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Azure for Decision Makers

You're reading from   Azure for Decision Makers The essential guide to Azure for business leaders

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837639915
Length 146 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Authors (3):
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Jason Milgram Jason Milgram
Author Profile Icon Jason Milgram
Jason Milgram
David Rendón David Rendón
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David Rendón
Jack Lee Jack Lee
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Jack Lee
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Introduction 2. Chapter 2: Modernizing with Hybrid, Multicloud, and Edge Computing FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Migration and Modernization 4. Chapter 4: Maximizing Azure Security Benefits for Your Organization 5. Chapter 5: Automation and Governance in Azure 6. Chapter 6: Maximizing Efficiency and Cost Savings in Azure 7. Next Steps
8. Index 9. Other Books You May Enjoy

Thinking about cloud management, migration, security, and governance

As a business decision-maker or technical professional, it is essential to understand the importance of cloud management, migration, security, and governance when developing, evaluating, or adopting a cloud strategy. These aspects are critical in ensuring an organization's cloud environment is efficient, secure, and compliant with relevant regulations and policies. Let's briefly look at these areas.

Cost management

Effective cost management is a cornerstone of any successful cloud strategy. As a business decision-maker, understanding and controlling your cloud expenses is a crucial challenge. Microsoft Azure provides robust solutions for this very purpose. With its extensive suite of cost management tools, Azure can help your organization to better comprehend, optimize, and manage its cloud spending.

Azure's cost management tools allow increased visibility and control over your cloud spending, enabling you to make informed decisions about resource allocation and investment. This allows your organization to use the cloud more effectively, maximizing the benefits of your investment.

Azure also provides tools for setting budgets and monitoring spending. For example, you can create custom budgets for your cloud projects and receive alerts when spending approaches your predetermined thresholds.

Moreover, Azure's suite includes features to optimize resource utilization and take advantage of Reserved Instances and Savings Plans. These elements of Azure can help identify underutilized resources and lock in lower prices for services, respectively.

Ultimately, Azure's comprehensive cost management tools and resources help your organization optimize expenses, maintain control over costs, and reap the most value from your cloud investment.

In subsequent chapters of this book, we will expand upon each aspect of Azure's cost management capabilities, offering more profound insights into how these tools can be used to maximize your organization's operational efficiency and financial health in the cloud. By understanding these elements, you can implement an Azure strategy that aligns with your business needs and drives sustainable growth.

Migration and deployment

As more organizations transition toward cloud-based solutions, understanding the process of cloud migration and deployment becomes increasingly critical. With its robust and user-friendly features, Microsoft Azure provides an ideal platform for such a transition.

In the journey toward the cloud, Azure helps businesses effectively assess their readiness for migration. It offers tools to analyze your organization's infrastructure and systems, determining the most efficient and seamless path to the cloud.

Choosing the right cloud platform is another crucial decision in your cloud journey. Azure's flexible and scalable solutions cater to a wide variety of business needs, whether you require IaaS, PaaS, or SaaS solutions.

Executing a seamless deployment is another aspect where Azure shines. It provides an intuitive and robust set of tools for deploying and managing applications, databases, and services in the cloud, reducing time, cost, and complexity.

Successful migration to Azure can have significant benefits for your organization. It can boost operational efficiency, lay the groundwork for future growth, and enable your business to make use of new technologies and innovations. Furthermore, Azure's ongoing management and monitoring tools ensure that your cloud environment remains optimal and evolves with your business needs.

This introduction only scratches the surface of what Azure migration and deployment entail. In the following chapters of this book, we'll delve deeper into each stage of the migration and deployment process, providing comprehensive strategies and detailed guidance to ensure your transition to Azure is as smooth and beneficial as possible. Understanding these processes will be essential to implementing an effective Azure strategy and achieving your organization's objectives in the cloud.

Configuration management

Configuration management is an essential part of any cloud strategy, and Azure offers a host of tools to streamline this crucial process. It ensures the consistency of your cloud resources, maintains the system performance, and upholds the security of your cloud environment.

Azure's configuration management tools help monitor and automate your Azure resources' setup, configuration, and management. They enable your business to ensure consistency and compliance across your entire Azure environment, reducing the risk of errors and system outages due to misconfiguration.

Azure Automation State Configuration, for example, allows you to manage your Azure and non-Azure environments from a central location, defining and enforcing configurations across your cloud and on-premises systems.

The Azure Policy service, on the other hand, helps you create, assign, and manage policies to enforce rules and effects over your resources, ensuring compliance with corporate standards and SLAs.

Proper configuration management can improve system reliability, accelerate deployment processes, reduce downtime, and improve security, hence leading to considerable savings in time, costs, and resources.

The key to effective configuration management lies in understanding your organization's specific needs and aligning Azure's capabilities to those needs. However, the details and intricacies of configuration management in Azure are vast, which we will explore more thoroughly in subsequent chapters of this book. By comprehending these processes, you, as a business decision-maker, will be better equipped to use Azure's configuration management capabilities to maintain an efficient, reliable, and secure cloud environment.

Unified governance, risk management, and compliance

Unified governance, risk management, and compliance are indispensable aspects of Azure's strategy and implementation. Unified governance, risk management, and compliance in Azure provide a framework for aligning IT operations with business objectives, managing risk effectively, and meeting compliance requirements.

Azure offers robust tools and services that support unified governance, risk management, and compliance, aiding organizations in maintaining a secure and compliant state while managing risks efficiently. For example, Azure Policy helps enforce organizational standards and assess compliance at scale. Similarly, Azure Blueprints allows the quick creation of governed subscriptions to balance agility and control.

On the other hand, Microsoft Defender for Cloud and Azure Advisor provide proactive insights to manage risks effectively. They help protect your Azure resources, offer threat protection, and provide clear, actionable recommendations to optimize your Azure deployments.

For managing compliance, Update management center provides access to a portfolio of compliance offerings, making it easier for businesses to meet the complex regulatory requirements of their industry. In addition, it keeps you informed about how Microsoft protects your data and maintains compliance with global standards.

Unified governance, risk management, and compliance are paramount for any organization to establish effective controls, avoid fines for non-compliance, protect the organization from risk, and keep the business operations running smoothly. A comprehensive understanding of these components provides a strong foundation for successful Azure strategy and implementation.

However, the scope and intricacies of unified governance, risk management, and compliance in Azure are vast, which we will explore in the upcoming chapters. By comprehending these, you, as a business decision-maker, can confidently harness Azure's capabilities to ensure your cloud environment's security, compliance, and efficient risk management.

Observability and resiliency

In an increasingly complex and interconnected digital landscape, the concepts of observability and resiliency have become cornerstones of a successful Azure strategy and implementation.

Observability, in the context of Azure, encompasses the practices and tools that provide insight into your applications, infrastructure, and network, allowing you to understand the state of your systems, diagnose problems, and optimize performance. In addition, Azure provides a suite of services such as Azure Monitor, Azure Log Analytics, and Azure Application Insights that can gather, analyze, and visualize telemetry data from various sources, providing actionable insights about your application and infrastructure.

On the other hand, resiliency is about designing and operating your systems to withstand disruptions and recover quickly from any issues. Azure Site Recovery and Azure Backup provide vital capabilities to ensure business continuity and disaster recovery. Furthermore, Azure's globally distributed datacenters and services, such as Azure Traffic Manager, facilitate high availability and load balancing across regions.

Maintaining a balance between observability and resiliency is critical to managing complex cloud environments. These aspects enable you to maintain high performance and uptime, mitigate risks, and quickly respond to changes or disruptions.

However, it is essential to acknowledge the breadth and depth of these concepts. Hence, we will delve into these topics more deeply in subsequent chapters, equipping you as a business decision-maker with a thorough understanding of Azure's observability and resiliency capabilities and enabling you to design and implement robust, resilient, and observable solutions in Azure.

Security and control

Security and control remain paramount as business decision-makers strategize and implement Azure-based solutions. As a result, Azure, Microsoft's flagship cloud offering, is built with a robust security model to ensure data protection, privacy, and compliance.

Azure offers a multitude of features and services that form a multi-layered security architecture. Azure Active Directory for identity and access management, Microsoft Defender for Cloud for unified security management, and Azure Key Vault for securely storing application secrets are just a few examples of the security services available. These capabilities help safeguard your organization's assets, manage identities, detect threats, and respond effectively to incidents.

However, security is not just about protection but also about control. Azure provides granular control over your resources with features such as role-based access control (RBAC), policy enforcement, and resource locks. These mechanisms allow you to decide who has access to your resources, what actions they can perform, and under what conditions.

A firm grip on security and control is a prerequisite for achieving an effective Azure strategy and implementation. However, comprehending the breadth and depth of these domains in Azure requires a deeper dive. Subsequent chapters in this book will delve further into these topics, providing a comprehensive understanding of Azure's security and control features and enabling you to build, deploy, and manage secure and well-governed applications and infrastructures on Azure.

Bringing it all together

All the concepts covered in this section, such as cost management, migration, deployment, configuration management, governance, risk management, compliance, observability, resiliency, and security, often overlap because they all contribute to the successful operation, management, and maintenance of cloud resources and applications. Ensuring that these concepts work cohesively to provide a seamless experience for the user, regardless of the deployment model from cloud to edge, is referred to as unified operations. We will be discussing unified operations in more detail in the next chapter.

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