Q&A
Why adopt a multicloud model?
Most organizations embrace multicloud models as part of their cloud strategy. They want to distribute applications and services between multiple cloud services to meet business needs and objectives. They also look to benefit from best-of-breed innovations, cost savings, and risk reduction.
What is a hybrid cloud?
A hybrid cloud is any combination of two or more clouds (on-premises private, hosted private, or public) that can be centrally managed to enable interoperability use cases, such as workload and data portability, and load balancing.
How do multicloud and hybrid cloud differ?
As previously explained, hybrid cloud technically refers to any two or more clouds that are centrally managed, such as on-premises private, hosted private, or public. The term is typically used to reflect specific architectures across on-premises and public cloud environments.
While the term multicloud can be used to describe an application architecture that includes an on-premises environment, it refers primarily to the consumption of cloud services from multiple public clouds.
Therefore, multicloud is not exclusive and should not be confused with a hybrid cloud deployment model. The term hybrid multicloud has emerged to cover both.