Cloud-Enabled Managed Hosting Market Definition/Description
For a more detailed overview of cloud-enabled managed hosting, see “Technology Overview for Cloud-Enabled Managed Hosting.”
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Multitenant, on the provider’s premises: Compute, storage and networking hardware is shared by many customers, housed in the service provider’s facilities and fully managed by that provider. This is the most common use case. It encompasses cloud infrastructure as a service (IaaS) offerings for which the provider offers management of guest OS instances.
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Single-tenant, on the provider’s premises: Compute and storage hardware is dedicated to one customer and housed in the service provider’s facilities.
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Single-tenant, on the customer’s premises: Compute, storage and networking hardware is dedicated to one customer and housed in that customer’s data center facilities, but owned and managed by the service provider in a nearly identical fashion to the multitenant and single-tenant provider-housed approaches.
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Management of infrastructure software at the middleware or persistence layer, such as Web server software, application servers and database servers
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Management of storage, including backup and recovery
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Management of host-based and network-based security functions
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Management of network devices, such as application delivery controllers
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Professional services associated with hosting, such as architecture consultation, capacity planning, performance testing, security auditing and data center migration
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E-business hosting for digital marketing sites, e-commerce websites, SaaS, social websites, and similar modern online properties and applications. These workloads are often complex and are associated with a high rate of change in systems and application infrastructure.
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Web-based business application hosting for corporate intranets and Web-based applications delivered to users primarily within enterprises. The applications may be commercial software or developed in-house; workloads are often relatively static and do not have a high rate of change.
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Enterprise application hosting. Managed hosting for the infrastructure used to support large commercial software applications, such as those of Oracle, SAP and other enterprise software vendors. These workloads are often complex and require specialized knowledge to operate optimally, but do not have a high rate of change.
- First, Gartner will be launching a new “Magic Quadrant for Public Cloud Infrastructure Managed Service Providers, Global” in 2016. More details on this Magic Quadrant will be available soon on Lydia Leong’s blog.
- Second, in order to make room for the new Magic Quadrant for Public Cloud Infrastructure Managed Service Providers, and because buyer behavior in North America has moved the most towards this direction, we have retired our Magic Quadrant for Cloud-Enabled Managed Hosting in North America. In its place, we will be publishing a North American Market Guide for hosting for our end-user clients, roughly at the same time last year’s Magic Quadrant was published (July).
- Third, in Europe and Asia-Pacific there is still more of a focus on locally-hosted services than in North America, therefore our Magic Quadrants for Cloud-Enabled Managed Hosting will continue in those markets but will be changing their focus slightly, as represented by their new titles – Magic Quadrant for Managed Hybrid Cloud Hosting.
- Magic Quadrant for Cloud Infrastructure-as-a-Service (previous edition, )
- Magic Quadrant for Cloud Enabled Managed Hosting, North America (previous edition,
- Magic Quadrant for Cloud Enabled Managed Hosting, Europe (previous edition – client-only link, )
- Magic Quadrant for Cloud Enabled Managed Hosting, Asia-Pacific
2015
Magic Quadrant for Cloud-Enabled Managed Hosting, North America, 2015 |
https://www.gartner.com/doc/reprints?id=1-2K50B8G&ct=150729&st=sb
2014
Gartner Magic Quadrants tend to evolve over time as technologies and buyer expectations mature, and our views on the hosting market are no exception. Gartner has been publishing Magic Quadrants in the hosting market since 2004 1998, which later became a combined hosting and cloud IaaS Magic Quadrant in 2009 (link) and now the two exist as separate Magic Quadrants. The first thing that most readers will notice in this year’s MQ is the change in title –Cloud-Enabled Managed Hosting.
This is not simply a cloudwashing of our previous Magic Quadrant for Managed Hosting, the term Cloud-Enabled encapsulates how we view the market as evolving at this point in time. In a nutshell, Gartner expects that Cloud-Enabled Managed Hosting will evolve managed services over the next several years … much like Infrastructure-as-a-Service has done to infrastructure provisioning and management over the past several years.
Why has the name of the Magic Quadrant for Managed Hosting changed to “Cloud-Enabled Managed Hosting”?
These new Magic Quadrants cover the market that is created by the intersection of managed services and a cloud-enabled infrastructure platform (which might or might not be cloud IaaS). These magic quadrants will begin to place more focus more on the service layer on top of the infrastructure, rather than the infrastructure itself.
Magic Quadrant for Cloud-Enabled Managed Hosting, North America, 2014 |
http://blogs.gartner.com/douglas-toombs/the-2014-magic-quadrant-for-cloud-enabled-managed-hosting-in-north-america/
http://pages.peak10.com/%20Gartner-Magic-Quadrant-Landing-Page.html
http://www.peak10.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/2014-magic-quadrant-for-cloud-enabled-managed-hosting-north-america.pdf