taking place.

Contact us to help you define your cloud migration strategy so that you can avoid these mistakes and benefit from all of the value that the cloud has to offer.

*This article originally taken from blog.zettagrid.com

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Protect Business in the Cloud with Disaster Recovery, How To?

Written by Nicki Pereira, Chief Technology Officer of Zettagrid  : Businesses today rely heavily on their IT systems and there are very few businesses that will not be severely impacted by an incident which results in unplanned IT downtime

IT infrastructure, the applications that run on the Infrastructure and the data that is created through the business applications are the essential life force of modern businesses today.

Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity are not new concepts in organisational risk management.

The growth of cloud solutions has created the opportunity for organisations to leverage the cloud to provide them an essential risk management service, independent from their on-premise infrastructure.

However, organisations that have moved their production systems to the cloud are not exempt from planning for an unplanned IT downtime incident. Just as there are disaster recovery plans and processes in place for an on-premise incident, so too should organisations have plans to mitigate the impact an unplanned outage if they’re already operating out of a cloud environment.If their business experiences an outage or needs to recover from a disaster, they can recover quickly and continue operations from their environment in Zettagrid cloud.

Disaster Recovery (DR) is the replication of either on-premises or cloud based production IT systems to a third-party service provider who has the environment, tools and necessary processes to deliver this service.

These tools, services and processes should provide automation, flexibility and effortless management ensuring this service is an extension of the organisations IT platform.

DR for on-premises environments means replicating IT infrastructure residing upon on-premises hardware and software. In the event the on-premises environment becomes totally or partially unavailable, the organisation can then transfer production operations to their cloud based service until such a time as the on-premise systems are restored.

DR for businesses already operating in the cloud comes with its own set of challenges.

Although cloud based infrastructure has greater redundancy, security and availability, service interruptions can still occur. Human error can also disrupt operations and trigger an outage. Organisations must plan for these events.

A survey conducted by Dimensional Research in October 2016, found that 97% of all network outages are due to human error. You can read the report here.

This human factor implies that cloud based environments are at risk even though they provide greater resiliency. The fact is no matter where you house your critical systems the risk of downtime remains and must be mitigated to ensure business operations are not affected by unplanned service interruptions.

DR for cloud environments is possible by implementing geo-redundant replication between production and failover environments.

*This article originally taken from blog.zettagrid.com

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