Reader small image

You're reading from  Azure Strategy and Implementation Guide, - Third Edition

Product typeBook
Published inJun 2020
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781838986681
Edition3rd Edition
Tools
Right arrow
Authors (3):
Peter De Tender
Peter De Tender
author image
Peter De Tender

Peter De Tender has 20 years of professional expertise in Microsoft Infrastructure consulting and architecting, with a main focus on Microsoft Cloud technologies (Azure, Enterprise Mobility Suite, Office 365...). After working for some of the top Microsoft partners in Belgium, he ran his own successful business for several years, mainly providing Infrastructure and Cloud Architect training and readiness in a passionate and enthusiastic way. Peter coached several Microsoft Partners all over the world in doing more Microsoft business, both from a technical and business angle. Just recently, as of June 2016 to be exact, Peter joined Microsoft Corp as an FTE Azure Architect and Program Manager in the global AzureCAT GSI team, part of Azure engineering, where his role consists of providing Azure-focused readiness training and cloud practice building coaching to the TOP Microsoft Global System Integrators. This role allows Peter to combine his two passions, working on the latest and greatest up-to-date technologies, and cooperating with people from all over the globe. His valued credentials are Microsoft Certified Trainer, Azure Certified Architect, and— before he joined Microsoft—Peter was also recognized as a Microsoft MVP for several years in a row. In his free time, Peter loves speaking at (inter)national conferences and community events, is a technical writer and courseware creator.
Read more about Peter De Tender

Greg Leonardo
Greg Leonardo
author image
Greg Leonardo

Greg Leonardo is currently a cloud architect helping organizations with cloud adoption and innovation. He has worked in the IT industry since his time in the military. He is a veteran, father, architect, teacher, speaker, and early adopter. Currently, he is a Certified Azure Solution Architect Expert, Microsoft Certified Trainer (MCT), and Microsoft Azure MVP, and he has worked in many facets of IT throughout his career. Additionally, he is president of TampaDev, a community meetup that runs #TampaCC, Azure User Group, Azure Medics, and various technology events throughout Tampa. He has also authored Hands-On Cloud Solutions with Azure and the previous two editions of Azure Strategy and Implementation Guide for Microsoft by Packt Publishing.
Read more about Greg Leonardo

Jason Milgram
Jason Milgram
author image
Jason Milgram

Jason Milgram is a Microsoft MVP since 2010 and the SVP, Azure Leader at OZ Digital, headquartered in Fort Lauderdale, FL. As a public speaker, Jason has given over 100 presentations at conferences and user groups on cloud computing, Microsoft Azure, Enterprise Mobility + Security, and launching a tech start-up. Prior to OZ, Jason was CTO, Financial Services at Hitachi Solutions in Irvine, CA, Chief Architect at i3 in Fairfax, VA, Chief Architect at SAIC in Reston, VA, 1st VP Cloud Solutions Architect at City National Bank of Florida in Miami, and VP Platform Architecture & Engineering at Champion Solutions Group in Boca Raton, FL.
Read more about Jason Milgram

View More author details
Right arrow

Public cloud, hybrid cloud, and multi-cloud models

At a high level, many organizations are looking into deploying or embracing one (or more) of the following cloud models.

Public cloud

This is the typical cloud platform offered by a service provider. Such service providers include Azure, Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google Cloud Platform (GCP), Rackspace, and Digital Ocean. In simple terms, the datacenter is managed by the vendor, and you consume the hosting part as a service.

Also, there is no dependency or integration with your existing on-premises datacenter. This is typically used by start-ups, Small-Medium Business (SMB) customers, or larger enterprises who want to build out a standalone environment outside of what they are running on-premises.

Hybrid cloud

In a hybrid cloud model, you are building an integration between your existing on-premises datacenter(s) and a public cloud environment. Most often, this is because you want to expand your datacenter capabilities, or you do not wish to perform a full migration to a public cloud-only model. Building a hybrid cloud typically starts with the physical network integration (in Azure offered by ExpressRoute or a site-to-site VPN), followed by deploying Infrastructure as a Service or Platform as a Service. Another aspect of the hybrid cloud is identity; Azure offers you Azure Active Directory as the identity solution. For hybrids, organizations synchronize (all or select) on-premises users and group objects from Active Directory domains to a single Azure Active Directory tenant. This allows for optimization in user and security management, offering users an easy but highly secure authentication procedure for cloud-running workloads.

Multi-cloud

More and more (enterprise) customers are looking at or currently using a multi-cloud strategy. Multi-cloud means using several public or hybrid clouds together. The benefit is using what is available. Imagine your business application relies on a service that is not available in your public cloud of choice, but might already be available in Azure. As long as you can integrate both worlds together in all aspects, such as security, supportability, skilled employees, and so on, there is no reason for not going in that direction. Looking at cost benefits could be another driver. Instead of running all workloads with the same public cloud vendor, it might be cost-effective to split workloads between different cloud vendors. Lastly, embracing things such as DevOps and Infrastructure as Code will also help you in adopting a multi-cloud strategy. Tools such as Jenkins, Terraform, Ansible, and several others provide REST APIs that can communicate with different cloud back ends. As such, your IT teams don't have to learn different cloud-specific templates, but rather can focus on the capabilities of the tooling instead of focusing on the cloud capabilities as such. At the same time, it should be mentioned a multi-cloud strategy also comes with several challenges. Supportability, mixed skillset requirements of your IT staff, and overall complexity because of the need to manage different environments are probably the most critical concerns to warn you about.

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Azure Strategy and Implementation Guide, - Third Edition
Published in: Jun 2020Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781838986681

Authors (3)

author image
Peter De Tender

Peter De Tender has 20 years of professional expertise in Microsoft Infrastructure consulting and architecting, with a main focus on Microsoft Cloud technologies (Azure, Enterprise Mobility Suite, Office 365...). After working for some of the top Microsoft partners in Belgium, he ran his own successful business for several years, mainly providing Infrastructure and Cloud Architect training and readiness in a passionate and enthusiastic way. Peter coached several Microsoft Partners all over the world in doing more Microsoft business, both from a technical and business angle. Just recently, as of June 2016 to be exact, Peter joined Microsoft Corp as an FTE Azure Architect and Program Manager in the global AzureCAT GSI team, part of Azure engineering, where his role consists of providing Azure-focused readiness training and cloud practice building coaching to the TOP Microsoft Global System Integrators. This role allows Peter to combine his two passions, working on the latest and greatest up-to-date technologies, and cooperating with people from all over the globe. His valued credentials are Microsoft Certified Trainer, Azure Certified Architect, and— before he joined Microsoft—Peter was also recognized as a Microsoft MVP for several years in a row. In his free time, Peter loves speaking at (inter)national conferences and community events, is a technical writer and courseware creator.
Read more about Peter De Tender

author image
Greg Leonardo

Greg Leonardo is currently a cloud architect helping organizations with cloud adoption and innovation. He has worked in the IT industry since his time in the military. He is a veteran, father, architect, teacher, speaker, and early adopter. Currently, he is a Certified Azure Solution Architect Expert, Microsoft Certified Trainer (MCT), and Microsoft Azure MVP, and he has worked in many facets of IT throughout his career. Additionally, he is president of TampaDev, a community meetup that runs #TampaCC, Azure User Group, Azure Medics, and various technology events throughout Tampa. He has also authored Hands-On Cloud Solutions with Azure and the previous two editions of Azure Strategy and Implementation Guide for Microsoft by Packt Publishing.
Read more about Greg Leonardo

author image
Jason Milgram

Jason Milgram is a Microsoft MVP since 2010 and the SVP, Azure Leader at OZ Digital, headquartered in Fort Lauderdale, FL. As a public speaker, Jason has given over 100 presentations at conferences and user groups on cloud computing, Microsoft Azure, Enterprise Mobility + Security, and launching a tech start-up. Prior to OZ, Jason was CTO, Financial Services at Hitachi Solutions in Irvine, CA, Chief Architect at i3 in Fairfax, VA, Chief Architect at SAIC in Reston, VA, 1st VP Cloud Solutions Architect at City National Bank of Florida in Miami, and VP Platform Architecture & Engineering at Champion Solutions Group in Boca Raton, FL.
Read more about Jason Milgram