08 Jul 2026
New State of the Data Center Report: Hybrid IT Now Dominates Enterprise Architecture, with Colocation Anchoring Critical Workloads
New State of the Data Center Report: Hybrid IT Now Dominates Enterprise Architecture,
with Colocation Anchoring Critical Workloads
Uptime, Security, Connectivity and Performance Overtake Cost as Primary Drivers of Enterprise IT
Decisions Across Cloud, Colocation and On-Prem Environments
DENVER - (July 8, 2026) – CoreSite, an American Tower company (NYSE: AMT) empowering critical
business and AI workloads that impact everyday life through interconnected data center solutions, today
released its 2026 State of the Data Center Report, which examines how enterprise IT strategies are
evolving as organizations enter a new phase of hybrid infrastructure management.
The seventh edition of the report shows that hybrid IT has become the standard operating model for
enterprises – but that companies are still looking for the right hybrid IT mix. After years of cloud
migration and hybrid adoption, organizations are shifting their focus from deciding whether to use cloud,
colocation or on-premises infrastructure to determining which workloads belong in each environment.
As workloads become more distributed and AI drives greater infrastructure demands, enterprises are
taking a more deliberate approach to workload placement, making decisions based on performance,
security, data control and connectivity requirements rather than cost alone.
“An organization’s success will be determined by its ability to deploy hybrid workloads at scale, and by
future-proofing with higher power densities and faster connectivity,” said Juan Font, President and CEO
of CoreSite and SVP of American Tower. “The future belongs to organizations that align the right
infrastructure with the right workloads.”
High-level insights and key data points from this year’s report include:
• Workload Placement Is Becoming More Intentional: Across roughly two dozen workload
categories, enterprises are actively rebalancing where applications run. The research shows
increased cloud deployment of chatbots, mobile apps, websites, content delivery and AI-based
recommender systems, while colocation is gaining share in workloads such as web applications,
HR systems and cybersecurity—signaling a more precise, workload-by-workload optimization
approach rather than broad migration strategies.
• CIOs Are Choosing Colocation for AI Production Workloads: Nearly 70% of CIOs now
favor colocation and hybrid environments for AI/ML production workloads such as chatbots,
virtual assistants and web hosting. This marks one of the clearest signals yet that AI production
infrastructure is migrating to highly connected, power-dense environments.
• Cloud Connectivity Is Now a Core Requirement for Colocation Providers: Nearly eight
in 10 respondents rate native, direct connectivity to major cloud providers as ‘very important’ for
colocation providers — the highest level of urgency recorded in the last five years, showing that
seamless public cloud interconnection has become a foundation for modern hybrid IT
architectures.
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• Cost Is No Longer the Primary Driver: While cost remains a factor, uptime, security and
performance have overtaken cost as the primary drivers of workload placement decisions,
particularly for AI and high-density compute workloads, marking a shift from cost-optimized
infrastructure planning to resilience- and performance-driven architecture decisions.
As hybrid environments become more complex, seamless integration and direct, low-latency connectivity.
across cloud, colocation and on-prem systems have become essential. Security and data control remain
foundational drivers of workload placement decisions, particularly for sensitive and regulated workloads.
As a result, colocation is evolving beyond a hosting environment and increasingly serving as an
orchestration point that enables performance, security and ecosystem connectivity across distributed
enterprise environments.
“The State of the Data Center findings reinforce broader trends we're seeing across the industry: hybrid
IT is now the standard operating model for enterprises,” said John Gallant, Enterprise Consulting
Director at CIO. “What stands out in this year's research is that enterprises have moved beyond hybrid
adoption and the ones preparing for the future are now focused on optimizing workload placement across
cloud, colocation and on-premises environments based on performance, security and control
requirements.”
The 2026 State of the Data Center Report is based on a quantitative survey of more than 300 CIOs, CTOs
and other IT decision-makers representing a variety of industry sectors, plus in-depth interviews with
seven senior technology executives from financial services, healthcare, retail and SaaS organizations.
Industry leader Foundry, an IDG, Inc. company, conducted the research.
Download the 2026 State of the Data Center Report to dive deeper into these insights and more https://hubs.la/Q04ngNqn0
