Most large enterprises can save a
minimum of 25 per cent on their IT costs over five years by moving to a
private cloud from a legacy IT environment, according to a financial
analysis conducted by Nokia. The analysis, known as the ‘Nokia
Enterprise Private Cloud TCO Model’ – the first of its kind in the
industry – also demonstrates that enterprises can expect to break even
on their private cloud investment in less than three years.
Advocates of enterprises moving to
private cloud have typically focused on the operational and business
benefits that this approach can offer, in terms of flexibility, agility
and the ability to scale quickly.
The analysis underlying the Enterprise
Private Cloud TCO Model is among the first available in the market that
exclusively explores the question that is most critical to IT managers –
what are the cost benefits of this move? The model shows that the
common assumption that private cloud is too difficult or costly to adopt
is wrong, and that large enterprises should make the move directly to
private or public-private hybrid cloud because it utilizes off-the-shelf
components and is less expensive.
The analysis began with an existing
budget for a representative legacy IT environment, and contrasted that
with the requirements of a shift to a private cloud model and associated
costs. More specifically, the analysis takes the overall operational
budget of the enterprise data centre, and then provides a high-level
breakout by the software or operational tasks performed. The breakout
was then used to calculate potential cost impacts – both increases and
decreases – for a cloud environment. Nokia’s financial model is based on
a private cloud, or private-public hybrid cloud architecture that can
be built at any large enterprise today, incorporating commercial
components from a variety of vendors as well as open source components
including OpenStack cloud management software. The model also assumes
that the cloud architecture is one that does not require ‘forklift’
replacement of the IT environment, but instead sits on top of the
existing IT infrastructure as an overlay. As a result, it also assumes a
deployment strategy that would minimize changes to day-to-day IT
operations.
Leading industry analyst firm
International Data Corporation (IDC) validated the model overall,
including the ranges of potential increased and decreased costs by
category.
Vice President, Business Value Strategy,
IDC, Randy Perry said: “IDC has conducted an extensive analysis of the
structure and operation of the Nokia Enterprise Private Cloud TCO Model.
We are satisfied that the assumptions, all supported by 3rd party
references, are reasonable and comprehensive enough to establish a fair
comparison of total costs of private cloud and legacy environments.
Also, the industry data and default settings fall within acceptable
ranges based on IDC business value research with over 450 enterprises
over the last two years. Finally, the algorithms and methodology for
calculating cost savings are accurate and adhere to commonly accepted
financial guidelines.”
Head, Large Enterprise Segment at Nokia
said: “The Private Cloud TCO Model we are introducing today is an
industry first. Most advocates for the deployment of a private or hybrid
cloud in large enterprises focus their arguments on the benefits
offered by a cloud approach, be it faster deployment times for new
applications, a more flexible approach to deploying and managing their
resources and similar claims.”
Vice President, Marketing and Community
Services, OpenStack Foundation, Lauren Sell, said: “More and more
enterprises are embracing OpenStack-powered private clouds for their
performance advantages and their cost savings – both over public clouds
and proprietary private clouds. The Private Cloud TCO Model developed by
Nokia is the latest example of OpenStack community members creating
valuable and validated tools that can help enterprises as they plan and
execute their strategies for agile, open cloud.”
The cost savings identified by the model
were calculated using the most conservative assumptions available,
based on the needs of highly regulated industries such as finance and
healthcare.
Today, the Nokia Enterprise Private
Cloud TCO Model offers a generic analysis of likely cost savings for
large enterprises. For enterprises that are interested, it can quickly
be modified to incorporate a particular enterprise’s data and deliver
not only a custom savings but also a budgeting estimate by cost
category. Nokia says it will perform such analysis tasks without charge
for large enterprises from now until June 30, 2017.
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