Hybrid cloud combines storage, compute, and networking resources across on-premises, private cloud, and public cloud environments, to protect and provide access to data and other resources. Today’s hybrid clouds involve running production applications (e.g., traditional, SaaS, and cloud-native) across multiple on-prem platforms, private clouds, and public clouds as well as edge devices.
Modern hybrid cloud environments also manage connectivity and communication as well as protect and secure the data, workloads, and applications with cloud backup solutions that take advantage of these various deployment and consumption models.
The mix of on-prem infrastructure and private and public clouds in hybrid cloud environments vary considerably based on the individual business needs.
Hybrid cloud adoption in enterprise IT continues to increase and it is driving how modern organizations architect, manage, and protect their enterprise storage, networking, and computing environments. Today’s hybrid cloud model is both flexible and secure, and is growing in popularity because it gives organizations the freedom to choose where their workloads run to optimize costs, maximize performance, and satisfy compliance needs—while providing a cost-effective, secure, and reliable way to protect their data and applications.
Hybrid cloud advantages include:
Around the world, industries are increasingly embracing hybrid cloud strategies with many accelerating their use during the recent pandemic. Here’s what some industries are doing with hybrid cloud:
Healthcare — During the pandemic, providers rapidly accelerated telehealth practices using a variety of applications and services across clouds. For example, scheduling and billing services ran in public clouds while protected health information (PHI) remained secure in a private cloud.
Government — Federal, national, state, and local agencies are increasingly choosing hybrid cloud infrastructure to improve constituent services and lower costs. Case workers, for example, use apps in public clouds to file reports, while the reports remain protected with hybrid cloud backups for safekeeping and long-term retention.
Financial services — Hybrid cloud is helping banks and other financial firms improve customer experiences while keeping costs down. For example, retail banks can rely on public cloud services to cost-effectively store lobby video footage while using private clouds for online banking applications that secure sensitive customer data.
Retail — Seasonal events like back-to-school promotions and Black Friday sales have retailers embracing hybrid clouds to dynamically spin up more compute, network, and storage resources during peak activities. Having the ability to automatically spin down resources during off-peak times allows retailers to mitigate costs without having to deploy and manage additional administrative and infrastructure resources that could potentially sit idle for months at a time unused between spikes of activity.
Organizations should consider hybrid cloud backup strategies to better protect and simplify management of data and applications across on-prem, public, and private clouds. Hybrid cloud solutions offer tremendous flexibility and accelerated recoveries from outages related to cyberthreats like ransomware and other disasters.
Some examples of hybrid cloud backup environments could include:
Hybrid cloud backup services are particularly useful for businesses relying on edge computing, in which storage and compute resources are located closest to the location where they are required. Hybrid cloud backup is becoming popular in edge computing as organizations look to boost the performance of backup and recovery operations.
A hybrid cloud backup solution can help organizations protect and recover data and applications across on-prem, private, and public cloud locations from a single unified platform.
A hybrid cloud backup solution can be run on-prem as self-managed software or as a fully managed service in the cloud (also called backup as a service, or BaaS). But no matter what type of deployment model is used, a hybrid cloud backup solution can protect workloads across all on-prem and edge environments as well as clouds.
This approach eliminates the multiple point products, complex operations, and services required by many traditional and legacy siloed backup solutions. Instead, a single software platform manages all data and applications, no matter what type or location.
Traditional backup or local backup generally consists of onsite data capacity, typically disk-based hardware, manually replicated by the underlying IT infrastructure. This imposes scaling limitations and management complexity and requires running multiple point solutions to holistically protect all enterprise data running across on-prem and cloud locations. In contrast, hybrid cloud backup solutions can protect and replicate data across both on-prem and cloud locations providing organizations with greater operational efficiency while reducing CapEx and administrative costs.
Cloud backup is used to securely store data, applications, and files with a cloud service provider. This protects data from loss, outages, and disasters by backing up to a secure location in the cloud.
Hybrid cloud backup combines the advantages of both on-premises and cloud-based backup solutions. It can backup and recover data across on-premises, public cloud, private cloud, and edge locations. This approach provides greater flexibility, faster data recovery, and offers high availability and data redundancy for optimal data protection and business continuity.
In summary, while cloud backup mainly stores data in remote cloud locations, hybrid cloud backup stores data both locally and in the cloud to boost data resilience and improve accessibility.
Hybrid cloud encompasses infrastructure and services from on-prem, private, public clouds, and edge computing environments while unifying management and providing protection for all data and applications running in the environment. Deciding whether to use on-prem, public cloud, edge devices, or a combination of these platforms depends on the requirements of individual applications or workloads. Such requirements may center on performance, security, compliance, or the need for special capabilities such as artificial intelligence/machine learning (AI/ML) or high-speed processing.
Here’s how hybrid cloud typically works:
Hybrid cloud is particularly useful for companies that have varying computing needs, as it allows them to easily scale up or down as needed without having to make significant investments in additional on-prem infrastructure. It also provides levels of security, control, and protection of sensitive data that may not be possible when using any of the options alone (on-prem, public cloud, private cloud, edge).
More than 72% of enterprises on cloud journeys today have a hybrid cloud strategy, according to the 2023 State of Cloud report from Flexera. Recent analyst reports also reveal enterprise IT leaders agree on-premises infrastructure will continue to be important to their operations.
Organizations with the following requirements are more likely to use hybrid cloud:
Since not all enterprise data has the same level of importance to an organization, hybrid cloud provides a great deal of flexibility for organizations to manage and secure their data. Some data may require being protected and retained for longer periods of time. Some data must reside in certain locations for compliance reasons. Some data is mission-critical to the business, and some is simply not. These, and other factors determine how data must be managed and secured, and whether hybrid cloud is a good match for it.
Hybrid cloud use cases are wide-ranging and growing quickly as organizations accelerate cloud strategies and look for solutions that can help them stay ahead of emerging cyber threats like ransomware.
Common hybrid cloud use cases include:
There are many cloud provides that can support a hybrid cloud strategy, including
Data maintained in a hybrid cloud varies by organization and industry, yet it typically includes data from virtual machines (VMs), physical servers, databases, files, containers, cloud-based and cloud-native applications, software-as-a-service (SaaS) apps, primary storage, and mainframes.
The hybrid cloud era requires a new approach to data security and data management that boosts cyber resilience while eliminating data silos and delivering a consistent experience, no matter the location of data, workloads, and applications.
Cohesity delivers the optimal hybrid cloud backup solution. It consolidates data from data centers, private clouds, and multiple public clouds on a single data security and management platform that can be self-managed or as a fully-managed BaaS solution with complete visibility across the environment through a single UI.
With Cohesity, enterprises can optimally backup and protect data and apps (traditional, SaaS, and cloud) in a hybrid cloud to maximize the value of that data while lowering costs. Moreover, Cohesity enhances the security of enterprise data by reducing the attack surface while simultaneously decreasing deployment, management, and operational costs by adjusting the capacity of services on demand, making costs more predictable and businesses more agile.
Cohesity Cloud Services, including BaaS, boosts cyber resilience and lowers total cost of ownership, helping organizations get the most from their hybrid cloud and hybrid cloud backup strategies: