Enterprise Dropbox Envy: Nasuni Rolls Out Mobile Cloud Storage Option

IT's problem isn't so much BYOD, as it is bring your own storage. That's why Nasuni and others are rolling out mobile cloud storage options to compete with Dropbox.

September 20, 2012

5 Min Read
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Just as jelly is to peanut butter, consumerized cloud storage options like Dropbox are to mobility. The bring-your-own-device (BYOD) trend has changed all the rules for IT--and very few of those changes really have to do with the devices at all. The biggest paradigm shifts are all about how the user accesses and shares information. The lesson is that if IT doesn't start offering its own flavor of enterprise storage that plays well with users' devices, it will find its user base hiding in the corner, left to eat sandwiches of their own making.

"People want to bring their own devices, and they've been accustomed to these consumer-grade storage applications like Dropbox that have set expectations for how easy it should be for them to get their data," says Andres Rodriguez, CEO of Nasuni. "What's really driving IT crazy is the fact that if IT doesn't give those services to their employees, their employees will find a way around it."

Doubt it? According to a survey conducted earlier this summer by Ponemon Institute, a majority of IT workers reported that this level of storage circumvention is already happening. According to 60% of respondents, their user bases frequently or very frequently use Dropbox to share sensitive information without permission from their employers.

Dropbox is but one of the public cloud-based storage options that enterprise users are bringing to work, of course. But the underlying risk brought to the table by mobile users' thirst for anytime access through consumer-grade storage is persistent, regardless of the provider.

"It has zero corporate controls, zero protection and zero security," Steve Duplessie, founder of IT analyst firm Enterprise Strategy Group, says about these storage services.

As customers complain of the pain point, vendors from many different quarters have already started whipping up their own version of what they're all calling "Dropbox for the Enterprise." The phrase has grown so much in favor that even back in March, The 451 Group highlighted the already ad nauseum use of it as vendors struggled to describe their spin on "enterprise-grade Dropbox."

For its part, The 451 Group analysts eventually settled on "Mobile File Sharing and Sync Platforms," stating that the fundamental characteristic of these pervasive storage services for the enterprise are the interface with mobile devices.

"The mobility part of this, as opposed to cloud, is what is really new and disruptive," wrote Kathleen Reidy for The 451 Group, explaining that vendor pedigrees are all over the map. "We see vendors from virtualization, security, storage, content management and mobility sectors all vying for attention."

The list of vendors just keeps growing. Last month, VMware finally took its much-discussed Project Octopus out of beta and christened it with the official name VMware Horizon Suite, which allows IT to customize a service catalog for all of its data and applications and deliver information across devices controlled by policies on user attributes and environment.

And this week another new contender threw its hat in the ring, when enterprise storage vendor Nasuni went live with mobile access to its enterprise storage platform designed for distributed organizations. Nasuni's consolidated storage brings together primary storage with built-in backup, replication, and off-site protection using an on-site appliance connected to the cloud.

Next: Designing a Mobile Cloud Storage OptionThe user interface of sharing and accessing data across the mobile enterprise was designed by Nasuni to mimic the Dropbox experience.

"We took a lot of the design cues and design strategy from what the customers have basically been trained to use," says Connor Fee, director of marketing at Nasuni. "The reality is a lot of the stage has been set here."

But unlike a lot of the cloud-based file sharing solutions out there--enterprise-focused or not--the under-the-hood aspects of Nasuni more closely look like enterprise storage than cloud storage. The platform is directly integrated into the customers' storage infrastructure, rather than being layered on top in some fashion or another.

"All we're doing is taking that same access control and we're passing it through to the mobile device. No change, no adds to the infrastructure, no new permission systems to manage," says Fee. "IT remains the steward of the access control system, as opposed to trying to manage the hodgepodge of user-based controls."

This kind of native access is what makes Nasuni unique in the market, says Duplessie, explaining that the ability for enterprises to build access control for mobile devices on the backs of their existing Active Directory infrastructures is the product's key differentiator.

"It's the same log-on permissions from active directory that you've always had," he says. "No net new changes."

For its part, Nasuni expects the rest of the enterprise storage market to quickly follow its lead in the market.

"I would be shocked if you don't see more and more folks offering HTTPS- and mobile-based access because it is just another protocol to access the data," Fee says.

Duplessie agrees, explaining that storage vendors like EMC are likely looking to extend their core platforms in this way.

"They either have to build it themselves, or they're going to end up partnering or buying out [companies like Nasuni]," he says.

However, this fully native approach does have one glaring drawback: While it does help centralize control of storage accessed by corporate users included within Active Directory, there's still the matter of collaboration with partners outside the organization. In these cases of sharing outside the firewall, organizations still need to augment with some additional means to collaborate, Duplessie says.

"This is not a panacea. This is not, 'If you have this, you don't need Dropbox,'" he says. "Those problems of sharing outside of the firewall exist no matter what. It's just that you don't want Dropbox to store everything that matters to your company. You just want stuff in Dropbox that you absolutely need to have there."

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