Country for PR: Australia
Contributor: Medianet International
Thursday, November 14 2019 - 12:00
AsiaNet
One in Three Cloud Migrations in Singapore and Malaysia Fail to Meet Expectations Because Organisations Do Not Make Cloud Part of Their Core Strategy – First Unisys Cloud Success Barometer(TM)
SINGAPORE, 14 Nov. 2019/Medianet International-AsiaNet/--

- Singaporean organisations that integrate cloud into broader business 
transformation strategy are 40% more likely to succeed with cloud migration 
compared to those who do not


Almost one-third of Singaporean (32%) and Malaysian (27%) organisations say 
they have failed to realise notable benefits from cloud computing, largely 
because they have not integrated their migration plan into their broader 
business transformation strategy, according to a new study by Unisys 
Corporation (UIS).

The first Unisys Cloud Success Barometer(TM)( 
https://www.unisys.com/cloudbarometer) study explored the impact and importance 
of cloud by surveying 1,000 senior IT and business leaders in 13 countries 
around the world, including 90 in Malaysia and Singapore. Other key findings 
include:

 - 70% of organisations in Singapore and Malaysia say their organisational 
   effectiveness has greatly or moderately improved for the better due to
   cloud computing;
 - Asia Pacific organisations for which cloud is a core part of their business
   strategy are 2.5 times more likely (80%) to say organisational 
   effectiveness had changed for the better, compared to only 29% of those who
   said cloud was a minor part of their transformation;
 - Of the 13 countries surveyed, Malaysian organisations report the second 
   lowest use of legacy systems (11%) and public cloud (17%) but second 
   highest use of on premise data centres (41%); 
 - Compared to Malaysia, Singapore’s organisations are almost twice as likely 
   use public cloud (31%) and almost half as likely to use on premise data 
   centres (23%). 
 - Two thirds of Singaporean (64%) and Malaysian (68%) organisations agree 
   that data is more secure in the cloud than in-house; and security is cited 
   as both the top benefit and greatest challenge for moving data, 
   applications or processes to the cloud.

"These results show why cloud transformation is not just an IT issue, it’s a 
business issue," said Leon Sayers, Regional Consulting Lead, Unisys Asia 
Pacific. "Singaporean organisations recorded the lowest level of success for 
cloud implementations meeting expectations. However, 82% of those Singaporean 
organisations that integrated cloud as a core part of their business strategy 
did see moderate or great organisational improvements in organisational 
effectiveness. Rather than a 'lift and shift' approach, successful cloud 
implementations require the right framework in place at the outset, with 
continual innovation and updates over time." 

The Future is Multi-Cloud 
Despite nearly all respondents (97% in Singapore and 94% in Malaysia) saying 
they had migrated to the cloud to some degree, use of multi-cloud is still low 
(44% in Singapore and 25% in Malaysia) – in line with the global results. 

However, those who used multi-cloud said they view the cloud as essential to 
staying competitive.

 - Nine in ten Singaporean multi–cloud users say that if they didn’t move to
   the cloud they would be somewhat to extremely concerned about being left 
   behind as a technology laggard (88%), competition innovating first (88%) 
   and be outperformed by the competition employees– compared to 56%, 51% and 
   51% respectively of all Singaporean organisations surveyed.

"A multi-cloud strategy offers flexibility and choice, and recognises that not 
all data and applications need to be treated in the same way," explained 
Sayers. "A multi-cloud strategy helps organisations gain greater sovereignty 
over their data, spread their risk in case of downtime and increase the 
negotiating leverage to shop rates for different service needs from multiple 
vendors."

2019 Unisys Cloud Success Barometer: Cloud Has Not Met Expectations in Singapore
The first Unisys Cloud Success Barometer surveyed more than 1,000 senior 
business and IT leaders across 13 countries in August and September 2019. 
Unisys gauged their attitudes on a wide range of cloud performance issues and 
created a barometer based on their feedback. The barometer score is calculated 
on a scale from zero to 100, based on how well cloud expectations are being met 
in six areas across business, competitive and IT benefits. 

The Unisys Cloud Success Barometer score for Singapore is 39, the lowest of the 
13 countries surveyed, and well below the global average of 49. 
 
https://s3-ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/mnr-s3-prod/0149/000381_howwellhaveyourexpectationsbenmet_800.jpg 

The top drivers for Singaporean organisations moving to the cloud are the 
desire for better IT and data security (71%), managing or reducing costs (58%) 
and gaining a competitive advantage (55%). Expectations for their cloud 
implementations were exceeded for gaining a competive advantage(67%), faster 
time to market (67%), being agile to match demand (65%) and better IT and data 
security (59%).

However, the benefits delivered fell short in the areas of driving innovation 
(50% said expectations were somewhat met/below expectation), reducing headcount 
(50%) and reducing costs (50%). 

Navigating the Path to Success
The survey identified several factors that improved the likelihood of a 
successful migration. Globally, organisations that used third-party support to 
help with their cloud adoption were 26% more likely to realise organisational 
improvements for the better compared to organisations that handled cloud 
migration in-house. In Singapore the results are even higher with organisations 
using third parties almost three times as likely to see improvements. Whereas 
in Malaysia, organisations using third parties were 11% less likely to see 
improvements.

"While no cloud migration is the same, there are several core building blocks 
that many successful migrations share. First, organisations must do a thorough 
planning assessment that looks at anticipated ROI, staff training needs, 
security risks and identifies where outside expertise is needed. Next, they 
need to establish a continuous integration/continuous delivery framework 
leveraging microservices, containers and DevOps. Lastly, having a cloud 
management portal is critical to providing end-to-end visibility for better 
monitoring and performance," said Sayers.  

For more results and information on the 2019 Unisys Cloud Success Barometer and 
to download a report on the survey results, visit 
www.unisys.com/cloudbarometer. 

Methodology
The Unisys Cloud Success Barometer online survey of 728 IT leaders and 317 
senior business leaders was conducted across 13 countries: Australia, Belgium, 
Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Germany, Malaysia, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, 
Singapore, UK and USA during August-September 2019. The 90 Singaporean and 
Malaysian responses are from 56 IT leaders and 34 business leaders.

About Unisys
Unisys is a global information technology company that builds high-performance, 
security-centric solutions for the most demanding businesses and governments. 
Unisys offerings include security software and services; digital transformation 
and workplace services; industry applications and services; and innovative 
software operating environments for high-intensity enterprise computing. For 
more information on how Unisys builds better outcomes securely for its clients 
across the Government, Financial Services and Commercial markets, visit 
www.unisys.com.sg. Follow Unisys on Twitter(http://twitter.com/UnisysCorp) and 
LinkedIn(http://www.linkedin.com/company/unisys). 

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Unisys and other Unisys products and services mentioned herein, as well as 
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SOURCE: Unisys