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市場調查報告書
商品編碼
2088438
雲端發現市場:2026-2032年全球市場預測(按組件、待發現的雲端類型、部署模式、組織規模、發現方法和產業分類)Cloud Discovery Market by Component, Cloud Type Discovered, Deployment Model, Organization Size, Discovery Method, Industry Vertical - Global Forecast 2026-2032 |
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預計到 2032 年,雲端發現市場將成長至 34.3 億美元,複合年成長率為 9.44%。
| 主要市場統計數據 | |
|---|---|
| 基準年 2025 | 18.2億美元 |
| 預計年份:2026年 | 19.9億美元 |
| 預測年份 2032 | 34.3億美元 |
| 複合年成長率 (%) | 9.44% |
雲端發現已成為跨公共雲端、私有雲端、SaaS、混合雲端和邊緣環境營運的企業的策略管理要點。隨著企業加速數位轉型,持續識別雲端資產、影子IT、未託管的SaaS應用程式、暴露的資料儲存、配置錯誤的工作負載和閒置資源的能力,對於網路安全、合規性、IT資產管理和財務營運(FinOps)而言至關重要。
雲端發現格局正從週期性清單收集轉向跨動態雲端環境的持續性、策略主導視覺性。企業正在用基於 API 的發現、無代理掃描、身份感知存取映射、資料分類以及與 SIEM、SOAR、ITSM、CMDB 和 FinOps 工作流程的整合來取代基於電子表格的資產追蹤。
人工智慧 (AI) 正在拓展雲端發現的範圍,使其從視覺化擴展到預測、優先排序和自動回應。與僅使用基於規則的工具相比,AI 賦能的平台能夠透過關聯配置資料、身分權限、網路暴露情況、業務部門所有權、漏洞情報和使用模式,更快地識別高風險資產。
亞太地區為雲端發現提供了高速成長的環境,企業在實現核心系統現代化的同時,也要應對資料在地化、產業特定的網路安全法規以及SaaS的快速普及等挑戰。印度、中國、日本、韓國、澳洲和東南亞國協都在投資「雲端優先」的現代化轉型,但諸如中國的《個人資訊保護法》、印度的《數位個人資料保護法》以及澳洲的關鍵基礎設施改革等法規,都要求企業提高對雲端資產的可見度並改善資料管理。
東協地區的需求主要受《東協2025年數位發展總體規劃》、區域內資料中心容量的擴張以及基於雲端的銀行、零售、物流和政府服務日益普及的推動。在海灣合作理事會(GCC)成員國中,沙烏地阿拉伯、阿拉伯聯合大公國、卡達及其周邊市場的國家級「雲端優先」政策、智慧政府計畫和網路安全法規正在推動雲端運算的普及。
美國憑藉大規模雲端應用、聯邦安全標準、SaaS 的蓬勃發展以及企業財務營運的成熟,引領著雲端發現技術的普及。同時,加拿大則專注於隱私保護、公共部門現代化和安全的雲端採購。在墨西哥和巴西,隨著金融服務、電信、零售和數位政府等行業的業務向雲端平台遷移,對雲端的需求也不斷成長。在巴西,《個人資料保護法》(LGPD)正在加強資料可見性的課責。
產業領導者應將雲端發現視為一項持續的管治職能,而非一次性審計。首要任務是建立涵蓋 IaaS、PaaS、SaaS、容器、無伺服器函數、身分、API、資料儲存和第三方整合工具的統一清單,並將該清單與所有權、業務重要性、保密性和策略要求關聯起來。
本執行摘要基於二手研究、市場三角測量以及對來自可靠資訊來源的公開數據的檢驗。這些資訊來源包括公共雲端支出預測、企業雲端採用情況調查、安全漏洞成本研究、歐盟統計局企業雲端採用情況資料、國家隱私法、網路安全指令以及區域數位轉型策略。
雲端環境日益分散、動態化,並且需要考慮合規性問題,而手動庫存管理無法充分滿足這些問題,因此雲端發現已成為企業的核心能力。企業需要即時了解資產、身分、數據、應用程式、風險和成本,以保護其數位化營運並維持雲端投資回報。
The Cloud Discovery Market is projected to grow by USD 3.43 billion at a CAGR of 9.44% by 2032.
| KEY MARKET STATISTICS | |
|---|---|
| Base Year [2025] | USD 1.82 billion |
| Estimated Year [2026] | USD 1.99 billion |
| Forecast Year [2032] | USD 3.43 billion |
| CAGR (%) | 9.44% |
Cloud discovery has become a strategic control point for enterprises operating across public cloud, private cloud, SaaS, hybrid cloud, and edge environments. As organizations accelerate digital transformation, the ability to continuously identify cloud assets, shadow IT, unmanaged SaaS applications, exposed data stores, misconfigured workloads, and dormant resources is now central to cybersecurity, compliance, IT asset management, and FinOps.
Growing cloud adoption and increasing IT environment complexity are driving demand for cloud visibility and management solutions. As organizations expand their use of public, private, hybrid, and multi-cloud environments, maintaining accurate asset inventories through manual processes becomes increasingly challenging. This trend is accelerating the adoption of automated cloud asset discovery, SaaS management, cloud security posture management (CSPM), cloud access security brokers (CASB), cloud-native application protection platforms (CNAPP), and broader cloud governance solutions to improve visibility, security, compliance, and operational efficiency.
The cloud discovery landscape is shifting from periodic inventory collection to continuous, policy-driven visibility across dynamic cloud estates. Enterprises are replacing spreadsheet-based asset tracking with API-based discovery, agentless scanning, identity-aware access mapping, data classification, and integration with SIEM, SOAR, ITSM, CMDB, and FinOps workflows.
The most important transformation is the convergence of cloud discovery with security, compliance, and cost optimization. Security teams use discovery to detect exposed storage buckets, orphaned identities, vulnerable images, and unmanaged workloads. Finance teams use it to reduce waste from idle compute and duplicate SaaS subscriptions. Compliance teams use it to prove control coverage under frameworks such as GDPR, HIPAA, PCI DSS, SOC 2, ISO/IEC 27001, NIS2, and DORA.
Artificial intelligence is expanding cloud discovery from visibility into prediction, prioritization, and automated response. AI-enabled platforms can correlate configuration data, identity permissions, network exposure, business ownership, vulnerability intelligence, and usage patterns to identify high-risk assets faster than rule-based tools alone.
The measurable security case is strong. IBM's 2024 Cost of a Data Breach Report placed the global average breach cost at USD 4.88 million and reported that organizations using security AI and automation extensively had average breach costs USD 2.22 million lower than organizations without these capabilities. In cloud discovery, AI supports anomaly detection, resource tagging recommendations, attack path analysis, sensitive data discovery, and remediation orchestration, helping organizations reduce risk while improving operational efficiency.
Asia-Pacific is a high-growth environment for cloud discovery as enterprises modernize core systems while navigating data localization, sectoral cybersecurity rules, and rapid SaaS adoption. India, China, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and ASEAN economies are investing in cloud-first modernization, while regulations such as China's PIPL, India's Digital Personal Data Protection Act, and Australia's critical infrastructure reforms require stronger cloud asset visibility and data control.
North America remains a mature demand center, led by large-scale public cloud adoption, federal cloud security requirements, financial services modernization, and strong adoption of CNAPP, CSPM, CASB, and FinOps practices. Europe is shaped by GDPR, NIS2, DORA, and digital sovereignty initiatives; Eurostat reported that 45.2% of EU enterprises bought cloud computing services in 2023, highlighting the expanding compliance need. Latin America, the Middle East, and Africa are gaining momentum through cloud regions, digital government programs, telecom-led cloud services, and privacy laws such as Brazil's LGPD and South Africa's POPIA.
ASEAN demand is supported by the ASEAN Digital Masterplan 2025, growing regional data center capacity, and rising adoption of cloud-based banking, retail, logistics, and government services. The GCC is advancing cloud discovery through national cloud-first policies, smart government programs, and cybersecurity mandates across Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and neighboring markets.
The European Union is one of the most regulation-intensive environments for cloud discovery because GDPR, NIS2, DORA, and emerging cloud assurance initiatives require traceability, data classification, and vendor risk visibility. BRICS economies are using cloud to scale digital public infrastructure and industrial modernization, creating demand for sovereign cloud discovery and hybrid asset visibility. G7 and NATO markets prioritize cyber resilience, secure software supply chains, AI governance, and critical infrastructure protection, making cloud discovery an essential foundation for risk-based security operations.
The United States leads cloud discovery adoption through large-scale cloud usage, federal security standards, SaaS sprawl, and enterprise FinOps maturity, while Canada emphasizes privacy, public-sector modernization, and secure cloud procurement. Mexico and Brazil are expanding demand as financial services, telecom, retail, and digital government workloads migrate to cloud platforms, with Brazil's LGPD increasing accountability for data visibility.
In Europe, the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and Russia show distinct drivers ranging from cloud-first public services and financial compliance to sovereignty requirements and domestic cloud ecosystems. China, India, Japan, Australia, and South Korea represent major Asia-Pacific demand centers, supported by industrial digitization, 5G-enabled services, regulated data environments, and strong cloud security investment. Across these countries, the strongest use cases include shadow IT discovery, cloud misconfiguration detection, SaaS rationalization, and sensitive data mapping.
Industry leaders should treat cloud discovery as a continuous governance capability rather than a one-time audit. The first priority is to establish a unified inventory across IaaS, PaaS, SaaS, containers, serverless functions, identities, APIs, data stores, and third-party integrations, then connect that inventory to ownership, business criticality, sensitivity, and policy requirements.
Executives should integrate cloud discovery with CNAPP, CSPM, CASB, ITSM, CMDB, SIEM, data security posture management, and FinOps systems. High-impact actions include enforcing tagging standards, automating misconfiguration remediation, identifying unused resources, mapping excessive permissions, rationalizing SaaS subscriptions, and measuring risk reduction through board-level KPIs such as unmanaged asset count, exposed critical assets, cloud waste, and mean time to remediate.
This executive summary is based on secondary research, market triangulation, and validation of public data from credible sources including public cloud spending outlooks, enterprise cloud adoption research, security breach cost research, Eurostat enterprise cloud adoption data, national privacy laws, cybersecurity directives, and regional digital transformation strategies.
The analysis evaluates cloud discovery across technology adoption, regulatory requirements, buyer priorities, deployment environments, and regional maturity. Keywords and market themes were mapped to high-intent enterprise search behavior, including cloud discovery, cloud asset discovery, shadow IT discovery, SaaS discovery, CNAPP, CSPM, CASB, FinOps, cloud compliance, and cloud security posture management.
Cloud discovery is becoming a core enterprise capability because cloud environments are too distributed, dynamic, and compliance-sensitive to manage through manual inventories. Organizations need real-time visibility into assets, identities, data, applications, risks, and costs to secure digital operations and sustain cloud return on investment.
The strongest opportunities will favor platforms that combine broad discovery coverage, AI-driven risk prioritization, workflow automation, regulatory alignment, and measurable FinOps outcomes. As multi-cloud and hybrid cloud adoption continues to expand, cloud discovery will remain foundational to cloud governance, cybersecurity resilience, data protection, and operational excellence.