Even when cloud isn’t the lowest-cost option on paper, CIOs stay because of the business value it delivers.
1. Speed and agility
Peter Loo believes that if Los Angeles County moved everything back on-prem, they “would not be able to afford to do the kinds of things” they do with cloud today. The cloud lets them:
- Access compute and storage much faster than buying, installing, and provisioning hardware.
- Experiment and iterate more quickly on new services and digital initiatives.
In other words, cloud is a speed premium—you pay more in some areas, but you get to outcomes faster.
2. Hybrid strategies to balance cost and control
Laserfiche illustrates a different angle. The company runs a hybrid environment:
- A colocation facility for much of its compute.
- A separate disaster recovery (DR) site.
- Significant use of SaaS and a hyperscaler environment for its Laserfiche cloud offering.
For them, it’s actually cheaper to run some compute in a colo than to be fully cloud-native. The decision isn’t binary; it’s about matching workloads to the right environment based on cost, risk, and business needs.
3. Rising on-prem costs
On-premises isn’t standing still either. Loo notes that only about 25–30% of their footprint is still on-prem, and the costs there have been climbing:
- Licensing for on-prem solutions has increased significantly.
- VMware costs in particular have “increased tremendously” and surprised many organizations.
In some cases, these on-prem costs have outpaced cloud services, especially as cloud offerings have become more commoditized.
The net result is that CIOs are reimagining their infrastructure mix. They’re not choosing cloud just because it’s cheaper; they’re choosing it because it helps them move faster, scale more flexibly, and focus on the right mix of cost, risk, and capability across cloud, colo, and on-prem.