Highest security standards, flexibility and cost efficiency: a private cloud offers numerous advantages for SMEs. A well thought-out migration strategy, step-by-step implementation and rigorous monitoring are essential for a successful cloud migration that ensures higher functionality and lower IT operating costs. In a white paper, we show how SMEs can move their IT infrastructure and applications to the private cloud within six weeks.
In numerous surveys, IT decision-makers and opinion leaders named the cloud as the undisputed leader among technology trends. Cloud computing is expected to continue to grow in the coming years. "Regardless of what industry you are in (government, startups, agriculture, healthcare, banking), plan to migrate to the cloud, as the entire world is moving to the cloud sooner rather than later," predicts Medium publicationTowards Data Sciencein a summary of software trends 2021.
The rapidly growing popularity of cloud hosting and the increased demand from our customers for a private cloud was reason enough for us to summarise the most important information on the topic of the private cloud in a white paper.
A private cloud is a personal pool of resources for a single client.
These resources are run in a dedicated infrastructure either on-site, by means of dedicated servers or in a data centre of an external partner.
Private clouds are hosted on private servers and the resources and networks are completely separated from other users. This isolates business-critical workloads and data from other users of the cloud infrastructure.
The users of the private cloud are given absolute control over the virtual network.
After defining the term private cloud above, we will first take a closer look at the concept of the public cloud and then show how private clouds and public clouds differ significantly.
A public cloud is a multi-tenant platform where computing resources can be rented on demand from an external provider and shared with other companies or users, whereas with a private cloud only one company at a time has access to the computing resources in the cloud.
Public cloud services are always provided by a third-party provider and a private cloud can be located in a company's local data centre or hosted by a cloud provider.
Although the individual users also act independently of each other with a public cloud, they all use the same pool of resources.
The private cloud grants access to cloud services only to authorised users and resources are not shared among multiple users. With a private cloud, computer, storage and network capacities can be adapted to the individual needs of an organisation and are not subject to the restrictions of the public cloud.
The most important advantages of private clouds over public clouds include higher data protection, greater reliability and greater control over one's own data or applications.
The high security standards and customised offerings of a private cloud often seem more expensive at first glance than the prefabricated public cloud offerings from hyperscalers such as Amazon or Microsoft. However, research by Tech Target in 2020 shows that the horrendous costs of private clouds are largely a myth and that more than half of all SMEs do not ultimately save money with a public cloud from a large provider.
In the next section, we have summarised how SMEs can benefit from a private cloud.
Application and IT environment requirements can change quickly, especially in growing start-ups and SMEs, depending on the order situation or team development.
One of the biggest advantages of cloud-based servers is their high scalability: if a small business grows into a medium-sized enterprise, there is no need to purchase new servers and software at every milestone.
With cloud servers, more computing power can be activated within minutes. In addition, the rented cloud resources can be accessed from anywhere in the world, the only requirement is an internet connection.
If you are still unsure whether cloud hosting makes sense for your company, you will find here our decision-making guide for the step into the cloud.
Cloud migration is the transfer of data and apps to a cloud infrastructure.
Migrating workload and applications to the cloud is a complex process that requires careful preparation and precise implementation.
The renowned market research company Gartner describes the five phases of the relocation process as follows:
The biggest sticking point in cloud migrations is data transfer: regardless of whether the transfer takes place via the internet or whether the data is physically brought to the storage location with a device, data transfers should not be underestimated and, from experience, often take more time than expected.
The design and architecture of your data may not fit the cloud data model, so adjustments need to be made before the migration process. Xelon can provide a simplified migration process.