{"id":45658,"date":"2023-08-16T08:37:11","date_gmt":"2023-08-16T12:37:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/centricconsulting.com\/?p=45658"},"modified":"2024-08-06T10:11:45","modified_gmt":"2024-08-06T14:11:45","slug":"top-considerations-for-a-successful-utilities-cloud-migration-what-you-need-to-know","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/centricconsulting.com\/blog\/top-considerations-for-a-successful-utilities-cloud-migration-what-you-need-to-know\/","title":{"rendered":"Top Considerations for a Successful Utilities Cloud Migration: What You Need to Know"},"content":{"rendered":"
Utility organizations face the challenges of an ever-evolving digital landscape and demands for reliable, efficient and sustainable energy services. New opportunities for utilities to use innovative technologies such as artificial intelligence and robotic process automation have only accelerated the demand to develop systems capable of supporting high computing and data needs.<\/p>\n
With this, many utility companies consider options like a migration to the cloud<\/a> as a means to embrace innovation<\/a>, improve scalability, and provide flexibility. However, in an industry where security and performance are of the utmost importance, concerns about cloud persist.<\/strong><\/p>\n We\u2019ll provide a breakdown of the core benefits and potential challenges of starting your cloud migration journey, as well as recommendations for how to begin.<\/p>\n Before we dive into the potential challenges and concerns associated with cloud migration, it is important to uncover some of the core benefits of a cloud migration in the utility sector.<\/p>\n Migrating to the cloud provides a great deal of scalability and reliability. By using cloud infrastructure and services, provided by organizations including Amazon Web Services<\/a> (AWS) and Microsoft Azure<\/a>, utility companies can dynamically adjust their computing resources to accommodate fluctuating demands (such as peak load periods), which improves operational efficiency, reduces potential down-time, and mitigates the potential cost of over-provisioning for on-premises resources.<\/p>\n Reliability of service is also a major benefit of cloud service options, with top providers guaranteeing high uptimes(the percentage of time the services are available) typically over 99 percent and redundancies (data storage in multiple locations in case of compromise). Cloud-based systems also allow for the remote monitoring and maintenance of critical infrastructure and utility equipment.<\/strong><\/p>\n With these tools, utility employees can easily monitor equipment performance, detect any potential issues, and proactively predict and schedule required maintenance. This use of cloud-based technologies can result in significant cost reductions and reduce potential downtime.<\/p>\n Cloud platforms offer advanced data processing and storage, which allows your utility company to analyze vast volumes of data in ways that previously required substantial investments in infrastructure and staffing. This real-time data analysis allows you to provide substantial benefits to both customers and internal operations.<\/p>\n On the customer side, this enables highly personalized communications concerning usage trends, energy efficiency recommendations, billing forecasts, and more.<\/p>\n On the operations side, big data analysis can enable significant improvements to grid reliability and performance by enabling use cases such as predictive maintenance, optimized asset management, and highly accurate load forecasting. Organizations might reduce overall operational expenses through a migration to the cloud. As part of the planning process, organizations can benefit from tools major service providers provide to estimate the cost of their resource needs. By enabling scaling, organizations are oftentimes able to secure significant cost savings by leveraging only the resources that they need based on demand.<\/p>\n Moreover, the cloud requires less IT personnel maintenance time overall, using innovative technologies such as serverless computing, platform as a service, solution as a service, and fully managed, highly redundant and available databases that would be prohibitively expensive to implement for utilities.<\/p>\n It also allows development teams to spin up environments more quickly using methods like infrastructure as code (IaC), enabling overall project-level cost savings as well. Finally, organizations may also be able to benefit from grants provided by large service providers to support their initial migration efforts.<\/p>\n Security is one of the most discussed topics when addressing cloud migrations. One of the largest benefits of cloud migration<\/a> is that you gain the security infrastructure of large service providers, with massive investment in providing secure services.<\/strong><\/p>\n Moreover, cloud-based solutions offer security solutions including advanced encryption, access control mechanisms to protect sensitive data, robust disaster recovery capabilities, and business continuity capabilities that ensure rapid data restoration and system resilience in the case of major disruption events.<\/p>\n Cloud migrations are not without their challenges. We have highlighted a few of the top concerns and challenges associated with the cloud migration process, with a focus on challenges unique to the utility industry, as well as some tips on how to mitigate these apprehensions.<\/p>\n We presented security as a cloud migration benefit, but it is also an area of major concern. The largest issue typically raised is that utility data now rests in the partial hands of a third party. Cloud providers, however, have invested significant resources to ensure that their applications meet the very highest levels of security compliance.<\/p>\n Most utility companies do not have the resource capabilities to have a large security organization. By using cloud solutions<\/a>, you get the added benefit of this team of specialists constantly working to maintain the integrity of the solution.<\/strong><\/p>\n Utilities themselves must also take an approach that ensures the security of their cloud solution- both from a proactive and reactive perspective. You need to put proactive measures in place to ensure critical security components such as proper identity and access management, data encryption, and so on. You must also support reactive measures for the detection and prevention of unauthorized use, intrusions, data leaks and more.<\/p>\n To ensure proper implementation of these measures both in set-up and ongoing support, we encourage the engagement of a specialized third-party auditing service. It is also important to consider in contracting the amount of liability for security your cloud provider will provide and if that meets your organizational needs.<\/p>\n As a highly regulated industry, compliance concerns naturally become part of any conversation related to cloud migrations, as a utility must ensure its solution meets industry-specific requirements related to cybersecurity and data privacy. Moreover, there is the natural concern that the use of a third party, in this case, your cloud service provider, may reduce the amount of control you have over your infrastructure and performance data.<\/p>\n However, most cloud partners provide robust reporting tools to their customers, with users having the ability to customize reports to meet their organizational compliance needs.<\/strong><\/p>\n You can also mitigate compliance concerns by ensuring your selected service provider meets your specific compliance requirements, such as only using data centers located in your country, and ensuring they meet federal guidelines, such as those established by the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program<\/a> (FedRAMP), and meeting standard security framework requirements such as those established by NIST, SOC 2, ISO 27001, and CSA CCM.<\/p>\n A cloud migration project requires the organization to be ready to execute on a large-scale change to your IT operations. Successful implementations approach cloud migration as a fundamental shift in your operating model.<\/p>\n Less successful projects approach cloud migration in silos, with multiple instances established across the organization, potentially on multiple platforms, which can result in an inefficient, costly disparate approach to the cloud. It is critical to establish a roadmap that considers the full vision for the migration process across the organization.<\/p>\n While there are likely cost savings associated with cloud migrations, there are two primary challenges this approach presents for utility companies.<\/p>\n First, there is less direct control over budget, as it is based on usage and can fluctuate.<\/strong><\/p>\n Without an effective cloud management process in place, it is quite easy to overspend on excess infrastructure, services, applications and user licenses. To mitigate potential overspend, organizations can benefit from working with an organization that specializes in Cloud FinOps<\/a>, which is designed to help organizations focus on cloud cost optimization from discovery through operations, empowering teams to make cloud business decisions around speed, cost and quality. We can break down cloud transformation into the following areas of optimization.<\/p>\nTop Four Benefits of Cloud Migration<\/h2>\n
Scalability and Reliability<\/h3>\n
Enable Innovation with Cloud Migration<\/h3>\n
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\nUtilities that migrate to the cloud<\/a> can, therefore, innovate more quickly without the dependency on long-term planning related to resource capacity. <\/strong><\/p>\nPotential Cost Savings<\/h3>\n
Enhanced Security<\/h3>\n
Cloud Concerns and Potential Solutions<\/h2>\n
Security Concerns<\/h3>\n
Compliance Concerns<\/h3>\n
Cloud Migration Change Management and Adoption<\/h3>\n
Budgets<\/h3>\n