01Hybrid multicloud infrastructure deployments will become an infrastructure standard.
90% of ECI respondents are taking a “cloud smart” approach to their infrastructure strategy – leveraging the best environment (e.g., data center, cloud, edge) for each of their applications. Given the pervasiveness of this approach, it is no wonder that hybrid and multicloud environments have become the de facto infrastructure standard. Furthermore, over 80% of organizations believe hybrid IT environments are most beneficial to their ability to manage applications and data. Most importantly, this is now becoming an executive priority, with nearly half of respondents noting that implementing hybrid IT is a top priority for their CIO.
02Ransomware protection is top of mind for both CXOs and practitioners but most organizations continue to struggle in the wake of attacks.
Ransomware and malware attacks will remain existential threats to modern enterprises, with the cat-and-mouse game between malicious actors and enterprise security professionals set to continue throughout 2024. Yet, data protection and recovery remain a challenge, as 71% of respondents who experienced a ransomware attack reported taking days or even weeks to restore full operations. To help address this, 78% of organizations say they plan to increase investments in ransomware protection solutions throughout this year.
03As organizations seek equilibrium driven by security and innovation, application and data movement remain a complex challenge.
Enterprise workloads – including their applications and data – often find their way to the IT environment which best suits their needs, whether that environment is an on-premises data center, the cloud, a smaller edge location, or a mix of all three. This diversity of application placement is part of the reason why 95% of organizations say they moved applications from one environment to another over the past year, with security and innovation as the top drivers for this movement. Enterprises should expect application and data movement to remain constant, and plan infrastructure choices accordingly – emphasizing flexibility and visibility. Today, organizations face significant roadblocks when it comes to executing complex application migrations, with 35% of ECI respondents saying workload and application migration is a significant challenge given their current IT infrastructure.
04Enterprises aren’t just planning their sustainability programs, they are actively implementing them starting with IT modernization.
88% of ECI respondents agree that sustainability is a priority for their organization. However, unlike in the previous report where action was limited, many organizations indicate they are already taking active steps to implement sustainability initiatives, with the most common being modernizing IT infrastructure. This is a fascinating result, and one that shows the direct impact of IT infrastructure on sustainability. When looking at regional trends, we’re also seeing implementing remote work to support sustainability as a priority in EMEA and APJ, while it only ranks fifth in the Americas.
05Infrastructure modernization is becoming an imperative, driven by AI, modern applications and data growth.
ECI respondents identified increased investment to support AI strategy as their #1 priority, followed closely by investment in IT modernization. Furthermore, 37% of ECI respondents indicate running AI applications on their current IT infrastructure will be a “significant” challenge. In order to mitigate and overcome this challenge, we expect organizations to prioritize IT modernization and edge infrastructure deployments, which can facilitate faster processing and access to data. This, in turn, will improve their ability to link data from multiple environments to give better visibility of where data resides across their sprawling ecosystems.
of organizations believe hybrid IT environments are most beneficial to their ability to manage applications and data
of organizations plan to increase investments in IT modernization to support AI
of respondents who experienced a ransomware attack reported taking days or even weeks to restore full operations
Almost half (46%) of organizations surveyed say they've implemented a hybrid cloud or hybrid multicloud IT infrastructure model today. This proportion will remain relatively consistent over the next 1-3 years when looking at the combination of hybrid IT deployment models – but only because the proportion of organizations expecting to use hybrid multicloud models is forecast to double over the next one to three years (see Figure 1). This shift in proportions between hybrid cloud and hybrid multicloud is nuanced, but extremely important in the larger picture of how organizations are planning to manage their data and applications across environments.
On-premises data center and private cloud
Hybrid cloud
Hybrid multicloud
Single public cloud
Multiple public clouds
Today
1-3 years
Figure 1: IT Deployment Models in Use and Planned
Another notable trend is the expected increase of multiple public cloud use. This indicates a need for flexibility but also foreshadows an increase in complexity for IT teams looking to manage different cloud environments that all require different tooling and expertise. Whether enterprises favor a mix of on-premises or cloud resources, the reality is that nearly three quarters of respondents plan to use more than one environment showing a clear trend towards hybrid multicloud IT continuing to become the preferred IT deployment model.
Hybrid multicloud IT environments typically include a mix of cloud computing models, such as on-premises and hosted private cloud, public and service provider cloud or edge locations. Hybrid multicloud environments give modern, digital enterprises a wide variety of cost/billing and deployment options for their data and applications, allowing them to optimize spending and application performance, while also accelerating time to market for complex IT infrastructure solutions. These benefits are a large part of the reason why the ability to flexibly run solutions across clouds and on-premises (i.e., hybrid) was ranked as the #1 driver of infrastructure choice for IT decision makers notably above performance and security (see Figure 2).
Flexibility to run solutions across clouds and on-prem
Performance
Ransomware and malware protection
Data Services (e.g. snapshots, replication, data recovery, back up)
Data Sovereignty and privacy
Ability to support AI
Sustainability
Cost
Figure 2: Rank Order of Primary Drivers of Infrastructure Choice
Managing multiple deployment environments can also come with a range of challenges. Because mixed IT environments source solutions from a range of providers, and deploy them in different environments, it becomes critically important to employ universal data management, protection, security, and monitoring tools in order to ensure interoperability across heterogeneous platforms. A lack of data and application interoperability solutions can result in costly security breaches, data loss events, resource utilization overruns, or redundant operations. This makes a unified hybrid multicloud, with a common cloud operating model across environments, key to success.
When asked about interoperability, more than half (51%) of ECI respondents indicate their hybrid multicloud environments are not fully interoperable. Even worse, this proportion increased to 76% when looking at just respondents from large enterprises (organizations with 5,000+ employees). Clearly, delivering hybrid multicloud interoperability is no easy task, and for many organizations will be an ongoing initiative that requires support from IT infrastructure partners and service providers. However, achieving and maintaining higher levels of interoperability should remain a top priority for any organization serious about implementation of a long-term hybrid multicloud strategy.
Database workloads are some of the most-moved workloads within the enterprise. These mission-critical workloads are often some of the most costly and complex to move or modernize. In fact, managing databases across private, public, and edge deployments was cited as one of the #1 challenges associated with database management:
Managing database
across private, public
and edge deployments
Managing a growing
number of databases
Managing volumes of
databases at scale
Supporting modern
apps development
Database patching
and upgrade tasks
Managing open
source databases
Database
provisioning
However, this challenge has not stopped a growing number of enterprises from undertaking database modernization and migration initiatives. But many organizations find themselves faced with data management complexity and siloed operations, as databases are replicated and copied across multiple environments, including on-premises and cloud, to meet application needs. Given this reality, it comes as no surprise that managing a growing number of databases is the #2 most cited challenge among ECI respondents.
Organizations can begin addressing these challenges by adopting a common control plane capable of managing database provisioning, backup, patching/updating, and copy management regardless of the environment a database sits in (e.g., on premises, cloud, edge). Most importantly, they should look for solutions delivering a unified offering among different IT environments as well as supporting different database vendors. This approach will help organizations address two of the top database management challenges that enterprises experience today.
Unfortunately, ransomware isn’t going away in 2024. Ransomware and malware attacks will remain existential threats to modern enterprises that rely on uninterrupted access to data and business-critical applications. This is a major reason why ransomware and malware protection is one of the most significant challenges facing IT infrastructure decision-makers today. In fact, 42% of ECI respondents say ransomware and malware protection is a significant challenge for their current IT infrastructure (see Figure 3):
Ransomware and malware protection
Data privacy and compliance
Running AI applications
Figure 3: Top Challenge Areas For Current IT Infrastructure to Address
Furthermore, ECI respondents rank ransomware protection and data security as their organization’s biggest data management challenge. Unfortunately, there is no single action, software solution, or security control that can completely safeguard your organization from the threat of ransomware. The best solution is often a multi-layered approach designed to prevent, detect, mitigate, and recover from malicious attacks when they happen. It is also critical that an organization’s ransomware/malware defense remains flexible and iterative enough to accommodate new applications and workloads, as well as novel attack methods. This ability to continuously improve the organization’s security capabilities is a key to long-term success. Many organizations are cognizant of this, with 92% of ECI respondents saying their organization needs to make improvements to its current ransomware protection stance. The good news is that many organizations are prioritizing investments to support this continuous improvement: 78% of respondents say they will increase investments in ransomware protection over the next 12 months.
Ransomware attacks affect all sizes of business across all industries and geographical locations. However, some industries are more at risk of malware and ransomware attacks than others because of the massive volumes of sensitive data they have or the blast radius of how an attack would cause damage in terms of data loss/downtime. The most targeted industries are typically banking and financial services, healthcare, manufacturing, energy and utilities, governmental agencies, and education.
Given the pervasiveness of ransomware attacks, the 6th annual ECI report focused specifically on gaining a better understanding of organizations’ ability to respond to these attacks. 89% of survey respondents admit their organization has experienced a ransomware attack in the past 3 years. Given that some ransomware attacks go undiscovered, and some organizations may not be able to disclose attacks publicly, it is likely that this percentage is even higher.
But even more concerning is the fact that 96% of organizations affected by ransomware experienced some sort of negative impact to their operations. In other words, very few organizations came out of a ransomware attack/event unscathed. And once targeted, only 29% of organizations were able to recover within hours, with the vast majority of organizations (71%) taking days, weeks, or months to fully recover from a ransomware event (see Figure 4).
Organizations say they
fully recovered in hours
Organizations say they
fully recovered in days
Organizations say they
fully recovered in weeks
Organizations say it took several weeks to
fully restore operations and completely
mitigate the ransomware attack
Figure 4: Time Required to Recover from Ransomware Attack
Ensuring data security and protecting against ransomware is the #1 IT leadership priority for 2024. This comes as no surprise. Ransomware attacks, and data loss/downtime events are two major reasons why large organizations find themselves on the wrong side of the news headlines. For C-level executives and IT leadership, these events can have career-altering impacts, and preventing/mitigating attack and or data loss should absolutely remain their top priority.
Q: What do you think are the top priorities for your organization’s CIO/CTO/Leadership?
Implementing the right hybrid IT operations was ranked #2, likely driven by ongoing requirements for IT leaders to find new ways to deploy and manage infrastructure across owned data centers and different cloud platforms. Today there are a range of hybrid infrastructure software and services available for implementation, and IT leaders should ensure these solutions can enable infrastructure agnostic operations, so applications and data can run seamlessly across different cloud-powered data centers and services.
Coming in as the #3 C-level priority is the implementation of AI strategies. Media hype and commercial availability of AI tools and services drove enterprise interest in AI technology to new heights during 2023. This hype will continue to influence C-level decision making in 2024. For detailed information on AI technology and solution evolution, and its impact on IT infrastructure trends, please see Nutanix's State of Enterprise AI Report.
Digging deeper into C-level response rates uncovered the following findings:
89% of C-level respondents agree that having a single platform to run and manage all applications and data across clouds is ideal for their organization (6 points higher than decision makers)
81% of C-level respondents say that investments in hiring and retaining development of engineering staff will increase over 2024 (14 points higher than decision makers)
In addition to ransomware protection, data privacy is high on the executive radar. C-level respondents ranked data privacy as the #1 data management challenge faced by their organization (ransomware protection was ranked #2).
91% of C-level respondents agree that sustainability is a priority to their organization (4 points higher than decision makers).
Data security and
ransomware protection
Implementing the right
hybrid IT operations
Implementing
AI strategies
98% of respondents in the 2024 ECI say their organization supports sustainability initiatives of some sort. So, what are they doing to drive change? Over the last year, many organizations focused on being more data driven in terms of their approach to sustainability: 51% of organizations say they improved their ability to identify areas for reducing waste; while 44% indicate they improved their ability to monitor and measure greenhouse gas emissions as well as their carbon footprint. It is essential that organizations develop these baseline metrics in order to measure the improvement of sustainability initiatives over time, and set realistic goals which can be achieved over time. Sustainable practices will not be achieved overnight.
In addition to the importance of creating reliable metrics, many ECI respondents indicate they are already taking active steps to drive infrastructure change to support sustainability initiatives. More than half of respondents say they modernized their IT infrastructure during the past year to improve sustainability. This is a fascinating result, and one which we expect will have a material impact on the IT infrastructure market moving forward, as sustainability initiatives play more of a role in facilitating IT and organizational changes (see Figure 5). However, this priority changes across regions as explored later in the report.
We modernized our IT infrastructure to improve sustainability
We improved our ability to identify areas for reducing waste products (e.g. harmful pollutants, chemicals, paper etc.)
Remote working has reduced pollution from employee travel to a central working location
We improved compliance with environmental regulations
Our capability to monitor greenhouse emissions and our carbon footprint has improved
We utilize more renewable energy sources
We've set a goal to become carbon neutral by 2050
Figure 5: Which Sustainability Initiatives Has Your Organization Focused On Over the Past Year?
In addition to IT modernization, sustainability requirements are making an impact on data and application migrations. According to ECI respondents, 32% of organizations moved applications from one environment to another in the last 12 months to meet sustainability goals.
Finally, ECI results indicate that this focus on sustainability and related priorities is not slowing down. 77% of organizations say they plan to increase investments in sustainability efforts and technologies through 2024.
Similar to how water follows the path of least resistance, we've learned that enterprise workloads (including their applications and data) often find their way to the IT environment which best suits their needs – whether that environment is an on premises data center, hosted, managed or public cloud, a smaller edge location, or a mix of all three. And this environmental mix might vary depending on an organization’s size, industry, data profile, or security and compliance requirements. This diversity is part of the reason why 95% of organizations moved applications from one environment to another over the past year. This variability of workload placement is also why it is so difficult – if not impossible – to generically categorize a workload as “best fit for the cloud,” “best for on-premises”, or “best for the edge.”
The reality is that applications and data tend to move IT environments for a variety of reasons, often in search of equilibrium among a range of factors deemed critical to both business and IT, with security and innovation as the key drivers (see Figure 6).
To improve our security posture and/ or to meet regulatory requirements
To integrate with cloud native services (e.g. AI/ ML etc.)
To improve data access speeds
To gain better control of the application
Faster app development
Outsourcing IT management
To meet sustainability goals
Disaster recovery
Capacity concerns
Cost
Executive mandate
Figure 6: Reasons Why Organizations Are Moving Applications to Different Environments
Interestingly, while improving security posture and meeting regulatory requirements are the top reasons why applications are moved to different environments overall, for DevOps and Platform Engineering respondents, the top reason is to improve data access and speed (40%) tied with improving security posture and meeting regulatory requirements (40%), followed by integrating with cloud native services (37%).
The key is for organizations to plan for and enable this eventuality. One way to do so is by embracing new application deployment paradigms like hybrid multicloud. But in many cases this is easier said than done: 35% of ECI respondents say workload and application migration is a significant challenge when using their current IT infrastructure. Furthermore, 89% of organizations believe moving workloads to a different cloud environment is costly and time consuming. Despite these challenges, we recommend organizations begin establishing processes and operations to manage data and applications across environments, especially if these processes can be included as part of a larger IT modernization initiative.
Managing cloud costs continues to be top of mind for most, with 85% of ECI respondents saying their current IT infrastructure makes cloud cost control a challenge. However, cost does not seem to be the main driver of infrastructure decisions. For example, respondents ranked cost second to last when looking at the reasons why organizations choose to move applications to a different environment. Cost ranked last when asked about top drivers of infrastructure decisions as well as top challenges when managing data.
While cost continues to be top of mind for IT teams, its low ranking when compared to more strategic choices like security, data protection, performance, accessibility, and scalability, is indicative of how the perceived value of infrastructure solutions has changed over the last decade. Decision makers aren’t just picking the cheapest solution, they are thoroughly evaluating a range of variables associated with solution deployment that go beyond baseline cost, extending to more intangible considerations like the potential cost of downtime or data loss associated with choosing an inadequate solution.
2023 brought Artificial Intelligence into the mainstream for enterprises, but we’re still in the very early days when it comes to AI solution adoption. Organizations are still identifying the right workloads and use cases, determining best fit, and understanding budget implications. The Nutanix State of Enterprise AI Report contains in-depth analysis of AI solution adoption trends and the potential impact on IT infrastructure planning and decision-making.
AI continues to be top of mind as ECI respondents report increased investment to support AI strategy as their #1 priority, followed closely by investment in IT modernization. Additionally, 37% of ECI respondents indicate running AI applications on their current IT infrastructure will be a “significant” challenge.
When looking at how AI will impact other IT priorities, the ECI sheds additional light on the relationship between AI solution adoption, and edge strategies and data management:
90% of organizations believe strengthening their edge strategy will be an important priority for their organization in 2024. Furthermore, 72% of organizations say they plan to increase investment in edge strategy throughout 2024. Infrastructure deployment and management in edge locations is a critical ingredient of any AI/ML strategy. Acceleration of AI solution adoption has the potential to catalyze an increased sense of urgency regarding edge infrastructure deployment (especially as one ingredient of a hybrid multicloud infrastructure) to support faster processing and access to data which supports real-time processing.
When it comes to the need for data management solutions, 93% of ECI respondents agree it is important to improve visibility over where their data resides. 49% say linking data from multiple environments is one of the biggest challenges faced by their organization, while 47% of respondents indicate lack of visibility over where data resides is a key data management challenge. These data visibility and management challenges will only be exacerbated by complex AI and analytics deployments, and should be targets for continuous improvement for enterprises on their AI adoption journey.
Containerization involves packaging software that contains all the necessary elements to run an operating system virtually. This allows organizations to run operating systems from anywhere – in a private data center, public cloud, or even a personal laptop. Containerization can also be considered a core tenet of hybrid multicloud strategy.
Often, when enterprises use containers to architect cloud native applications, they also leverage container orchestration platforms or services to manage their containerized applications. Container orchestration involves a set of automated processes by which containers are deployed, networked, scaled, and managed. The main container orchestration platform used today is Kubernetes, an open-source platform that serves as the basis for many of today’s enterprise container orchestration platforms and managed services.
The 2024 ECI shows application containerization is pervasive, with 97% of respondents indicating that some proportion of their application estate is containerized.
All of our applications are containerized
More than 50% of applications are containerized
Less than 50% of applications are containerized
None of our applications are containerized
Only 48% of very large enterprises (5,000+ employees) say that more than half of their applications are containerized – 10 points below the total market average
62% of APJ respondents say that more than half of their applications are containerized – slightly above the global average and higher than EMEA or Americas
12% of Federal/Central Government respondents say that none of their applications are containerized – the highest proportion among all industries
Trends across geographic regions (North America, EMEA, APJ) tend to track similarly to one another and the global average. However, there are some important regional differences to note, which are highlighted in the tables below:
IT Deployment Models: All regions exhibit a similar forecasted decline in proportion of on premises data center, private cloud, and hybrid cloud models deployed over the next 1-3 years; and subsequent increase in proportions of hybrid multicloud, and single/multiple public cloud deployments (see Figure 7).
Americas
EMEA
APJ
On-premises datacenter
and private cloud
Hybrid cloud
Hybrid multicloud
Single public cloud
Multiple public clouds
Figure 7: IT Deployment Models in Use and Planned by Geography
Drivers of Infrastructure Choice: The rank order of primary drivers of infrastructure choice track closely between the Americas and the global average. However there are some key differences across other global regions. In EMEA, data sovereignty and privacy increases in rank to be tied for the #1 reason driving infrastructure choice. This is in stark contrast to the Americas, where data sovereignty and privacy was ranked lowest (see Figure 8).
Performance
Ransomware and malware protection
Data services (e.g. snapshots, replication data recovery, back up)
Flexibility to run across clouds and on-prem
Ability to support AI
Sustainability
Cost
Data sovereignty and privacy
Figure 8: Rank Order of Primary Drivers of Infrastructure Choice by Geography
Drivers of Application Migration: Application migration drivers vary slightly by region. All regions included “improvements to security posture and or to meet regulatory requirements,” and “integration with cloud native services” among their top 2-3 drivers. Interestingly, APJ showed the highest prevalence of application migration driven by sustainability goals (see Figure 9).
To improve data access speeds
To improve our security posture and/or to meet regulatory requirements
To integrate with cloud native services (e.g. AI/ ML etc.)
Faster app development
Outsourcing IT management
To gain better control of the application
To meet sustainability goals
Disaster recovery
Capacity concerns
Executive mandate
Cost
Figure 9: Reasons for Application Migration by Geography
Sustainability Initiatives: When it comes to sustainability initiatives, we uncover an interesting nuance among regional responses. While Americas respondents are focused on IT infrastructure modernization and waste reduction as their top sustainability initiatives, both EMEA and APJ are much more focused on remote work as a way to reduce pollution and improve sustainability (remote work took the #1 and #2 ranked spot in EMEA and APJ, respectively). However, in Americas remote work ranked #5 on the initiative list. Clearly, organizations across the Americas region are lowering their expectations regarding remote work as a significant improvement to sustainability postures. This may also be a reflection of changing post-COVID working dynamics – with organizations across Americas putting a higher emphasis on “return to the office” policies compared to EMEA and APJ.
We modernized our IT infrastructure to improve sustainability
Aimed to better our ability to identify areas for reducing waste products (e.g. harmful pollutants, chemicals, paper etc.)
Improving compliance with environmental regulations
Our capability to monitor greenhouse emissions and our carbon footprint has improved
Remote working facilitated by technologies has reduced pollution from employee travel to a central working location
We utilize more renewable energy sources
Become carbon neutral by 2050
Americas
EMEA
APJ
Figure 10: Sustainability Initiatives Focused on Over the Past Year by Geography
Ransomware Recovery: When looking at ransomware recovery by region, regional distribution of recovery times are relatively similar with slight differences in proportions of organizations able to recover within hours vs days. APJ indicates the highest proportion of respondents who said they were able to recover within hours (see Figure 11). Interestingly, 14% of EMEA respondents say their organization has not experienced a ransomware attack in the last 3 years, much higher than Americas and APJ, where the percentage was just 9% of respondents in both regions.
Our operations were fully restored in a few hours
Our operations were fully restored in a few days
Our operations were fully restored in a few weeks
Our operations were mostly restored within a few hours, but additional impacts of the attack continued for longer than a few weeks
Our operations were mostly restored in a few days, but additional impacts of the attack continued for longer than a few weeks
Americas
EMEA
APJ
Figure 11: Time Required to Recover from Ransomware Attack by Geography
Data Management: Similar to the global average, ransomware protection and data security top the list of biggest data management challenges in Americas and APJ. However EMEA broke from this trend, ranking data privacy and data storage usage guidance (e.g., GDPR) as their #1 and #2 challenges, respectively – with ransomware protection ranked #3. Cost remained the lowest-ranked data management challenge across all global regions (see Figure 12).
Ransomware protection and data security
Following guidance on data storage and usage (e.g., GDPR)
Data privacy
Linking data from multiple environments
Lack of visibility over where data resides
Cost
Americas
EMEA
APJ
Figure 12: Biggest Data Management Challenges by Region
There’s no use fighting the fact that hybrid and multicloud deployments will continue to be the de facto infrastructure standard. As a result, infrastructure professionals will be faced with requests and challenges to break down application and data silos; improve data protection, security and visibility across environments to thwart malicious attack; and improve data and application accessibility without sacrificing performance or risking downtime. Complicating matters is the fact that in most cases, there is no prescriptive roadmap for IT success in a hybrid multicloud world. Each enterprise will have unique application, workload, security, and data protection requirements which need to be addressed on a tailored basis. This is quite a tall order for IT professionals, and while we may not have all the answers today, we can offer some recommendations based on the research findings from the 6th Annual ECI study:
Continue to invest in solutions and services to improve data security and protection: 87% of organizations say ransomware and malware protection remain consistent challenges for their organization’s current IT infrastructure with 42% citing it as a significant challenge, but many are actively working to improve this. 78% of organizations plan to increase investment in ransomware protection solutions during 2024. Organizations unable to increase security or data protection budgets should begin campaigning to make this a C-level priority by 2025.
Design your IT environments to facilitate data and application portability: The growing pervasiveness of hybrid multicloud is proof that applications and data will continue to favor diversity and movement. But accommodating this application and data movement remains a challenge: 51% of organizations say they lack interoperability between their various infrastructure environments. This is part of the reason why 85% of organizations consider workload and app migration a challenge for their current IT infrastructure, with 35% pointing to it as a significant challenge. Enterprises should prioritize development and delivery of solutions which can facilitate and automate application and workload migration across environments.
Leverage AI solution adoption to drive IT modernization from core to edge: Results from this year’s ECI report and the Nutanix State of Enterprise AI Report indicate AI technology adoption will catalyze a new wave of IT infrastructure modernization requirements. IT decision makers can take this opportunity to ensure their organization’s AI, ML, analytics, and data growth initiatives are in alignment with infrastructure realities. 90% of organizations believe strengthening their edge strategy will be an important priority for their organization in 2024. Likewise, 93% of respondents agree it is important to improve visibility over where their data resides. Designing an IT modernization roadmap which includes edge infrastructure solutions, and comprehensive data visibility tools will be key success factors for successful AI/ML technology implementation.
Don’t underestimate the influence of sustainability on infrastructure choice: Almost 90% of respondents in this year’s ECI survey agree that sustainability is a priority for their organization. Increased prioritization of sustainable IT initiatives is impacting everything from infrastructure purchase decisions to corporate carbon neutrality goals. Make sustainability a factor in your IT infrastructure evaluation and purchase processes. It might be the differentiating factor that helps your organization choose among solutions/services which seem at parity with one another technically.
For the sixth consecutive year, Nutanix commissioned a global research study to learn about the state of global enterprise cloud deployments and what their biggest IT infrastructure and cloud-related data management initiatives and challenges are. In December 2023, U.K. researcher Vanson Bourne surveyed 1,500 IT and DevOps/Platform Engineering decision-makers around the world. The respondent base spanned multiple industries, business sizes, and geographies, including North and South America; Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA); and Asia-Pacific-Japan (APJ) region.
The findings of the 6th Annual Enterprise Cloud Index (ECI) reveal a notable increase in the planned deployment of hybrid multicloud infrastructure, which spans private IT infrastructure (both on-premises and hosted), public clouds, and edge locations. Results also indicate that data security concerns, and ransomware/malware attacks in particular, are as prevalent and concerning as ever as we enter 2024. Additionally, the 2024 ECI findings shed light on some of the important benefits, drivers, and challenges of application migration faced by modern enterprises. Our findings also explore emerging trends in AI solution adoption, changing buyer sentiment regarding infrastructure cost considerations, container adoption, and sustainability.