Cloud Awareness Still Lagging in MEA Public Sector, According to IDC Government Insights
27 Apr 2012
Dubai, April 27,
2012 – Government organizations in the Middle East and
Africa (MEA) region have yet to gain a nuanced understanding of cloud
computing, and currently demonstrate a relatively low inclination to
adopt the technology until they develop greater confidence in it,
according to the latest research findings from IDC Government Insights.
A recent survey by international marketing research company
IDC revealed that over half of senior government IT decision makers
across the MEA region are now familiar or fairly familiar with various
cloud technology terms, while fewer than 20% feel they have a strong
understanding of cloud computing terminology. At present, 60% have no
interest in deploying any sort of cloud-computing environment within
their organizations, highlighting the scale of the mountain that cloud
vendors must climb in order to achieve more widespread adoption within
the region.
Insights into the attitudes of these decision makers towards
cloud computing technology reveal that the vast majority (85%) believe
that cloud computing remains an immature/developing technology, in
spite of acknowledging that it has the ability to offer significant and
tangible benefits (74%). And while the majority believe that cloud
computing has clear benefits, there are still widespread concerns
regarding cost and bandwidth (72%) and its inherent security risks
(68%).
"MEA public sector agencies still need to further explore and
gather distinctive proficiency in order to define their business
requirements and build a cloud services model that is specifically
suited to their operations," says Mukesh Chulani, IDC Government
Insights' research manager for the Middle East, Africa, and Turkey.
"Security concerns constitute the greatest deterrent to cloud adoption
at present. As government organizations are the key custodians of
citizens' information, use of the cloud could expose them to
significant risk, with potentially grave liability consequences. This
is a risk factor that is greatly hampering adoption in the region."
While security is the number one government concern with
regard to cloud adoption, the IDC Government Insights' survey found
that a general lack of understanding of the technology, a perception
that cloud is unsuited to the government sector, and uncertainty
regarding specific cloud providers in the market are further inhibitors
to adoption in the region. Additional concerns related to issues such
as cost and bandwidth, IT governance, and the ability to integrate
cloud with existing systems.
Chulani urges vendors to set about overcoming such concerns by
educating internal stakeholders with regard to cloud computing.
"Government organizations in the Middle East and Africa region are
simply unaware of how to best take advantage of the cloud delivery
model. The technology is disruptive, buyers are sceptical, and hype
abounds," he says. "IT decision makers must help bolster awareness
within their organizations by providing educational tools, models, and
success stories. An inventory of government organizations' current IT
environments would also provide a good indication of whether existing
systems contain sensitive or mission-critical data and which workloads
are most suitable for migration to the cloud, thus providing an
excellent base from which to plan for the cloud."
About the
research
The IDC
Government Insights report Cloud
Computing Awareness, Usage, and Interest in the Middle East and Africa
Government Sector (IDC
#ZGI06U) presents a detailed view of the evolving cloud
computing landscape across the MEA region from the perspective of
government IT decision makers. It provides in-depth analysis of MEA
government sector cloud computing IT readiness and insights into
decision makers' familiarity with – and general attitudes towards –
cloud computing, the industry's leading adoption drivers and
inhibitors, the current and expected rates of cloud adoption, and key
vendor selection criteria.
Contact
For more information, contact:
Vladimir Tax
vtax@idc.com
+420 2 2142 3140
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