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India Leads Cloud Storage in AsiaPac

HDS-sponsored IDC survey

Hitachi Data Systems Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Hitachi, Ltd., has announced survey results indicating that India is leading in cloud storage and converged system adoption in Asia Pacific.

The survey results also revealed that more than 50% of the large Asia Pacific enterprises that participated in the survey are not anticipating or planning for the advent of big data. The survey results indicate that enterprises need to embrace advanced cloud technologies and solutions to manage data growth, transform data into actionable information and harness its power as a strategic asset for business insight and innovation.

The survey results are published in an HDS-sponsored IDC Corp. white paper titled The Changing Face of Storage: A Rethink of Strategy that Goes Beyond the Data. The survey was conducted by IDC from August to September 2011 with 150 IT executives from large enterprises in Australia, New Zealand, China, Hong Kong, India, Malaysia and Singapore. HDS commissioned the survey to better understand their storage management challenges, needs and strategies.

"The regional survey results reveal varying levels of maturity and understanding of storage management. The challenge of ensuring data relevancy and managing data growth, which ranked among the top five common issues faced, clearly indicates that the anticipated trend toward big data is something few are ready to take on," said Simon Piff, associate vice president, Asia/Pacific Enterprise Infrastructure Research, IDC.

Leading In Cloud Storage
And Converged System Adoption

The Indian market is the most mature in terms of the adoption of cloud technologies and the highest usage levels of converged systems. 50 percent of respondents in India are using or planning to use cloud storage in the next 6 to 12 months. 30 percent of respondents in India are using converged systems and 35 percent are either evaluating or planning to use such systems.

The Indian market responses indicate that the move to more advanced datacentre architectures is underway, and the growing pains are keenly felt. Data management issues due to growth and new challenges uncovered through the virtualisation of the server platform dominate concerns. However, fundamental issues such as managing email growth and backup also remained high.

Having access to accurate data on a timely basis key
to gaining deeper business insight

About 70 percent of respondents in India stated that the demand of the business for deeper analysis outpaces the ability for their systems to ensure the data they had is relevant, timely and useful. Their data growth is outpacing their ability to effectively manage it.

Virtual server sprawl a key concern
70 percent cited problems from virtual server sprawl, as they are unable to keep a close track of the virtual platform assets and their alignment to storage.

Justifying storage investments
a key challenge as budgets remain tight

60% cited aligning IT costs to business budgets and growth as a main challenge to adopting their IT strategy amid current market conditions.

Insufficient backup window a key issue
Due to the nature of their business, 60% of Indian organisations do not have enough time to back up systems.

Managing email is getting more difficult and expensive
60 percent of respondents in India cited concerns over the rising costs in managing email growth.

Top Three Current Concerns In Asia Pacific
In all Asia Pacific markets surveyed, IT executives are primarily concerned with data growth, with 56 percent of respondents citing it as the main challenge; however, 39 percent cited increasing utilisation levels and 36 percent cited managing storage for virtualised servers as key challenges. Unstructured data is exploding but many organisations acknowledge that utilisation levels have been notoriously low.

Of the respondents in Asia Pacific, 67 percent believe their current storage infrastructure is sufficient for the next 12 months; however, 72 percent do not have a strategy to cope with the anticipated growth of unstructured data – the large multimedia, internet-based or other types of multi-gigabyte big data that is now increasingly important as a competitive resource for data mining and other business uses.

Indeed, 64 percent of respondents in Asia Pacific stated that business needs for deeper analysis outpace the ability of their systems to ensure the data they have is relevant, timely and useful. Their data growth is outpacing their ability to effectively manage it.

"Data needs to be shared, compared, analysed and visualised more holistically. Only then can data become information used for insight, trending, and leveraged proactively in anticipation of things to come," said Eggleston. "There is a great potential for the information cloud because it will analyse content independently of applications or media and enable analytics of ‘big data’ to better align itself to human behavior for deeper, more relevant insight, driving innovation, advancing research, enabling better collaboration, and building more sustainable societies," he said.

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