Demand for cloud services is soaring worldwide. This is especially true in Asia, where as much as 76% of organisations are planning to increase cloud services in the next year, according to a report by the IDC. But the focus now and moving forward is no longer just on migrating to the cloud but also on how businesses can utilise the cloud more effectively and efficiently.
Oracle, a multinational computer technology corporation, is looking to meet both demands with Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), and it is a commitment the tech giant underscored at Oracle CloudWorld 2022. It then reaffirmed this cloud vision in early November in an exclusive virtual media brief, where Chris Chelliah, Senior Vice President, Technology, Customer Strategy and Business Development, JAPAC, at Oracle, talked about some of the companyâs latest cloud-related announcements.
Going Bold With Oracle Cloud
âAs we engaged more and more with customers and partners in the region, there was a common thread that came outâthe customers who were willing to be very, very bold in their decisions grabbed market share and made a big difference in what they did,â noted Chelliah. âBeing bold means making decisions that bring these customers closer to their consumers. Organisations that did, ended up grabbing a lot of the market share and ended up launching new products and growing even in this period of uncertainty.â
Chelliah, however, was quick to note that the cloud is not some magic bullet that would allow organisations to be bold. Instead, Chelliah described the cloud as âan enablerâ as it helps customers respond very quickly and obtain data from everywhere, bring them together and use them to provide âa very personalised service to the user.â The cloud also helps companies leverage new technologiesâMachine-Learning and Artificial Intelligence, for instanceâto offer âa higher order of personalisation for customers.â
Despite the cloud being an enabler, cloud spending in the region is relatively small at 20â25% only. Chelliah attributes this disconnect to the many barriers to cloud adoption, the most prominent of which are these three: Demanding workloads, security and reliability. First-generation cloud providers, according to Chelliah, were largely unable to remove these barriers entirely, prompting Oracle to âbe very boldâ and to âdo things differentlyâ with its own cloud.
Removing the Handcuffs With OCI
That cloud offering is OCI, a next-generation cloud designed to run any application faster and more securely, for less. Oracleâs cloud offering is a complete cloud infrastructure platform, and it provides organisations with all the services they need to migrate, build and run all their IT. This next-generation cloud removes said barriersâdescribed by Chelliah as âhandcuffsââand allows organisations to move seamlessly and securely from on-premises to the cloud.
On top of OCI are a suite of Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) applications, which offer OCI users key innovations to help them make the most out of Oracleâs barrier-breaking cloud infrastructure. These applications, designed specifically to effect positive changes in organisations, bring âa healthy tensionâ to OCI. Meaning, there is a need for OCI to meet the vast requirements of multiple applications, and meeting these requirements is driving Oracle to âmake its infrastructure betterâ and keep innovating. This dynamic makes Oracleâs cloud infrastructure even more superior, resulting in OCI customers getting a better cloud experience.
Little wonder OCI Public Cloud is growing exponentially, with a 103% year-on-year consumption growth on the strength of rapid regional expansion. Chelliah sees OCI expanding even more, mainly because Oracle is delivering âsomething very compelling for customersâ and has âremoved the handcuffs [in cloud adoption].â Even so, customers can expect more innovation to comeâon top of those Chelliah announced in the virtual media brief.
Cutting-Edge Innovations for OCI
Among the notable announcements, Chelliah talked about in the virtual brief is the release of MySQL HeatWave LakeHouse, Oracleâs latest addition to its pioneering MySQL HeatWave portfolio. This cloud service makes running queries and analytics faster, and more efficient but less costly by giving MySQL customers instant access to analytics and querying âwithout changing their applications, without rewriting their code and without moving their data.â
This key innovation, though, will not be exclusive to Oracle cloud users only, as it is also enabled in other cloud providers. It should come as no surprise because Oracle, Chelliah emphasised, is âall about the customers getting the benefitââtheir choice of cloud provider notwithstanding.
Chelliah also talked in great detail about Oracle Alloy, a cloud setup in which Oracle partners in different countries are turned into de facto Oracle cloud providers. Under Oracle Alloy, partners will be able to offer Oracleâs entire suite of cloud offerings but keep the entire operations in-country. This arrangement makes Oracle Alloy ideal for companies that want all the benefits of the public cloud, but are mandated by law to keep sensitive data on local shores and have local citizens operating their cloud.
âWith Oracle Alloy, we take that same cloud [OCI]âall the features, all the capabilitiesâand we take it to a provider inside a country,â Chelliah explained. âThat provider can customise this cloud, personalise it and serve it up together with their own IP and run it in-country. It is identical to a public cloud but now run by a trusted local provider as opposed to a multinational company [like Oracle].â
Supporting the Multi-Cloud Setup
Oracle, according to Chelliah, is also keen on supporting organisations opting to use multiple clouds, which is something already being done by 82% of organisations worldwideâup by 27% from last year. This decision is in part due to companies wanting to leverage the strengths of different cloud providers and in part due to businesses looking to redistribute risks to more than one cloud. Oracle recognises this trend, and is encouraging customers to adopt it because âit will deliver the best outcome for customers.â
To ensure a successful multi-cloud setup, Oracle has also strengthened integrations with other hyperscalers, like Microsoft Azure and Amazon Web Services, to keep customers from getting walled in so to speak by their chosen providers. These partnerships will enable some degree of interoperability between and among cloudsâbut without the added costs of extra networking. This, Chelliah pointed out, is akin to âtaking the plumbing away from customersâ so âthey can use the best services on the cloud that makes sense for and deliver the best outcomes.â
All About the Customers
In all, two common threads emerged from Chelliahâs brief. The first is how Oracle is constantly innovating the cloud and making it better. The second is how the software giant is all about giving its customers the best experiences possible. Oracleâs cloud offerings only prove bothâand the best, it seems, is yet to come.