





Press Release, Microsoft
April 28th, 2009
Bob Kelly, Microsoft's corporate vice president of Infrastructure Server Marketing, outlines how the right mix of private and public clouds can complement existing IT investments, reduce costs and ease management.
Editor's note — April 28, 2009 — Information regarding the availability of the Microsoft Business Productivity Online Suite (BPOS) was updated post-publication, BPOS is available for purchase in 19 countries worldwide.
REDMOND, Wash. — April 28, 2009 — History shows that companies that invest in innovation during recessionary times can emerge healthier and better-positioned for long-term success. As well, IT organizations that invest in the right technology today can help their organizations operate more efficiently, create competitive advantages and ultimately prosper in the long run.
Cloud computing - the delivery of applications, server operating systems and other software as an online service - is one such technology that holds great promise. Bridging in-house software with online services creates new opportunities for strategic IT without breaking the bank or abandoning existing investments. Cloud-based services allow companies to quickly and easily scale up as needed because they can provide a virtually unlimited pool of storage and computing resources. Cloud-based services also offer a "utility computing" model through which customers pay only for the resources they actually use, similar to buying electricity by the kilowatt-hour from a local utility.
Industry analysts have predicted a sharp rise in the adoption of cloud computing. According to IDC, worldwide IT spending on cloud services will grow almost threefold in the next three years, reaching US$42 billion by 2012.
"We expect the cloud adoption trend to be amplified by the current financial crisis," says Frank Gens, senior vice president and chief analyst at IDC. "IT managers are facing many challenges today such as budgetary pressures, regulatory compliance demands, and securing and managing sprawling datacenters, so it's critical that they identify the right transformational technologies to invest in for the future and understand their IT options."
But cloud computing is not an all-or-nothing proposition."Very few companies will rely either 100 percent on public cloud providers or 100 percent on in-house infrastructure," says Bob Kelly, corporate vice president of Infrastructure Server Marketing at Microsoft Corp. "Microsoft is working toward an integrated approach that bridges on-premises datacenters and the external cloud, which offers our customers the benefits of both approaches."
At the 10th annual Microsoft Management Summit this week in Las Vegas, Kelly outlined an infrastructure strategy to help IT customers understand their options as they incorporate "the cloud" into their future plans:
"Our goal is to give businesses the choice of running applications on-site, in the cloud or using a combination of the two," says Kelly. "This hybrid model gives customers the best of both worlds — the scale and convenience of a public cloud and the control and reliability of on-premises software — and lets them move fluidly between the two based on their needs. It provides customers an on-ramp from their current IT environment to the cloud."
Building on its cloud computing strategy, Microsoft made several announcements today and over the past few weeks on a broad range of hosted IT service solutions that complement its on-premises software, including these:
"The IT industry is in the midst of a major transformation as more applications are being delivered over the Web as a service," adds Kelly. "As customers weather the current economic volatility, Microsoft and its partners will help customers build and adapt solutions for a broad range of scenarios. Microsoft's infrastructure strategy and cloud services offerings are the most comprehensive in the industry, helping customers navigate these challenges and make the most out of their existing IT investments, whether on-premises, in the cloud or in between."