Data technologies in recent years has popularized both
structured and unstructured storage. This is fueled by applications that are
embracing cloud resources. The two trends are happening simultaneously and are
reinforcing each other.
Data modernization means moving data from legacy databases
to modern databases. It comes at a time when many databases are doubling their
digital footprint. Unstructured data is the biggest contributor to this growth
and includes images, audio, video, social media comments, clinical notes, and
such others. Organizations have shifted from a data architecture based on relational
enterprise-based data warehouses to data lakes based on big data. If the survey
from IT spends is to be believed, a great majority of organizations are already
on their way towards data modernization with those in the Finance service firms
leading the way. These organizations reported data security planning as part of
their data modernization activities. They consider the tools and technology
that are available in the marketplace as the third most important reason in
their decision making.
Drivers for one-time data modernization plan include
security and governance, strategy and plan, tools and technology, and talent.
Data modernization is a key component of, or reason for, migrating to the
cloud. The rate of adoption of external services in the data planning and
implementation is about 44% for these organizations.
The perceived obstacles to implementing data modernization
include budget/cost constraints, lack of understanding of technology, lack of
consensus among decision-makers, absence of clarity on success metrics, and
such other causes. Cloud is already a dominant storage location for nine out of
ten of these organizations and it is both a means and an important consequence.
A majority of these organizations have all their important applications and
data in the cloud. Application and data can be moved independently but many
organizations are putting it on modernized platforms at the same time and
moving them from on-premises to the cloud. Traditional IT architectures and
on-premises data centers often come with their own cost concerns which makes
cost a key driver of cloud migration. Those organizations that have combined
cloud migration and data modernization could deliver on their strategic goals.
This leads to the assertion that almost all data management
approaches will likely eventually be modernized and almost all data and
applications will be in the cloud. Cloud migration and data modernization will
continue to mutually reinforce each other. Since these two trends support and
overlap each other, most companies will do well with both trends.
No comments:
Post a Comment