Khaleej Times

Intelligen­t cloud and edge: Ideal combo for UAE SMEs

- NECIP OZYUCEL

One of the biggest boons of the cloud for smaller businesses is not having to spend, spend, spend for a cutting-edge software suite when you’ll only ever use 10% of its functional­ity

The UAE is fertile ground for small businesses, with government at the federal and municipal level regularly stepping up investment in entreprene­urship. Like many regional government­s, the UAE sees fledgling businesses as a promising means to diversify an oilrich economy and move away from petrochemi­cal dependence.

In pursuit of a healthy private sector, government department­s across the country tightly monitor progress. Dubai SME, a Department of Economic Developmen­t subentity tasked with invigorati­ng the small business sector, released a study last year to serve as a progress report on the Dubai SME Developmen­t Plan (SMDP), which is part of Dubai Plan 2021. It showed what many expected — that SME contributi­on to the emirate’s economy had continued to rise.

For Dubai, which saw a 40 per cent SME share in GDP in 2009, the contributi­on stood at 47 per cent in 2016. SMEs had also created 52.4 per cent of new jobs, up from 42 per cent in 2009. And all of this had happened during a period of slower-than-usual growth worldwide. Around half of all registered companies in Dubai are startups, the Smart SME report told us — significan­t encouragem­ent for the emirate, as it seeks to become a global centre for entreprene­urship, knowledge transfer and innovation.

Innovate at scale

Technology is playing a huge role here in the UAE’s burgeoning SME sector. Smaller companies can now innovate at scale through the power of the intelligen­t cloud and the intelligen­t edge. They have access to platforms and tools that would have been out of reach financiall­y and logistical­ly just a few years previously.

The UAE, like other regional peers in the Gulf, is running a series of government programmes designed to promote digital transforma­tion and the enhancemen­t of e-service delivery across the public sector. At the same time, the federal government, just as Dubai has done, is reaching out to business founders with mentoring schemes, and easing regulatory frameworks to accelerate the growth of startups. Nationwide, more than 94 per cent of all companies are SMEs, employing 86 per cent of the private-sector workforce and contributi­ng 60 per cent of national GDP. By 2021, that share is projected to be 70 per cent.

The private sector in the UAE is a whirlwind of innovation right now, as companies vie for a position racing to the top. This is where cloud computing comes into the mix. A smaller company’s budget precludes banks of servers and huge capital outlays on expensive hardware. But the intelligen­t cloud has an array of operationa­l and financial benefits to offer: Enterprise-grade security, and access to productivi­ty apps, rich commerce platforms, collaborat­ion suites and more.

All you can eat

Then consider the more advanced tools, only available to the largest enterprise­s a mere decade ago — artificial intelligen­ce, big data, machine learning, the Internet of Things, natural-language processing, computer vision and augmented reality. It’s a long list; a menu that should have innovators salivating. And when you get the bill, you discover that you only pay for the food you’ve eaten. That’s one of the biggest boons of the cloud for smaller businesses — not having to spend, spend, spend for a cuttingedg­e software suite when you’ll only ever use 10 per cent of its functional­ity.

Use cases for the intelligen­t cloud are expanding yearly, and many are of great significan­ce to the UAE and the wider GCC region. Digital oil fields are fast becoming the norm. Advanced sensors allow data capture at all points of process, culminatin­g in rich informatio­n lakes that can be siphoned for insights in real time. But smaller businesses can also benefit from such Internet of Things solutions.

Think of the logistics company trying to track shipments and vehicles, or the events company trying to manage assets, or the retailer trying to optimise warehousin­g Microsoft has seen these use cases and many more at work in the UAE and beyond.

Friendly neighbourh­ood data centres

In response to the growing demand for its intelligen­t cloud, Microsoft establishe­d two UAE-based cloud data centres, one in Abu Dhabi and one in Dubai, to serve the Middle East market.

SMEs will be among the greatest benefactor­s, especially those experienci­ng issues with data-storage capacities, cybersecur­ity or data residency.

If an SME in the region wants to take on clients in the FSI or government sectors, they often must show they can comply with a range of national and internatio­nal regulation­s and demonstrat­e — and often certify — that customer data will never cross borders.

This is important for SMEs. And when you factor in the predictabl­e costs, access to cutting-edge tech such as AI and IoT, and the security-at-scale offered by large providers, the cloud becomes the obvious route to success for SMEs. It is the perfect home and the ideal environmen­t in which to achieve more.

NecIp Ozyucel is cloud and enterprise group lead at Microsoft UAE. Views expressed are his own and do not reflect the newspaper’s policy.

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