Cloud migration can be hard, Veritas helps make it easy
Organizations such as yours are looking to adopt cloud to reduce cost while mitigating risk and achieving scalability. But migrating to cloud is a complex process that requires careful planning and deliberation. Did you know that 93% of organizations face challenges while migrating to the cloud and 84% of organizations are concerned about cloud lock-in? Don’t be part of these statistics.
Veritas is helping customers like you achieve success when it comes to adopting and migrating to cloud for their business services. Our solutions provide consistency and predictability, while giving you the ability to failback from cloud to on-premises, and eventually between clouds as well.
The difficulty of migrating workloads to the cloud depends on several factors: the time sensitive nature of your move, the amount of data, and the complexities of the IT services to be moved.
If you are like most organizations, you have a set budget and timeline to accomplish this, and failure to migrate per the business plan can have expensive consequences. Making it into the public cloud like Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft Azure, doesn’t necessarily mean a stress-free business life.
For a successful migration and business environment, there are some important factors that need to be considered.
- How do you ensure successful migration?
- Will you lose control of your workloads in the cloud?
- How resilient is the public cloud?
- Will you be locked-in to the cloud?
These questions need to be answered before you start planning your cloud migration strategy. Read the brief to learn why these factors are important and to learn the 4 key steps to a successful cloud strategy.
The Veritas Availability blog brings to you the latest news and views about how to keep mission-critical applications highly available and minimize downtime with fast failover. Learn about predictable availability, application resiliency, and storage efficiency across multi-cloud, virtual, and physical environments.