SharePoint Online Deployments Surging, According to Survey
    The rate of cloud-based Microsoft SharePoint  deployments ballooned by triple digits in 2017, based on a recent industry poll.
SharePoint tools  suppliers Sharegate, Hyperfish and Nintex this week released their "The SharePoint  and Office 365 Industry Survey," which included responses from about 450 SharePoint administrators and IT  professionals. The three companies also surveyed a random sample of their combined  client pools in 2016, providing lots of data points for comparison. 
SharePoint  Online deployments increased by an impressive 167 percent from 2016 to 2017. While only 21 percent of respondents in  2016 had SharePoint Online deployed, that number soared to 56 percent in 2017. Even  though that means that more than half of companies had SharePoint Online  deployed, a lotĀ of them were also still  running on-premise SharePoint deployments in parallel.
Yet another data point in the survey shows more and more  users trusting their entire SharePoint workload to the cloud. In 2016, one-fifth of users had SharePoint deployed exclusively online. A year later, that  number was nearly a third (31 percent). At the same time, hybrid environments (a mix  of SharePoint Online and on-premises SharePoint deployments) dropped by 7  percentage points to 34 percent and on-premises-only environments dropped by 2  percentage points to 35 percent in 2017.
   
 
The shift to the cloud in SharePoint is mirrored on the  Active Directory (AD) side in the vendor survey. In 2016, a very slight majority of  AD deployments involved on-premises AD (51 percent). But  in 2017, that number fell to 42 percent, while a mix of on-premises and Azure AD  jumped 3 percentage points to 34 percent and pure Azure AD deployments rose 4  percentage points to 16 percent.
The survey also reveals the relative share of the last six  on-premises versions of SharePoint, dating all the way back to SharePoint 2001,  although that version and SharePoint 2003 are present in low enough numbers to  make any conclusions about the trends on those editions statistically  questionable.
Among the newer versions, the only one gaining significant  share is the most recent, SharePoint 2016, which saw a 67 percent increase in deployments  from 2016 to 2017. While impressive, it's gaining share at a much lower rate  than SharePoint Online/Office 365 and from a smaller base. SharePoint 2016 ended  2017 with a presence in 25 percent of respondents' shops.
Holding steady and maintaining the largest share of any  edition, including SharePoint Online, is SharePoint 2013. Deployed at 66 percent of  respondents' sites, SharePoint 2013 won't maintain its lead through 2018 if  SharePoint Online continues its momentum.
   
 
For 2017, SharePoint Online seemed to be taking most of its  share from SharePoint 2007, which dropped 2 percentage points to 18 percent, and  especially from SharePoint 2010, which dropped 8 percentage points to 40 percent.
As Office 365 deployments continue to gallop ahead, there is  little reason to suspect that SharePoint Online's share of overall SharePoint  workloads won't continue to increase. The question is how fast.
As befits a survey fielded by tools vendors, a statement  accompanying the data points out that obstacles remain for those still moving  to SharePoint Online.
"The move to the cloud is not always as easy as it  sounds. Microsoft has released a content migration tool to help customers leave  SharePoint 2010 and 2013, but it just isn't enough. Here at Sharegate, we still  see a large number of customers leveraging our tools to migrate while keeping  their existing site structure and objects," said Benjamin Niaulin, Microsoft  Regional Director & Product Advisor at Sharegate.
Among the challenges are ongoing concerns about security,  cost constraints, time constraints and difficulties in migrating SharePoint  customizations from on-premises to online.
This survey says progress to the cloud in 2017 was rapid.  The question for 2018 will be whether that pace can continue. Were we looking  at low-hanging fruit, easy wins and pilot projects that could stall slightly this  year? Or was it an early majority shift that could bring nearly half of the SharePoint  customer base exclusively into the cloud by year's end?
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on January 10, 2018