Many organisations get cloud migration wrong. Here’s how to get it right

Randy Randhawa, Senior Vice President of Product Development at Virtana, details the best ways to tackle cloud migration head-on.

If not planned, or even understood thoroughly, there can be many pitfalls to cloud migration. Virtana’s recent State of Hybrid Cloud survey is evidence of this – with seven-in-10 (72%) of the 350 IT professionals surveyed stating that they have had to move workloads back to on-premises after migrating to the public cloud. And such a high number certainly raises questions.

There are a host of reasons as to why cloud applications are having to be moved back to on-prem, including:

  • The migration of applications that should have stayed on-premises
  • Technical issues with provisioning for the public cloud
  • Application performance degradation
  • Wrong public cloud provider selection
  • Unexpected costs

But the good news is, these instances and barriers to successful cloud migration can be avoided. Here’s how to not make the same disruptive and costly migration mistakes.

Ensure workloads that should have stayed on-premises aren’t migrated to the cloud

Not every workload belongs in the cloud, which is why many organisations opt for a hybrid cloud approach, keeping some part of their estate on-premises. You need to consider various attributes of different workloads—e.g., data, back end, privacy and security requirements—and their inherent suitability for a public cloud environment. You also need to have clear goals and priorities so you can make the best decision to support your business needs—and you must communicate those objectives and decisions with everyone involved in the cloud migration process.

Finally, you should understand the detailed health, utilisation, and performance characteristics of your workloads in the data centre. This baseline provides critical information to help you make migrate-or-stay decisions.

Avoid technical issues by adopting public cloud provisioning

The technical challenges of public cloud provisioning are due in no small part to the sheer number of configuration options available. Added to that is the fact that most of the guidance available focuses primarily on CPU utilisation. While important, it’s not the only factor to consider. You must also take other computing dimensions—such as memory usage, IOPS, and network bandwidth—into account. Additionally, you may have certain conditions that need to be factored in, such as prepaid reservation commitments or certain types of VMs you want to avoid, to name just two examples.

All of these puzzle pieces have to fit together, and if they don’t, you’re going to run into problems. You can head this off at the pass with an automated recommendation engine that looks at all the critical dimensions of your workloads over time, within constraints that you set, to provide you with a manageable shortlist of configurations. From there, you can perform a what-if analysis to find the optimal combination. When it comes time for provisioning, you’ll have a no-surprises process.

Maintaining application performance in the cloud

Any benefits you gain by moving applications to the cloud are outstripped if performance slows to an unacceptable level. To prevent this from happening, you first need to create a baseline of on-premises performance and model representative workloads in your public cloud configurations—before any migration work begins. Baselines are critical because they provide a reference point for comparing workload utilisation and performance in the cloud. You need to ensure your baselines reflect any seasonality to give you the most complete view of the health, utilisation, and performance characteristics of your workloads in your on-premises infrastructure. Then after you’ve moved your applications to the target cloud, you must optimise them to stay rightsized for performance and cost.

Select the right public cloud provider

Picking the wrong cloud provider could be an expensive and disruptive mistake. You may have specific requirements to help you narrow the list of potential providers, but how do you make an apples-to-apples comparison to ultimately select the provider who will deliver the best performance at the lowest cost? The key is to use an automated recommendation engine, as described above, to build the list of comparable configurations for each provider and then “playback” those workloads before making any commitments.

Avoid unexpected public cloud costs

Too many times, companies get a nasty surprise when their end-of-month cloud bill arrives. Sometimes due to an unexpected surge in activity or increased workloads over time, it’s important to understand potentially costly changes that could occur before your budget is busted.

READ MORE:

To do so, a company needs total visibility of how costs could potentially rise. Utilising ongoing cloud optimisation capabilities can provide such visibility, and provide a platform for resources to be adjusted so that bills remain affordable without performance being harmed.

In short, the key to avoiding all of these public cloud challenges—and the unnecessary repatriation of applications—is what we like to call #KnowBeforeYouGo to the cloud.

For more news from Top Business Tech, don’t forget to subscribe to our daily bulletin!

Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter

Luke Conrad

Technology & Marketing Enthusiast

How AI Is Rewriting the Rules of Shopping

Sue Azari • 09th October 2025

The shift toward AI-native commerce is already underway. While mainstream adoption may take time, the complexity of building the right foundation means that early movers will gain a clear advantage. The question is no longer whether AI will reshape shopping, but whether your organisation will be ready when it does. This article outlines what you...

Data Centre Demand Growth Continues to Surge

Brad Legge • 02nd October 2025

The proliferation of digital technologies has thrust data centres into the spotlight as linchpins of modern business infrastructure. From cloud computing to artificial intelligence (AI), these facilities support critical operations across industries. The growing interest in generative artificial intelligence (AI) has triggered a race to develop technology, driving demand for high-density data centres and significantly...

5 Signs Your ERP System is Holding You Back

Adam Palmer • 11th September 2025

Is your ERP helping you move forward — or slowing you down? For a modern business, an ERP system should be a powerful enabler. One that drives agility, delivers real-time insights, and helps drive strategic growth — not something teams feel the need to work around. Yet too often, legacy ERP systems quietly drag down...

Why Wind River is serious about moving from VMware

Paul Miller • 09th September 2025

For IT departments with limited manpower and budgets, improving the efficiency of operational management of distributed IT infrastructure is a pressing issue. Organizations burdened with licensing costs, such as the VMware issue, will want to start optimizing costs and IT resources immediately. We interviewed a vendor that is working on this trend using open technology....

TPIs are the Future of Energy Solutions

David Sheldrake SVP POWWR • 19th June 2025

The energy industry is undergoing a transformation, and Third-Party Intermediaries (TPIs), those brokers and consultants who help businesses procure energy, are at the centre of it. With growing complexity, increasing regulation, and evolving customer expectations, the role of TPIs is shifting from price-focused brokers to strategic energy advisors. While renewable energy adoption continues to reshape...

Quick Commerce and the Retail Media Revolution

Sue Azari • 11th June 2025

Quick commerce has transformed the way consumers shop, redefining convenience with near-instant delivery of groceries, meals, and household essentials. However, beyond its impact on logistics and e-commerce, quick commerce is now emerging as a major force in digital advertising. As consumer behaviours shift toward on-demand purchases, these platforms are leveraging their vast first-party data and...