A cloud strategy roadmap is a visual communication tool that describes how your organization will migrate to the cloud. It includes key tasks, deliverables, and deadlines. IT teams use roadmaps to put their cloud migration strategy on track and hold all stakeholders accountable. According to Gartner, cloud strategy roadmaps should have at least five parts: aligning objectives, planning, preparing for execution, governance, optimization, and collaboration.
Because cloud migration projects are complex and involve multiple parts of an organization, developing a cloud strategy roadmap is not a simple task. You should follow a structured process to ensure all relevant stakeholders are on board and align your roadmap with available resources and operational considerations.
In this article:
Addressing the “why”
The best way to start building your cloud roadmap is to start with the why. Why are you migrating? What are the benefits? Why should other members of your organization join your cloud vision?
Addressing the “how”
When you approach a cloud roadmap, you’ll need concrete answers to the technical challenges of migration. Ask yourself how you’ll migrate workloads to the cloud, how they will operate in a hybrid environment, and which cloud migration method is the most appropriate—lift-and-shift, refactoring, or rebuilding.
Addressing cultural factors
Another category of questions involves the people in your organization. Don't underestimate the importance of culture. Technology is often the easier part of cloud transformation; changing workflows people are accustomed to is more challenging.
How will you encourage people in your organization to cooperate with the migration, and what will you do to ensure it impacts them positively? Empathy, professional development, and support are as important as choosing between cloud providers or cloud-native technologies.
Addressing the “what”
An essential part of your roadmap is what you will migrate. Ask yourself which workloads will move to the cloud, which are easier to migrate, and which are more challenging. Define datasets that will move to the cloud and critical aspects like data sensitivity and availability requirements.
Define success
Ask yourself what will make your cloud migration a success. Are you aiming to shut down the on-premises data center or move all new development to the cloud? Define the organization's ultimate goal with specific metrics to measure migration success.
According to research by Gartner, the ideal cloud migration roadmap consists of five steps.
Organizations should create a cloud migration value proposition for business and IT early in the cloud migration roadmap. Start by conducting a survey to understand the use cases for cloud adoption, aligning cloud strategy with IT goals, and defining action steps to achieve your goals.
Another important aspect is to define migration principles based on application and team readiness, business priorities, and vendor capabilities. Use data available in the organization to define the metrics and key performance indicators (KPIs) for a successful migration.
Related content: Read our guide to cloud migration approaches
Choose the right cloud provider and negotiate a successful contract. At this stage, you should build cloud capabilities across the organization, assess alternative service providers, and prepare to mitigate cloud-related risks. Identify the necessary investments in your network, security, identity architecture, and other tools.
At this stage, determine whether to migrate your entire environment to the cloud, or one workload at a time. Identify if your organization requires a multi-cloud environment or a single cloud provider will suffice. Think about the long term—will the capabilities of your cloud provider fit your needs in the future, and how will costs grow over time given your future growth?
Related content: Read our guide to cloud transition planning
At this stage, you deploy and optimize workloads in the cloud. Deployment involves identifying workloads for migration, defining your cloud management workflow, adopting implementation best practices, and analyzing how workloads perform in the cloud.
Managing cloud migration as a structured, well-defined process can help an organization significantly improve the efficiency and effectiveness of cloud workload management.
Related content: Read our detailed cloud migration checklists:
The goal of a successful cloud migration includes setting up robust processes to minimize disruption to your workflow. To be successful, you must discover, analyze and monitor sensitive data throughout your cloud deployment. Set up a security control plane using a third-party tool with suitable functionality.
Take a lifecycle approach to governance—it is important to realize that you must continuously maintain governance to be effective. Governance and compliance feedback should be an integral part of your workflow, leveraging automation.
At this stage, workloads are already running successfully in the cloud. Consider investments that can improve existing use of the cloud and address operational challenges. Define customer-centric goals, communicating to teams how improved cloud use can benefit the organization. Align all stakeholders around the need to continuously develop and optimize your cloud presence.
Related content: Read our guide to cloud migration tools
Cloud migration processes can only succeed by achieving cooperation between cross-departmental teams. The following roles should be included in your roadmap and in relevant planning stages:
NetApp Cloud Volumes ONTAP, the leading enterprise-grade storage management solution, delivers secure, proven storage management services on AWS, Azure and Google Cloud. Cloud Volumes ONTAP capacity can scale into the petabytes, and it supports various use cases such as file services, databases, DevOps or any other enterprise workload, with a strong set of features including high availability, data protection, storage efficiencies, Kubernetes integration, and more.
Download our free eBook: The NetApp Guide to Migrating Enterprise Workloads to the Cloud