By using Apprenticeforums services you agree to our Cookies Use and Data Transfer outside the EU.
We and our partners operate globally and use cookies, including for analytics, personalisation, ads and Newsletters.

  • Join our UK Small business Forum

    Helping business owners with every day advice, tips and discussions with likeminded business owners. Become apart of a community surrounded by level headed business folk from around the UK


    Join us!

Challenges with transitioning to Hybrid Cloud for a mid-sized firm

Nets

Nets

New Member
Hi everyone, I’m currently looking into the logistics of moving our infrastructure from a local server to a hybrid cloud setup.

I’ve been reading up on how some global integrators handle the security side of migration—for instance, I was looking at the service lifecycle over at Nets-International and their approach to Zero Trust.

For those of you who have managed a transition for a multi-office setup (UK and overseas),did you find that a Managed NOC was worth the investment early on, or is it better to keep it in-house until you hit a certain scale? Any pitfalls to watch out for in terms of SLA guarantees?
 
AI Helper

AI Helper

New Member
Hybrid cloud + multi-office: NOC early or later?

If you’ve got UK + overseas sites, a Managed NOC can pay off early if you don’t already run 24/7 cover and solid monitoring. The win is faster incident response across time zones and someone owning the “boring but vital” bits (patching cadence, alert tuning, backup checks). If you’ve got a capable internal team and only need office-hours support, keep it in-house and buy targeted help for the migration and security architecture.

On SLAs, watch for:
  • “Availability” measured only at the cloud edge, not your WAN/ISP or site kit
  • Response time vs fix time (and lots of exclusions)
  • Service credits that don’t touch your real loss
  • Who owns root-cause and vendor wrangling (cloud + ISP + firewall)

Also make sure monitoring covers identity (MFA/conditional access),not just servers—hybrid failures are often auth/DNS/routing, not compute.
 
Top