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Cloud Standards Cloud Control and Managing Your Own Service Level Agreements
Managing your cloud resources in accordance with your key business priorities
By: Eddie Budgen
Feb. 22, 2012 09:45 AM
Depending on how analysts define it, the market for cloud products and services is growing anywhere from 19% (Gartner) to 27% (IDC ) per year. The growth in public cloud service usage is even more robust. At Amazon EC2, the leading cloud services provider (CSP), average daily instance launch counts grew fivefold from 2008 to 2009, and more than doubled in 2010. A growing percentage of these customers are enterprises using the public cloud in an Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) model. Under the IaaS model, all equipment used to support operations is outsourced including compute, storage, and networking components. With that high degree of reliance on the CSP, many organizations are seeking some form of service management to support the specific needs of their business. That need became even clearer when Amazon EC2 experienced an extended outage that took thousands of websites down in April 2011 - some for more than three days. This outage costs organizations days of lost productivity and millions of dollars in revenue. The need to control the cloud is all the more vital when you consider that business agility and lower costs are the two primary drivers behind cloud infrastructure services migration. However, lower costs are no bargain if the service is deficient, and agility cannot exist without reliability. Adopting the IaaS model should not mean surrendering control over costs or performance or leaving one's organization vulnerable. The problem is gaining control of your cloud environment. We have provided five easy steps to controlling your cloud environment.
Step 1: Implement your own SLAs to complement CSP SLAs While SLAs do ensure that customers receive some compensation for service unavailability, prospective CSP customers should keep the following points in mind:
Software-based SLAs give you the power to define, maintain, and enforce the fulfillment of business and compliance policies according to your own business priorities. Step 2: Put your eggs in multiple baskets SLAs should define, maintain, and enforce business policies according to the priorities you set and actively monitor service performance and make any needed adjustments before critical KPI thresholds are violated and avoid an SLA breach. Step 3: Optimize running costs while delivering on service targets The secret to doing this is to define Key Performance Indicators (KPI), which can then be articulated as Business SLAs. Under the SLAs, you can assign and enforce control adjustment actions whenever a KPI threshold is breached. The result: optimized cloud services with zero additional operational resources. Step 4: Keep a constant eye on cloud service usage Independent cloud monitoring is a good start but not quite enough. It's better to implement tools and services that also allow you to establish limit policies on monitored resources, and to control use of cloud services to different usage groups. By setting specific limits for each group, you can ensure that you will not get a runaway CSP bill at the end of the month. SLA controls are a way to set and enforce these live policies. Step 5: Mix and match your cloud services to satisfy business needs and get the best value The answer to this problem is called an "inter-cloud SLA broker," a software tool that can provide the means to coordinate services across multiple CSPs. With an inter-cloud SLA broker, an organization can establish and manage multiple SLAs within, between, and across cloud service providers, essentially spanning cloud distribution and deployment models. The inter-cloud SLA broker continuously monitors service health according to the KPIs and thresholds you set in the SLAs. When a KPI threshold has been crossed, it triggers an automatic notification, and/or dynamic adjustments and provisioning actions to bring the service back into line with its SLA. Such actions could include provisioning additional IaaS resources from another provider, redirecting VIP requests to the best-performing service provider endpoint, and even performing a cost analysis across cloud service marketplaces to broker the best price for an available cloud service at that time. By enabling this high degree of automated control, the inter-cloud SLA broker gives organizations the agility to ensure that each cloud service is always applied in the right way. In all, there are a number of ways to get smarter about cloud computing investments and it all starts by taking control and managing your cloud resources in accordance with your key business priorities. These simple steps will help to alleviate any of the complexities previously associated with the cloud. Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
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