A decade ago, the cloud was just a strategic option. Organizations could choose to migrate workloads to AWS or keep everything on-premise. The decision was binary and deliberate.
Today, that choice no longer exists. Most enterprises operate across a sprawl of cloud platforms, remote offices, distributed workforces, and connected devices, and the infrastructure holding all of this together is what separates successful organizations from those that experience constant bottlenecks and performance issues. That infrastructure is cloud connectivity.
The global cloud computing market reached $912 billion in 2025 and is forecast to grow to $1.6 trillion by 2030,1 and businesses supporting that growth depend on connectivity infrastructure that can evolve as rapidly as their cloud strategies do. Read on to learn what cloud connectivity is, why it matters for cloud performance, and how to find a solution that aligns with your organization's growth trajectory.
Cloud connectivity refers to the methods, technologies, and services that enable devices, networks, users, and systems to access and communicate with cloud-based resources. At its core, it is the connection between your business environment – whether an office, a data center, a remote workforce, or a fleet of connected devices – and the cloud platforms where your applications and data live.
Cloud connectivity isn’t a single technology. It includes everything from dedicated private connections, broadband access, and software-defined networking to the managed services that configure and maintain all of the above.
Network connectivity is the broader category within which cloud connectivity sits. Every cloud interaction – a VoIP call, a video conference, a CRM lookup – depends on a well-architected connectivity network to move data quickly and without interruption.
A high-performance connectivity network today should include:
The quality of your network connectivity directly determines the quality of your cloud experience. Need better infrastructure to support your cloud tools? Explore the CCA's Cloud Communication Providers Directory, which connects you with vetted vendors offering the full gamut of connectivity solutions.
The method a business uses to establish its cloud connection has direct implications for performance, security, cost, and reliability. Three primary approaches serve different business needs.
Routing cloud traffic over the public internet is the most common approach, with 69% of businesses embracing public cloud services in 2025.3 It’s fast to deploy and cost-effective, but performance can be variable, and security depends on encryption controls. This method is usually enough for daily workloads and smaller businesses, but can introduce risk for latency-sensitive applications or regulated data.
Dedicated private connections, such as AWS Direct Connect or Azure ExpressRoute, route traffic over a private circuit. The result is low latency, predictable throughput, and a stronger security posture, making this approach standard for enterprises running mission-critical workloads in the cloud.
SD-WAN creates intelligent virtual connections that route traffic across multiple underlying links – broadband, MPLS, LTE – based on real-time conditions and policy rules. It gives organizations a more cost-effective path to reliable cloud connectivity by optimizing available resources rather than requiring new physical infrastructure.
Most enterprises today operate across AWS, Azure, Google Cloud, and multiple SaaS platforms simultaneously – often because they adopted applications independently over time. Multi-cloud connectivity refers to the architecture and services that enable secure, seamless communication between workloads running across multiple providers.
Make sure your multicloud connectivity strategy accounts for:
Multicloud connectivity can become fragmented without a deliberate strategy, where each cloud silo has its own access path and performance characteristics. Not only does this fragmentation increase complexity, it also reduces the agility that cloud adoption is meant to provide.
There are two main approaches for establishing cloud connectivity infrastructure: managed services – where a provider handles it all – or self-managed infrastructure that a business builds and operates internally.
Here’s how these options compare:
Managed connectivity services transfer the deployment, monitoring, and maintenance of connectivity infrastructure to a specialized provider. The provider handles everything about the environment, including circuit procurement, SD-WAN configuration, performance monitoring, and incident response – so your internal teams get enterprise-grade connectivity without requiring deep network engineering expertise in-house.
Managed services also provide access to current market knowledge about connectivity technologies, pricing, and vendor capabilities, which organizations building internal teams can struggle to maintain as the market evolves.
Organizations with large IT teams and specific customization requirements sometimes prefer to build and manage connectivity infrastructure directly. While this offers maximum control over design decisions and allows for more customization to meet organizational requirements, it also requires an ongoing investment in engineering talent and operational processes.
As cloud environments grow more complex, many businesses are finding the cost of maintaining specialized connectivity expertise difficult to justify against the cost of managed alternatives.
Hybrid cloud connectivity combines on-premise infrastructure with the cloud, enabling workloads, data, and apps to move between the two. Nearly all (90%) of organizations are expected to adopt a hybrid cloud approach through 2027,2 driven by the need to balance scalability, security, and regulatory compliance requirements.
Hybrid cloud connectivity makes it so that both environments work as one. Important factors to consider include latency between on-prem systems and cloud workloads, identity and access management that spans both environments, and failover architecture that keeps your systems going if either environment experiences disruption.
The Internet of Things has added an entirely new dimension to cloud connectivity requirements. Connectivity in IoT refers to the networks and protocols that enable physical devices – sensors, cameras, industrial equipment, smart building systems – to communicate with cloud platforms for data processing and control.
What is IoT connectivity in practice? It’s the combination of wireless protocols like 5G, LTE, Wi-Fi, and LoRaWAN, alongside network management infrastructure that keeps IoT device fleets online, secure, and generating usable data.
The biggest challenges in ensuring reliable IoT connectivity include:
If you’re seeking vetted providers for cloud connectivity solutions to support your IoT devices, check out the CCA's Cloud Communications Providers Directory. Our vendors are all fully vetted and have proven implementation experience across industries and deployment scenarios.
The cloud connectivity market spans network service providers, SD-WAN vendors, colocation facilities, cloud exchange platforms, and managed service providers. Regardless of the type of connectivity solution you’re looking for, make sure to evaluate these factors when comparing vendors:
Understand the latency, throughput, and availability thresholds your critical applications actually need – then evaluate solutions against those thresholds.
Determine whether your data classification or regulatory framework requires private connectivity and ensure that any solution meets those standards by default.
Cloud environments scale quickly, and your connectivity infrastructure needs to keep pace without requiring disruptive re-architecture.
Evaluate how well the solution will be able to integrate with your network equipment and security tooling to avoid fragmented operations.
The provider's support, responsiveness, and uptime commitments matter as much as the technical specification.
Cloud connectivity is the enabler of every cloud-based application, communication platform, and digital service your business delivers. As workloads become more distributed, device fleets grow larger, and multi-cloud architectures become the norm, the organizations that invest in robust, well-managed connectivity infrastructure will consistently outperform those that treat it as an afterthought.
Looking for infrastructure partners to support your cloud communications and connectivity needs? The CCA's Cloud Communications Providers Directory features providers with proven expertise in cloud connectivity, SD-WAN, managed services, and enterprise networking, so you can find the solutions you need to meet your goals.
If your business is shaping the future of cloud connectivity or cloud communications, we would love to have you involved. Apply for CCA membership today and join the global community driving the industry forward.
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