Strategies for Building Distributed IaaS Infrastructures for Medium-Sized Enterprises

Alexander Andreyev

Citation: Alexander Andreyev, "Strategies for Building Distributed IaaS Infrastructures for Medium-Sized Enterprises", Universal Library of Engineering Technology, Volume 02, Issue 03.

Copyright: This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Abstract

This article examines a set of strategies for constructing distributed IaaS infrastructures—encompassing multi-cloud, hybrid, and edge-cloud models—for medium-sized enterprises. The purpose of the study is to analyze and comparatively evaluate key architectural approaches to deploying a distributed cloud platform, taking into account requirements for latency, cost, regulatory constraints, and the maturity of DevOps processes. Infrastructure spending by mid-sized enterprises on cloud services has ramped up rapidly. This is in response to the new workloads that require rapid scaling with tight RTT requirements of 30–40 ms for business-critical applications. Analytical reports by Gartner, IDC, Flexera, Datadog, and the FinOps Foundation have helped this paper share practical recommendations for striking a balance between CAPEX and OPEX, with a focus on fault tolerance and security at the core. An aspect from which novelty emanates in this work is its integrated approach, encompassing Multi-Cloud, Hybrid, and Edge-Cloud models. It has been uniquely applied toward unified engineering principles: shared-nothing architectures, automation via IaC (Terraform, Pulumi, CDK), a unified SD-WAN transport plane, a multi-tiered ring fault-tolerance model, Zero Trust security, and FinOps cost management. The hybrid container and serverless platform has also been validated in the article regarding its efficacy as an economically predictable and scalable solution while working alongside peak loads. Multi-cloud increases flexibility and ensures maximum high availability via active-active implementations among various providers. Hybrid proves best whenever stringent data protection and local storage mandates are in force, while the edge-cloud decreases latency by bringing computing resources much closer to the user. This article will target readership among IT directors, cloud architects, and project managers driving digital transformation initiatives and distributed cloud platform projects within mid-sized enterprises.


Keywords: IaaS, Distributed Infrastructure, Medium-Sized Enterprises, Multi-Cloud, Hybrid Model, Edge-Cloud.

Download doi https://doi.org/10.70315/uloap.ulete.2025.0203009