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Make Light Work of Cloud Governance with Unified Cloud Management

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The hybrid cloud and the multi-cloud have made cloud governance more challenging than it once was. In fact, it’s not uncommon for an organization’s cloud environment to fall into chaos. But organizations can mitigate risks by mapping out a comprehensive cloud strategy and using the right tools. Unified cloud management can help enterprises ease management burdens and implement effective policies and practices. This entails using intelligent tools to deliver multiple cloud services through one common infrastructure.

Here’s how unified cloud management helps:

Manage Costs

Cloud sprawl is a reality. It refers to the uncontrolled proliferation of an enterprise’s cloud instances, services, and providers. This problem is a result of a lack of visibility. Normally, you can’t keep track of who’s using what resources and how to reconcile your budget in a multi-cloud setup. After all, different cloud providers bill resources differently, and metrics are inconsistent between platforms. Unified cloud management can help solve this problem by giving you cost visibility. You achieve this by deploying the right cloud management tools.

Ensure Security and Compliance

Public cloud providers, such as Amazon Web Services, Google, and Azure, use different approaches to protect your data. You need a comprehensive, holistic solution to protect your whole environment. Unified cloud management calls for the use of third-party tools that bring together all your cloud deployments. These tools understand the security methods employed in all your clouds. They ensure you have protection for your resources and conform to your security policies.

Monitor and Manage Resource Utilization

Most organizations move to the cloud because of its flexibility and pay-as-you-go model. They only pay for what they use. This can come in handy in cases where the enterprise has intermittent load spikes. There’s no need to provision large-scale instances to handle something that occurs once every three months. The elasticity of the cloud enables organizations to scale resources up and down based on demand. But this is not possible if you do not understand how you use resources in the cloud. Unified cloud management gives you the ability to analyze your workloads and handle the placement of resources. This way, you can optimize for both performance and cost.

Implement Automation and Self-Healing

The automated remediation of events and issues in the cloud can help improve productivity in the organization. DevOps teams can focus on improving automation across workloads. A good example is when there’s a load spike. It makes sense to have the instances scale to meet the increased demand for resources. But if you’re managing an environment with multiple clouds, then things can get sticky. Major cloud providers do not have the tools to handle this sort of setup. You need intelligent software that allows you to react to events across clouds. Unified cloud management offers just that.

Conclusion

A cloud management platform, such as CloudBolt, is just what you need to implement unified cloud management. It can give you total visibility into your cloud infrastructure and makes cloud governance a breeze.

See CloudBolt in action. Request a demo!

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