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Complexity challenges of pandemic hangover could lead to SaaS hysteria

“I give the customer what he wants. I don’t think it’s my place to offer dietary advice. If they want red meat and boiling tar… then buon appetito,” said Tom Wambsgans, Shiv Roy’s husband and head of one of Waystar Royco’s divisions, in hit TV drama Succession.

This idea of feeding customers what they think they want regardless of the consequences is not necessarily a new one. While Wambsgans hit the nail on the head with Waystar Royco’s approach to customers, how many IT leaders can look at their mix of software-as-a-service (SaaS) apps, platforms and IT services and not feel that, somewhere along the line, they’ve been oversold?

This sums up nicely the almost Wild West approach of buying IT during the pandemic, when SaaS, for obvious reasons, had something of a growth spurt. The problem for many of these organisations is that data, which is needed for the efficient running of SaaS applications, resides in different enterprise systems. Often, the only way to overcome this is to buy a new SaaS product designed specifically to plug data gaps between enterprise systems with no application programming interfaces (APIs) in place. And so it goes on.

According to a NetApp’s 2023 cloud complexity report, released in March, 98% of senior IT leaders have been affected by increasing cloud complexity in some capacity, potentially leading to poor IT performance, loss in revenue and barriers to business growth.

In its recent report, Innovate or Fade, Accenture talked about the current “technology deficit”, which refers to “the disparity in adoption, implementation or effective use of technology (both established and leading edge) to create business value”.

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Computer Weekly

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Outage outrage! Why public cloud is putting data and business at risk

In the last 30 odd days there have been 60 cloud outages across four of the major cloud providers in AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud and Oracle Fusion Cloud. According to cloud and SaaS monitoring firm IsDown, 43 of these outages were for Google Cloud alone, which, along with the other hyperscalers, was contacted for comment on the matter for this article.

The current outage problem as it stands is an indication of the daily challenge facing the cloud providers under not just the pressure of increased numbers of users, but also the risk of using public cloud for anything mission critical or sensitive.

The trouble is that outages are a fact of life. As Tom Fairbairn, distinguished engineer at middleware firm Solace reminds us, “stuff happens” and most tech-based firms and platforms go down at some point. He talks about Facebook’s major outage in 2021, and how hardware failure and human error are generally to blame. But surely this is different – this is the cloud we’re talking about, the bedrock of modern computing.

“A lot of applications are now being built on the cloud,” says Stewart Parkin, CTO EMEA at Assured Data Protection. “Very often SaaS organizations are built on AWS or Azure, so it’s very possible that an entire organization moves into the cloud. Azure then goes down, and all of these workloads – email, Salesforce ERP files, SQL databases – are lost within that, due to their complete reliance upon SaaS on the cloud.”

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ERP Today

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