IT disaster recovery, cloud computing and information security news

Security is the number one concern amongst senior business executives when it comes to cloud data adoption, yet more than half of business-critical data is likely to reside there by 2019.

According to the findings of a new study released by Teradata, eight out of ten executives cite security as a concern when storing data in the cloud, but that has not stopped a huge rise in the amount of critical data being sent there. Looking ahead to 2019, executives predict that over half of IT (56 percent), customer (53 percent), and financial data (51 percent) will reside in the cloud.

The study highlights that although businesses want to invest in cloud storage and many plan to do so over the next two years, there are real concerns about security of information and data breaches.

Key trends identified in the survey were:

  • 40 percent of respondents say general security is a risk, while 25 percent of respondents believe cloud data adoption will result in more security breaches.
  • A quarter of those surveyed believe data cloud adoption will result in lack of control.
  • 52 percent say executive buy-in to data in the cloud is holding them back and 22 percent struggle with the additional staffing needed to move to the cloud.
  • Although 58 percent of data from organizations surveyed already sits in the cloud today, usage of cloud will increase over the next two years, with three in ten companies globally predicting a significant increase of data in the cloud by 2019.
  • Legal data is being kept on physical servers for the most part, with just 27 percent of businesses surveyed expecting to move their legal data to the cloud in the next two years.
  • 48 percent of organizations surveyed anticipate a significant increase in their cloud storage use by 2019.
  • 48 percent of marketing and communications departments within organizations surveyed will increase data stored in the cloud by 2019. 
  • 59 percent of respondents highlighted that the healthcare industry will move customer data to the cloud in the next two years.
  • Utilities will prioritize moving IT infrastructure (64 percent) and R&D/Engineering data (52 percent).

Marc Clark, ‎Director of Cloud Strategy and Deployment at Teradata said: "Our message to organizations around the world is that the cloud is actually one of the most secure means of virtual storage available. While our study finds widespread concerns, the fact is that cloud storage is growing rapidly, remains hugely cost-effective, and that there are ways to manage it securely.

"Cloud computing security processes should be designed to address the security controls that the cloud provider will incorporate, in order to maintain the data security, privacy and compliance with necessary regulations, as well as providing a business continuity and data backup plan.

"By identifying the barriers within the business that hinder further adoption, as well as where cloud storage is creating positive opportunities, we aim to provide reassurance that cloud storage is a safe and cost effective way to store company information."

The study was carried out in January 2017. The research was conducted across nine countries: Australia, France, Germany, Japan, UK, US, India, Spain and Russia, with 100 respondents from each.

www.teradata.com


Want news and features emailed to you?

Signup to our free newsletters and never miss a story.

A website you can trust

The entire Continuity Central website is scanned daily by Sucuri to ensure that no malware exists within the site. This means that you can browse with complete confidence.

Business continuity?

Business continuity can be defined as 'the processes, procedures, decisions and activities to ensure that an organization can continue to function through an operational interruption'. Read more about the basics of business continuity here.

Get the latest news and information sent to you by email

Continuity Central provides a number of free newsletters which are distributed by email. To subscribe click here.