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IaaS

Take Control of Your Cloud Infrastructure

Our IaaS services are built around what businesses actually need: reliability, flexibility, and access to engineers who know the systems inside and out.

IaaS Support that Stays Close to Your Systems

Not every business has the time or resources to keep infrastructure running smoothly behind the scenes. Internal IT teams often get stuck juggling outdated systems, limited capacity, or cloud platforms that don’t fit the way the business operates.

If you’ve dealt with any of these struggles, it’s time to address them directly.

Deployus delivers virtualised infrastructure that includes the right resources to keep your systems online and your team productive. Let us provide the clarity, control, and support your business needs through our tailored IaaS (Infrastructure as a Service) solutions.

What is Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS)?

Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) is a cloud computing model that gives businesses access to essential computing infrastructure without the cost or complexity of managing physical servers.

What are Cloud Service Models?

Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS)

Provides access to virtual machines, storage, and network infrastructure. You manage your own operating systems, applications, and data.

Best suited for businesses that need control over system configuration without maintaining physical servers.

Platform as a Service (PaaS)

Delivers a managed platform where you can run and build applications. The provider manages the infrastructure, operating system, and runtime.

Best suited for teams running web applications or custom software that don’t want to maintain the backend.

Software as a Service (SaaS)

Offers complete applications delivered over the internet. We manage everything for you—from infrastructure to updates.

Best suited for businesses who need simple, ready-to-use software like email, file sharing, or accounting tools.

Deployus provides IaaS services that remove the overhead of maintaining on-premise systems. This includes provisioning and managing virtual machines (VMs), setting up load balancers, and ensuring performance and uptime across your applications and data.

Instead of maintaining your own hardware, our IaaS offers virtualised computing resources (servers, storage, and networking) delivered over the internet and supported by experienced professionals.

IaaS: More Control, Less Overhead

Deployus’s IaaS includes everything needed to run, maintain, and scale your infrastructure—backed by expert local support and flexible service options.

IaaS Services Backed by Real People

We’ve built our IaaS services around the practical needs of organisations who expect infrastructure to work—quietly, consistently, and without creating cost blowouts or delays.

The Deployus difference:

When Things Go Down, We Bring You Back Up

Infrastructure is only as valuable as its ability to recover. We include Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) as part of our IaaS offering, so business continuity is built in from the start.

Each IaaS deployment includes three backup layers: two on-site and one cloud-based. If a disruption occurs, that offsite backup can be converted into a live virtual machine (often within 30 minutes) and made accessible to your team in under two hours.

We don’t charge for compute capacity until disaster recovery is activated. This means you only pay when the system is running—not just sitting idle.

Run Your Systems Your Way—with Our Support

At Deployus, we provide IaaS infrastructure that stays in the background—stable, secure, and supported. Our cloud service offering includes the right balance of flexibility and oversight, backed by engineers who respond when needed and systems built for long-term continuity.

Clients gain access to scalable virtual machines, detailed reporting, business continuity features, and a cloud platform that grows with demand, not fixed packages that outgrow the business.

If you’re looking for a practical, cost-effective way to run applications, protect data, and reduce time spent on infrastructure issues, Deployus IaaS is built for that.

IaaS Service FAQ: What You Should Know

Cloud-based infrastructure allows businesses to access virtualised computing resources (such as servers, storage, and networking) without owning or managing physical hardware. It reduces upfront capital costs, improves scalability, and supports remote access to applications and data.

Many organisations choose a cloud computing service model like IaaS to improve uptime, increase flexibility, and simplify infrastructure maintenance.

IaaS services give you the ability to scale virtual machines (VMs), storage, and compute resources up or down based on demand. This means you’re only paying for what you use, which supports a more cost-effective approach to infrastructure management.

You can also reduce the time your internal team spends on hardware maintenance and focus instead on higher-value IT work.

Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) is well-suited to businesses that need flexibility, cost control, and direct access to infrastructure without managing hardware. This includes professional services firms, companies with legacy on-prem systems, or organisations running web applications that need reliable uptime.

IaaS offers particular value to businesses looking for scalable environments that support business continuity, disaster recovery, and hybrid cloud strategies.

Unlike traditional hosting, which often involves fixed resources and limited flexibility, IaaS includes access to configurable virtual machines, load balancers, and on-demand storage within a secure cloud platform. Infrastructure as a service IaaS is typically more scalable and provides clearer usage visibility, allowing businesses to run applications and manage operating systems without being tied to physical servers.

When selecting an IaaS provider, consider their service responsiveness, security standards, billing transparency, and ability to support business continuity. It’s also important to assess whether they offer local support, how they manage virtual machines and backups, and how well their infrastructure supports your existing software or cloud computing models. A provider should also offer a clear path to maintain, optimise, and secure it over time.