The cloud computing market in the country is set to see accelerated growth as businesses embrace the benefits and vendors provide ever more sophisticated capabilities
Sridhar Pinnapureddy of CtrlS feels the huge costs incurred on a security measure like disaster recovery eventually propelled CIOs to migrate to the cloud
Image: Harsha Vadlamani for Forbes India
“When we first tried to market our product by pitching it as a ‘cloud’ offering, we only got a lukewarm response. Nobody wanted to talk about it,” recalls Sridhar Pinnapureddy, 40, of a time in the late-2000s when he was trying to offer clients cloud-based disaster recovery services.
The process involved data backup and retrieval by maintaining copies of electronic data on the cloud as a security measure, and Pinnapureddy had sniffed a business opportunity for CtrlS Datacenters, the Hyderabad-based company he had founded in 2008. “In those days, for disaster recovery, clients used to invest in a full setup [servers, hard drives, routers and other expensive hardware] in a remote location, often 800-5,000 km away from their primary data centre. We figured that, on a cloud platform, they could share infrastructure and reduce costs significantly,” he says.
But, for the first six months, his plan found no takers. Finally, at an offsite, Pinnapureddy got together his entire sales team and instructed them to avoid using the word ‘cloud’ because, at the time, the term was associated with lack of data sovereignty, and most companies were not comfortable storing their critical data on public servers.
The strategy worked. “In one quarter, we ended up selling the service to 40 clients,” says Pinnapureddy with a smile. Today, CtrlS serves around 4,000 small-, medium- and large-sized businesses in India. The company has so far built four data centres in the country, in Hyderabad, Noida, Mumbai and Bengaluru, says Pinnapureddy, founder and chief executive of the firm. Its biggest clients include the State Bank of India, Axis Bank and Standard Chartered Bank. The company says it clocked revenues of around ₹100 crore from cloud services in FY2017.
The growth has been fuelled by a change in the mindset of clients. “Conversations have shifted from ‘what is the cloud?’ to ‘how do we get on to the cloud?’,” Akhilesh Tuteja, head of IT advisory practice for KPMG in India and the Europe, Middle East and Africa region, tells Forbes India in an interview.
Market analysts concur. IT research and advisory firm Gartner predicts that the ‘public’ cloud services market in India will hit $1.9 billion (around ₹12,000 crore) in 2017, growing at a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 37 percent from 2016 to 2021. On a public cloud, a data centre company makes resources, such as software and data storage facilities, available to clients and also manages it. For clients, it is a cost-saving measure, compared to the traditional approach of building data centres on their premises.
THE SWITCH
So, what prompted the Indian market to quickly shed its aversion and embrace cloud computing solutions? According to Pinnapureddy, while, initially, chief information officers (CIOs) wouldn’t even want to speak about the idea of “giving away” data to a cloud provider, the huge costs incurred on a security measure like disaster recovery made it easier for them to “let go” and outsource it to cloud service providers like CtrlS.
Once CIOs migrated their disaster recovery systems onto the cloud successfully, they realised that other workloads, such as enterprise resource planning (ERP) and customer relationship management (CRM), could also be transferred in a similar way.
“We would tell our clients, ‘You are buying the entire equipment for these workloads and bearing the capex for it.’ Instead, we offered to provide them dedicated private equipment. If they didn’t want to use it, we would take it back,” says Pinnapureddy, explaining his business model.
And so, the idea of the ‘private cloud’—a network of servers hosted over the internet that are privately owned and dedicated to a particular enterprise—gained currency among Indian CIOs. They could keep ownership of their data, yet get the benefits of cloud. By mid-2010, India Inc had warmed up to the system.
By 2015, “the flavour” of the cloud changed considerably, says Pinnapureddy. CIOs figured that the public cloud infrastructure, in which a private operator hosts a network of servers for a number of enterprises, was a lot more robust, reliable and secure than their in-house data centres. Moreover, it was hard to keep up with the constant upgrades in technology that private clouds demanded.
“ The move to migrate is no more a technology decision relegated to CIOs and CTOs. it is a business decision.
(This story appears in the 15 September, 2017 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)