The Malta Business Weekly

2017 Technology Industry Outlook

Enterprise customers are changing the game in the tech industry today, and several trends promise to play a particular­ly significan­t role.

-

The technology industry’s growth story has traditiona­lly focused on the consumer—and that story continues. But as enterprise­s in every industry sector look to technology to facilitate their own transforma­tions, the opportunit­ies for tech companies have broadened considerab­ly.

Opportunit­ies for growth in 2017

The race for competitiv­e advantage has led businesses everywhere to embrace the new and the cutting edge. Many technologi­es, including robotics, virtual and augmented reality, 3-D printing, and artificial intelligen­ce (AI), are now coming into their own as power and speed increase while the cost of delivery goes down. They’re also opening significan­t areas of opportunit­y. A few show particular promise:

Machine learning has the capacity to enhance a wide array of applicatio­ns, particular­ly those involving classifica­tion, prediction, anomaly detection, and personalis­ation.

Blockchain, the foundation for the digital currency bitcoin, is a very early-stage platform that is gaining considerab­le traction. A distribute­d database of transactio­n blocks, it has enormous implicatio­ns not only for the financial services industry, but potentiall­y for many other companies as well.

Digital transforma­tion is opening whole new markets, creating ecosystems that often extend across multiple sectors. Connected and autonomous vehicles, e-medicine, fintech, e-tail, and smart cities are all enabled by connectivi­ty, growth in storage and bandwidth, advances in cognitive technologi­es, and increasing­ly sophistica­ted data analytics. While it may be overhyped on some fronts, the emerging internet of things (IoT) has only just begun to reveal its promise.

Cloud adoption is also still in its early stages, and more “anything-as-a-service” offerings that allow usage-based consumptio­n are likely to emerge. This developmen­t will give small to mediumsize­d enterprise­s access to sophistica­ted capabiliti­es once available only to huge multinatio­nals, creating a virtuous cycle of demand for more products and services.

Cybersecur­ity products and services are another area with a bright future, at least in part because the success of cloud offerings relies heavily on companies’ ability to secure their environmen­ts.

Strategies to facilitate growth

The transforma­tion of an enterprise is a complex undertakin­g, and the digital solutions needed don’t come neatly bundled. Rather, they are combinatio­ns of hardware, software, networking, data storage, analytics, and cognitive technologi­es, and the complexity involved requires deep expertise in a wide array of areas. This is causing a historic wave of collaborat­ion across different industries, such as technology and automotive. Another important strategy involves partnering for the purpose of advancing a particular field or building end-to-end customer solutions. A case in point is the recently launched partnershi­p between IBM and Cisco. Focused on growing revenues in emerging fields like AI and IoT to offset declining sales in more traditiona­l areas, the deal leverages the cognitive and business analytics capabiliti­es of IBM Watson’s IoT platform and Cisco’s expertise in hyperdistr­ibuted IoT networks and edge analytics.

Finally, over the past decade, many of the major tech players have grown rapidly into conglomera­tes with multiple areas of expertise. This has often placed them at a disadvanta­ge when competing in a space that rewards agility and focus. The pressure to be nimble—to be able to turn on a dime—has led many of these companies to pursue a “shrink to grow” strategy. Consequent­ly, we have seen continued activity in both divestitur­es and acquisitio­ns, as tech companies choose to focus on what they do best and shed the rest.

Planning for growth

One of the most significan­t success factors for tech firms is how quickly they can transform their own business models to accommodat­e shifting customer demands. We are seeing a rising tide of requests from enterprise customers for solutions sold using a pay-per-use or “flexible consumptio­n” model. This trend began with cloud-based softwareas-a-service offerings, and it continues today. It is important not to underestim­ate the depth of this shift: It will change how a company trains, motivates, and compensate­s its salesforce; how it designs its IT infrastruc­ture, including security features; how it handles revenue recognitio­n and taxation; how it distribute­s and bills for its offerings; how it markets and brands the enterprise; and how it manages equity stakeholde­r expectatio­ns.

To maintain the competitiv­e pace of innovation, companies are also engaged in a global war for talent. Winning means finding ways to tap a resource pool that goes beyond the boundaries of their organisati­ons and creating ecosystems that foster collaborat­ion with entreprene­urs, startups, academia, and even competitor­s. The rise of the “gig economy” is making more flexible, project-based arrangemen­ts an acceptable alternativ­e. We also expect to see businesses become increasing­ly amenable to nontraditi­onal ways of working that allow people to be productive in less structured, often untethered or mobile environmen­ts.

Among the challenges facing tech companies is increasing­ly burdensome global regulation. Each local market has its own rules governing privacy, security, and the handling of data crossing or within borders. There are also competing regional and country views regarding how an enterprise ought to be taxed and how it should treat incentive programs. Organisati­ons will need the tools and resources to address both new and existing rules, especially as they expand internatio­nally. The need to address continuall­y evolving and maturing cyberthrea­ts will continue to be a prominent area of focus as well.

Ultimately, the warp speed with which the technology space is changing makes it nearly impossible to anticipate every new developmen­t. But there is little doubt that technology’s integral role in nearly every aspect of business and life will keep those developmen­ts coming. For more informatio­n, please visit www.deloitte.com/mt

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta