Cloud data management is a way of managing all data that an enterprise has stored, either in the cloud—or multiple clouds—or on-premises using a cloud-based solution.
An effective cloud-based data management solution can have the same capabilities as a modern on-prem data management solution such as data backup, disaster recovery, archiving, file and object services, and analytics. Some data management in cloud vendors even offer protection against ransomware.
A big difference, however, is that cloud data management software is designed to be cloud native to take advantage of underlying cloud services such as cloud storage and is also designed to address special cloud practices around data integrity and security, among other requirements. Organizations taking advantage of cloud data management may use a service provider for as a service (aaS) solutions or self-manage data management services in public or hybrid cloud.
Data is essential to today’s businesses, but effectively managing it can be challenging. The combined effects of mass data fragmentation and the growing complexity of hybrid cloud infrastructures make it all but impossible to control and harness the full value of data with legacy tools.
A cloud-native data management software solution eliminates silos, simplifies operations, and allows you to extract value from a centralized point for a hybrid environment under granular control.
Cloud data management is an extremely attractive proposition for any business operating in a cloud or hybrid environment. The three main benefits from using data management in the cloud are:
Leading cloud data management software solutions will deliver these capabilities and more:
Cloud data management empowers you and your organization to focus on managing data not infrastructure. Organizations can opt to subscribe to discrete data management offerings addressing a wide range of use cases from one or more providers, or run cloud data management software on public or hybrid cloud.
Here are the ten most popular cloud data use cases:
The top challenges of enterprise cloud data management software using legacy point products or tools are:
The top opportunities using enterprise data management in the cloud solutions with a modern approach to cloud computing and management are:
Enterprise data management on cloud cuts out data silos, simplifies operations, strengthens security, and allows IT teams to uncover value across multicloud environments.
Cloud integration with a modern hybrid cloud data management solution uses cloud-native APIs without any additional gateways or proxies. It enables tiering, archival, and replication between public and private clouds.
Data used to be kept centrally in on-prem data centers. But it’s now fragmented through multiple clouds as well as local data storage—including data centers, branch offices, campuses, desktops, laptops, and even mobile devices.
You need a simple strategy for managing all this data. The traditional approach of replicating data across redundant storage units in different locations lacked visibility and a centralized way to secure or manage it. Costly and inefficient, this approach is unsustainable.
That’s why there’s Cohesity Data Management as a Service (DMaaS). It’s a portfolio of services that gives you access to the industry’s most comprehensive set of data management offerings—including backup and recovery, disaster recovery, archiving, file and object services, dev/test provisioning, data governance, and security—in a single, consolidated, very easy-to-use environment. Before this, IT would have to assemble a hodge-podge of SaaS solutions from a host of vendors, with the associated overhead of managing different service levels, license terms, and interfaces. In effect, you’d be creating the same mass data fragmentation problems you had with legacy infrastructure silos.
These are some of the important things you can do with the Cohesity DMaaS solution:
Cohesity provides the ultimate choice in how you manage and deploy cloud data management. You can choose DMaaS, self-managed software, or both—all running on the same platform and managed through the same user interface.