By: Santosh Baran
Today, businesses benefit from the proliferation of powerful software including broad-based operational tools and targeted single-purpose solutions. However, this can also cause a common problem as companies grow: IT sprawl.
Without strict controls and centralized organization of the tech stack, businesses tend to end up with too many solutions, including more apps than they can employ productively. Integration is often lacking, and data tends to move without a roadmap and be at least partially siloed. This disjointed arrangement can hinder critical reporting, operational efficiency or the bottom line and, in the worst cases, hamstring progress and profits.
Addressing a sprawling tech stack typically requires transitioning key processes to up-to-date, cloud-based, industry-standard solutions that are integrated into a single system. A proven way to achieve this is to use an industry cloud. This centralized IT ecosystem helps organizations quickly adopt a stable technology platform and build a consistent operating model at scale.
What is an industry cloud?
An industry cloud, also known as a vertical cloud or sector-specific cloud, is a set of cloud computing solutions customized for a particular industry. Industry cloud solutions provide tools, applications and services tailored to the workflows and challenges of a specific sector.
One can customize a cloud for any industry. But crucially, an industry cloud is not an all-in solution. It is modular and composable so that companies can tailor usage and right-size costs. On a technical level, industry clouds tend to be comprised of four layers:
- Layer 1: Infrastructure – The foundational layer of the industry cloud includes sector- and vendor-agnostic infrastructure-as-a-service technology components to manage availability and resilience of compute, storage and network resources, industry compliance, and data security. Edge and high-performance computing are built into this layer.
- Layer 2: Platform – The second layer provides resources to build and manage industry-specific applications, including the business platform for workloads and associated services like Kubernetes clusters, database services, managed instance groups and serverless models. It also includes value-adds like customer data platforms, data-sharing standards, AI-ML platforms, data and analytics management, low-code developer environments, and support for open standards and API management.
- Layer 3: Differentiated applications – The third layer in the industry cloud supports two main types of applications: core apps and industry-specific apps. Core apps may be customer resource management, enterprise resource management or financial accounting tools with industry-tailored KPIs and workflows. Industry-specific apps support sector value chain areas and fulfill operational requirements particular to the given sector.
- Layer 4: Customization – This layer comprises customized functionalities for industry-specific enterprise needs. Unlike the previous three layers, the customization layer is tailored to the needs of an individual business. Examples of options in this layer are customized dashboards and workflows.