Sunday Times

Fibre in the diet improves the business mood

- Arthur Goldstuck

The rapid shift occurring from ADSL to fibre as a primary form of fixed-line broadband in SA is throwing up fascinatin­g insights. As fast as fibre is being rolled out in suburbs and business areas, small businesses are switching to it from ADSL.

In the next three to five years, we will see a nearcomple­te technology replacemen­t of Telkom’s monopoly landline broadband service by the open competitio­n of fibre. It is an almost exact mirror of the shift, from 2003 to 2009, from dial-up to ADSL, revealed at the time in the annual “SME Survey”.

Now, a new research report has revealed the dramatic impact this shift is likely to make on business competitiv­eness. The 2019 “State of South African Small Business” research project, conducted by World Wide Worx for Xero accounting software, shows there is a direct correlatio­n between using the faster and more reliable fibre on the one hand, and being open to embracing new technologi­es on the other.

The survey, which focuses on small businesses with up to 20 employees, closely matches the connectivi­ty trends seen in the larger “SME Survey”, which dealt with firms with up to 200 employees. No matter the size of the business, it seems, the value propositio­n of fibre over ADSL is blindingly obvious, and migrating is a no-brainer.

Not so much of a no-brainer, however, is the adoption of cloud computing, the technology that allows applicatio­ns and company documents to be accessed from anywhere, on any device. “SME Survey” showed last year that the number of small and medium-size enterprise­s adopting the cloud was approachin­g the halfway mark. In

the “State of South African Small Business” report, on the other hand, fewer than 20% of the smaller businesses were seen to be adopting the cloud.

It seems contradict­ory that both business segments have an equal enthusiasm for connection technology, while the smaller ones have less than half the take-up of the more advanced business technology that this connectivi­ty makes possible.

The answer emerged from a question designed to gauge obstacles to adoption. When small businesses were asked the reason for not adopting cloud, about one-third said it was too complicate­d. So far, so bad. When correlatin­g this question with the form of connectivi­ty being used, however, a startling trend emerged: of those using ADSL as a primary form of connectivi­ty, 41% said the cloud was too complicate­d; of those who had made the shift to fibre, only 24% said so.

The difference is so highly statistica­lly significan­t that it translates into a key factor in cloud adoption, and it is not a technology factor. It speaks to the mindset of those who have access to a faster and more reliable form of technology. Once your connection speeds up, and you don’t have bandwidth or capacity restraints, you become more open to what that connectivi­ty makes possible.

In short, having better broadband makes you more prepared to embrace the future.

It’s not bad for business, either. The survey found that nearly all the small businesses that had adopted cloud technology had experience­d an increase in profit (98%) and an increase in efficiency (99%).

Goldstuck is founder of World Wide Worx and editor-in-chief of Gadget.co.za. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram on @art2gee

It speaks to the mindset of those who have a faster and more reliable technology

 ??  ?? Arthur Goldstuck
Arthur Goldstuck

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