Cloud hosting has several benefits over hosting your company's servers in your own in-house server rooms. It's more secure, more reliable, easily scalable, and the performance is much higher.
But beyond just hosting your company servers in the cloud, you should consider the region where your cloud hosting provider is located. Regional cloud hosting is the idea that you look for different cloud hosting providers in different parts of the country or the world.
There are benefits to hosting your company's data servers in a completely different part of the world, including local data privacy compliance, increased performance, and latency reduction. We'll look at some of the reasons why you need a cloud hosting provider in another region.
What is Cloud Hosting?
Before we talk about regional cloud hosting, let's define what cloud hosting is in the first place. Cloud hosting is where you deploy a single server, or several servers, as part of a larger network of physical and virtual servers, in a place other than your headquarters or satellite location.
These servers are stored in another physical location far away from you. Your servers, along with thousands of other servers, are stored in a large climate-controlled building with very limited physical access. By working with a dedicated cloud provider, you can improve your overall performance over in-house servers for a number of reasons.
Cloud hosting offers several benefits over traditional in-house hosting:
It costs less than in-house servers. You can lease a cloud server for a lot less than it costs to buy a state-of-the-art server. In some places, you can expect to pay .11 NIS ($.03 USD ) per gigabyte when purchasing something that's multiple terabytes in size. Yes, you'll pay an ongoing monthly cost, but cloud servers will be upgraded and updated for you at no extra cost. If you own the server, you should upgrade every three to five years, and that will always cost more than monthly lease over the same amount of time.
It doesn't require increased staff. The bigger your server needs, the bigger your IT department needs to be. That means hiring more staff, paying more salaries, and dealing with staff shortages. But a cloud provider hires the staff, which means you don't need to hire anyone to manage that portion of your business.
It has lower energy costs. It costs a lot of money to operate a rack of servers, and you also have increased energy costs just to keep the room cool, and everything has to run 24/7. Your energy costs can be a major part of your business' operation, and your server room can be a big part of your energy costs.
It saves time. If you need additional space and computing power, you can order it in minutes. If you need to buy new servers, you have to wait for delivery, installation, and testing before you're up and running, which can take several days.
It's scalable. You'll eventually run out of physical space in your server room, and you'll need to either expand or move. With cloud computing, you can order as much computing and processing power as you need. Plus, you'll pay for it only as long as you need it. If you buy a server, you're stuck with that server all year long, even if it goes unused for most of the year.
It's more secure. Good server cybersecurity solutions are AI-based, and they learn and improve based on the number of attacks it receives. Major cloud providers have some of the best cybersecurity systems on the planet. A small server in your company's server room will not, because it doesn't have the same AI-based security software.
What is a Cloud Region?
A cloud region is the physical location where your cloud servers live. There are cloud regions scattered throughout Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East, and North America.
Companies often benefit from hosting their cloud servers in another region as a way to protect them from any number of local/area failures. Some companies will even go so far as to have their cloud servers and backups hosted in a number of different regions.







