IBM has announced that it is opening a new IBM Cloud Data Center in Johannesburg, South Africa. The new cloud center is the result of a close collaboration with Gijima and Vodacom and is designed to support cloud adoption and customer demand across the continent. IBM will provide clients with a complete portfolio of cloud services for running enterprise and as a service workloads.
The new facility underscores IBM's growing cloud footprint, which now includes 46 cloud data centers across six continents. Today's news also reinforces the joint partnership between SAP and IBM aimed at accelerating a customers' ability to run core business in the cloud.
"We're working to drive cloud adoption that best leverages a customer's existing IT investments," said Hamilton Ratshefola, IBM Country general manager in South Africa. "Our new Cloud Data Center gives customers a local onramp to IBM Cloud services including moving mission critical SAP workloads to the cloud with ease. It also gives customers the added flexibility of keeping data within country which is a key differentiator for IBM."
The IBM Cloud Data Center will provide enterprise customers in South Africa and Africa with access to IBM's global network of Cloud Data Centers and services expertise. This will enable businesses to run critical applications on the cloud, providing access to a broad array of services for building in-country cloud solutions, while offering faster network speeds to improve performance and reach end users even faster.
"The increase of enterprise cloud computing on the continent is being driven by large enterprise and multinational organisations expanding their presence and IT requirements across Africa," said Vuyani Jarana, chief officer of Vodacom Business. "CIO's are looking to gain efficiencies and cut cost by moving more of their IT infrastructure, applications and processes into the Cloud. Vodacom's extensive Fixed and Mobile network infrastructure, Pan African and global footprint and its investment in data center infrastructure provides the ideal platform and environment to deliver cloud services to large and multinational enterprises."
Today's news showcases IBM's global reach and broad portfolio of cloud services capable of supporting very large enterprises like big retailers and financial institutions. Vodacom is committed to delivering enterprise grade cloud solutions and this partnership with IBM delivers on that scale and will position Vodacom Business as a leader in total IT solutions across the continent.
"Gijima as a 100% black owned South African company, is proud to be the cloud partner of choice for these unique IBM services," said Eileen Wilton, CEO of Gijima. The partnership with IBM and Vodacom is an extension of Gijima's hybrid cloud strategy and is the culmination of two years of hard work as part of our turnaround strategy. Gijima is the ideal partner for this service as we already have the system and SAP integration skills as part of our existing solutions offering.
Bringing together Vodacom's network and Africa footprint, Gijima's SAP enterprise expertise and IBM's cloud platforms will create a powerhouse in cloud services, resolving data latency and in-country regulatory issues through the protection of data in-country and potentially also offset data networking costs. Gijima and Vodacom will both resell IBM's Cloud Managed Services to the SAP enterprise customer base in the region.
This article was originally posted “IBM Opens First Cloud Data Center In South Africa” from Cloud Strategy Magazine.