Hybrid cloud has helped Fitness First    drive development efficiency.  
    There's never been a better time to start a business: whereas    in the past you'd have needed to build your own data centre and    fill it with IT infrastructure, now major cloud service    providers like Amazon, Microsoft and Google can provide you    with all the services you need to run an online business. To    take just one example,     Airbnb runs many of its services on AWS.  
    But what about more established enterprises? It's not viable    for them to suddenly pack up all their data centres and move    everything into the public cloud. But there is a happy medium:    hybrid cloud. This approach enables organisations to take    advantage of cloud services while also harnessing the power of    on-premises platforms in a way that provides enough flexibility    to deal with any sudden demands.  
    One organisation that has opted for this hybrid approach in an    effort to modernise and improve their IT strategy is Fitness    First, the gym and health club operator. Founded in the UK    in 1993, Fitness First has grown to become one of the largest    fitness brands in the world, with over one million members    across 370 clubs in 16 countries.  
    But in the 24 years since Fitness First began operating,    technology has changed dramatically, and so have the needs of    the business. That's why the company decided to examine its    infrastructure and how it was used -- especially as the cost of    physical servers escalated as the firm expanded.  
    "The issue the organisation faced is that it has historically    gone down a physical server, physical data centre setup -- a    lot of investment over the years into tin. What it ended up    with was a lot of hardware which was now getting out of date,"    explains Jon Forster, Consulting Senior IT Advisor at Moray    Limited, the holding company that owns the Fitness First Group.  
    The company was beginning to struggle with the flexibility    required in order to make make changes while also managing    costs. "We wanted to change to IT being more of an enabler    rather than a reason for things to be slow. We'd really hit a    roadblock," says Forster.  
    It's for that reason that Fitness First looked towards hybrid    cloud, to provide "that flexibility to increase or decrease the    computing power you need at that moment in time," he says.  
    For example, tasks such as application development or work    around the website and coding only need to be powered at very    specific times; the rest of the time the servers dedicated to    these tasks are doing nothing. "They have no value until you    want them back," says Forster.  
    So Fitness First began looking for a hybrid cloud provider that    did all this and also tied into its Microsoft Azure-based    infrastructure. One of the key demands of the new service,    explains Forster, was the ability to be "flexible within your    own environment without additional tin." Discussions with    colleagues in the industry led Forster to enterprise cloud    provider     Nutanix.  
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    "They deliver what we want; it's tied into Microsoft and I can    have no real gap between where we host things and there's no    need for multiple technologies," Forster says.  
    So Fitness First opted to work with Nutanix and set up a hybrid    cloud server in a matter of weeks. Forster was impressed enough    to expand the relationship after just a few months.  
    "They worked with some of our guys and set it up very quickly.    In fact within about 10 weeks of buying the first three blocks,    it was going to well I bought another one in order to put    everything on Nutanix," he says.  
    By shifting towards a partially cloud-based model, Fitness    First has "completely changed" the way it does back end    development, says Forster. "It suddenly becomes really quick.    It changes so many ways -- having to look up backups has just    gone away as you push it all up into Azure and it just tells    you where and how it worked".  
    The ultimate benefit to Fitness First is that it's now able to    spin services up or down in reaction to increases in demand --    be that during a day-to-day basis or at the times of year when    there's a surge in new members.  
    "The business runs in peaks and troughs. But now it's got    enough compute power which you can wind back whenever you want,    so when we have those peaks, it's absolutely fine, it doesn't    slow down," says Forster.  
    The new setup also enables Fitness First to build new features    of alter existing ones much more quickly than was previously    possible, he explains.  
    "It's now quick so it's not a case of asking for something and    getting it 12 months later; it's much quicker. You can give    anyone the ability to get on and do it straight away and not be    held back. That's helped everybody".  
    Naturally, switching to a cloud-based model has also saved    Fitness First costs in terms of running and operating physical    data centres.  
    "It's much cheaper than we had before. Before we had about 18    racks of kit and now we have two half-racks -- that's it. In    terms of cost of space, of power, that's totally collapsed,"    Forster says, adding that those funds can be used to improve    customer service and feed into the bottom line.  
    So what's the main thing organisations looking to invest in    hybrid cloud infrastructure should be doing? It's important not    to be nostalgic about your old physical data centres, and to    look to move forward, according to Forster.  
    "Take a step away from what you have and don't base everything    on that -- base it on the need for the future. Don't just keep    slowly changing what you have, or it'll end up costing you a    lot more money," says Forster.  
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How hybrid cloud is strengthening Fitness First - ZDNet
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