With multiple providers vying for government business in cloud, it’s essential to identify which platform can support your strategy and individual workloads...
This content was provided by Microsoft Federal.
With more and more government organizations moving to the cloud, we’re only starting to realize its full potential. At its core, the cloud is both an operating environment to manage workloads—which can relieve agencies from spending too many resources on infrastructure nuts and bolts—and a platform for leveraging the latest technology innovations as they come online, such as AI and quantum computing.
Whether you’re working with a classified or an unclassified cloud environment, implementations should be considered in terms of speed of mission and capability enhancement. But with multiple providers vying for government business, it’s essential to identify which platform can support your strategy and individual workloads—especially the ability to support game-changing emerging technologies.
While the cloud has become essential to many mission operations, it’s more than a productivity enhancer; the right cloud can provide a crucial information advantage for the long term.
It is important to think about long term mission needs when migrating to the cloud to leverage existing capabilities and future innovations. As new capabilities come available down the road, you’ll be best positioned to take immediate advantage of them if you’re using the cloud that hosts those capabilities. Look for a platform provider whose long-term roadmap aligns with your mission goals.
To maintain security and integrity, cloud platforms need to conform and comply with security controls up to IL6 and in top secret regions, depending on the level of classification. This is easily confirmed, but it’s only one consideration.
Your cloud platform should also allow easy implementation and management of role-based access, just like your on-premise systems, as part of your Zero Trust framework. Plus, look for consistent security controls across your cloud environment—including your hybrid and multi-cloud infrastructures. Fewer alerts, more transparency, and faster responses enable security personnel to focus on genuine, imminent threats.
There’s one more key consideration when evaluating your cloud implementation: the right platform can also prepare your agency for the breakthrough capabilities on the horizon.
Generative AI and quantum computing are both coming into the mainstream, promising to power new mission capabilities that would have been near-impossible before.
While quantum is still an emerging technology, it’s crucial to be ready for it with a cloud platform designed to easily handle the demands of hyper-speed computing and complex computational handling.
Some practical ideas can help smooth the transition to the cloud:
While certain functions may need to stay on premise for now, especially where cloud apps still need to be developed and tested, cloud can amplify a broad swath of mission capabilities. With the right cloud infrastructure, delivering insights from the command center to the edge becomes faster, more scalable, and highly cost-effective.
Taking the time to understand what each cloud provider offers today, plus their roadmap for incorporating essential emerging technologies, will provide an information advantage—and mission enhancement—for years to come.
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