Insight report Insight Intelligent Technology Report 2022: IT Ambitions for Business Transformation

The pandemic accelerated transformation at organisations in every industry — and there are no signs of slowing.

By  Insight Editor / 29 Nov 2021


In the wake of COVID-19, businesses responded to significant challenges and deep uncertainty by driving more ambitious agendas on tighter timelines than ever before.

Organisations took bold steps forward into a digital-first landscape starting in 2020, and they’re striving to extend that trajectory into 2022 and beyond. However, challenges remain — ranging from talent shortages to supply chain disruption — and these roadblocks can impede operations and hinder strategic transformation.

To deepen our understanding of what lies ahead, we commissioned IDG to survey 400 IT leaders about post-pandemic marketplace and organisational shifts in our annual progress report, the Insight Intelligent Technology Report 2022: IT Ambitions for Business Transformation. Their responses reveal how they’re adapting to internal challenges, external disruption and new digital transformation goals.

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Transformation is the new normal.

Organisations of all sizes and across all business sectors navigated digital acceleration during the pandemic — and enterprises were no exception.


43%

reported that the pandemic accelerated business transformation progress, and another 52% either had to change or create a new strategy entirely.


47%

of new IT investments are dedicated to transforming the business vs. "keep the lights on" requirements.


67%

strongly agree that their organisations have adapted to marketplace changes by incorporating new technologies and IT processes.


Specifically, IT leaders focused on key initiatives in

✔ Data

✔ Operational processes

✔ Security

✔ Spending


Knocking down internal roadblocks

While organisations responded impressively to external challenges during the pandemic, hindrance to IT modernisation often came from within. 61% of respondents cited internal challenges as bigger roadblocks than external factors, including:

Security and data privacy deficiencies

40%

Shadow IT

36%

Competing internal priorities

35%

Upfront costs

32%

Cloud complexity

32%

Lack of skills and expertise

31%


The cloud is a particular point of concern.
One-third of respondents struggle with managing cloud spending, determining best-fit workloads for hybrid and multi-cloud environments, and a lack of skills related to the cloud.


And, IT teams are asked to do more with less.

Since February 2020, respondents report that IT has taken on new responsibilities in:

78%

Cybersecurity

72%

Cloud architecture

68%

IT procurement

64%

Analytics/BI

At the same time, 45% of respondents reported skills and talent gaps specifically related to these shifting responsibilities.


Getting ahead of external disruption

While internal factors are a primary obstacle for IT modernisation, external factors carry significant weight as well. 91% of respondents said their organisations are impacted to at least some extent by IT supply chain disruption, with 49% indicating they have been affected to a great extent.

How are leaders planning to mitigate these challenges?

44%

plan to shift application processing requirements to the cloud.

43%

intend to avoid last-minute, ad-hoc IT purchases.

42%

seek to improve forecasting for longer-term visibility into needs.


Modernisation persists in the face of these challenges.

And investing in talent and infrastructure is critical to unlocking digital transformation. Organizations are planning bold steps in the next 12 months, from hiring new IT talent to leveraging the power of DevOps, the Internet of Things and edge computing.

IT decision-makers are concentrating heavily on modernizing their cloud environment in the next 12 months, particularly in the areas of:


Security

51%

Cloud infrastructure and platform managed services

37%

Data analytics and business intelligence (BI) platforms

37%

Software as a Service

34%

Cloud monitoring and management

32%

And, over the next three years, they intend to focus on energising the intelligent use of data through:


36%

Artificial intelligence and machine learning


34%

High-performance computing


32%

BI and data analytics


31%

Digital workplace technologies

Business woman on laptop

Thinking holistically about the IT ecosystem

At a time when every business is a technology business, IT teams are asked to do more, and every digital transformation initiative is a major priority. Accelerating innovation while navigating internal and external roadblocks requires a holistic approach to the IT ecosystem — and enterprise leaders agree that they can’t execute that approach without help.

That’s why 95% of respondents indicate their organisations will rely on third parties to shape their business transformation strategies, and 89% expect the volume of IT projects offloaded to a partner to increase over the next 12 months.

No one achieves their most ambitious goals alone.

Learn more about how a trusted partner can accelerate your transformation strategy in the full report.

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