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Four reasons managed cloud service providers are essential
Mon, 30th Sep 2019
FYI, this story is more than a year old

The emergence and success of the cloud over the last decade is unquestioned.

It is nearly impossible to read any current IT publication that does not cover the growth, innovation and emerging use cases that are enabled by cloud.

And for most, the word “cloud” is synonymous with Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google.

This makes sense, as they are by far the most recognised and successful providers in the hyperscale public cloud.

And yet, these three leaders in the industry are not destined for complete market domination.

There not only remains a place for the Managed Cloud Service Provider (MSCP), but there are multiple reasons why they are essential and often the better choice for a significant majority of the IT market.

Public cloud infrastructure requires specific expertise

Many organisations will often start with the false premise that they can simply pick up the on-premises infrastructure and move it over to the hyperscale public cloud.

While this has often been the promise and the general infrastructure is similar, the reality is that many basic elements such as control panels, networking and security are different enough that challenges very quickly emerge.

Choosing a MCSP helps in one of two ways: the hosted service environment can closely mirror the on-premises environment, or a managed service can effectively broker the public cloud and introduce the cloud expertise necessary to integrate two different environments.

In an ecosystem where time-to-offering is an essential competitive advantage, this value cannot be underestimated.

In fact, it is very likely that the MCSP community will evolve into a front line brokering of the hyperscale public clouds, while facilitating and managing the transition and hybrid environment

Cloud economics need to be effectively managed

“The cloud is not a charity,” is one of my favourite statements.

The ability for cloud to drive profit is based on the ability to layer in margin.

While the public cloud can be very effective for elastic workloads with a high degree of variability, placing workloads in a remote location or for taking advantage of a pre-configured service, they can be significantly less cost-effective for static workloads with predictable infrastructure needs.

As the various public clouds all vie for market dominance and customers choose which workloads are best suited to the public cloud benefits, MCSPs offer the ability to abstract the workload from the public cloud, while closely monitoring the cost characteristics and shifting the data and service based on the customer ROI.

This is a distinct and definite value add that most customers are unable to measure and recognise.

Many services offer a superior end-user experience in a decentralised model

There is a simple truth in the IT ecosystem: network matters.

Organisations often find that two of the limiting factors in a service offering are the size of the bandwidth and the latency between the service offering and the user.

While it is sometimes possible, though expensive, to increase the size of the bandwidth, it isn't possible to accelerate the speed of light.

These two limiting factors have an absolute impact on services and have led to the creation of entire technology categories such as Content Distribution Networks (CDNs).

If it were possible to send data from a few centralised hyperscale distribution nodes, there would be no need for a CDN.

And yet CDNs have thrived and continue to thrive.

Why? Network matters and decentralised models can offer a superior experience.

Many of the hyperscale public clouds have recognised this and include offerings that place small amounts of compute at the edge — either in the customer data center or in a regional partner location.

While this provides the opportunity to improve service delivery, the business model of the hyperscale public cloud is not aligned with decentralised networks as they attempt to leverage economies of scale to keep prices down.

This leaves an opportunity for the MCSP to add infrastructure in a decentralised model loosely coupled with services from a central public cloud.

Customers should focus on their core business

Lastly, the decline of many organisations is often lack of focus.

They attempt to manage and execute too many things simultaneously.

By partnering with a MCSP, they are often able to consume an IT outcome with a Service Level Agreement (SLA) — thus freeing precious internal resources to focus on the core business tasks.

It has been broadly recognised that many IT functions such as email and communication services are frequently delivered through a trusted partner and extending this model to infrastructure and platform services makes good business sense.

The MCSP partner is able to deliver on their core competency, while the business is free to focus on theirs.

It's only too clear that the industry is going through a transformation with the adoption of cloud.

However, it would be a mistake to believe that the net result of this transformation is that organisations should solely examine the major public cloud providers.

A trusted MCSP partner who understands your business is often the smarter choice in this cloud evolution.