Public clouds have a way to go if they want to be the top choice of businesses looking to put resources in a shared, centralized computing environment, according to a poll of 1,200 IT professionals.
Just seven per cent of respondents say they’d most likely use public cloud services while 47 per cent say they would make a private cloud their first pick, according to the CDW 2011 Cloud Computing Tracking Poll.
Overall, security concern was the major deterrent to adoption with 41 per cent of respondents indicating it’s a worry. But nearly as many, 40 per cent, say cost is a concern as well. Coming in a distant third with 26 per cent was privacy and compliance concerns.
The cost worries are more pronounced among IT professionals that haven’t actually tried cloud services yet, the poll finds. Asked whether cloud applications cost less than traditional applications, 36 per cent say yes. But when those actually using at least some cloud applications were asked whether they were saving money by moving applications to the cloud, 84 per cent say yes.
The poll was performed in March for CDW by O’Keefe & Co., and polled 1,200 IT professionals equally distributed among small, medium and large businesses; federal and state/local government; healthcare organizations; higher education; and K-12 school districts.
Cloud users project that in two years they could save 22 per cent of their organizations’ IT budgets using cloud resources and applications. That will grow to 31 per cent in five years, the poll says. Currently, the number is 18 per cent.
By contrast, IT pros who don’t use any cloud resources project they will save 15 per cent in two years and 23 per cent in five years after they jump into using the cloud. Despite saying they were not yet implementing or maintaining cloud services, the non-user group nevertheless responded that it is currently spending nine per cent of its IT budget on cloud resources or applications.
Overall, based on cloud services and technology available now, all those polled say on average 42 per cent of their IT services and applications theoretically could be run in the cloud.
Two-thirds of them say they aren’t using cloud computing at all yet, equally split between learning about it and making firm plans to implement it. Just eight per cent say they aren’t considering it at all.
Of the 320 respondents that actually use cloud computing in some way, 73 per cent started by using a single cloud application. Ranked from one to six, the categories of applications most often placed in a cloud environment are: email, file storage, office productivity, Web conferencing, online learning and video conferencing.