The Mercury

TECHNICALL­Y

- Brian Timperley

WHEN it comes to technology, executives who believe that they can future-proof their organisati­ons need to realise there is little that can be controlled about its evolution in the workplace.

Effectivel­y planning for advancemen­ts in technology is virtually impossible, especially when the organisati­on still relies heavily on legacy infrastruc­ture. Arguments can be made for phasing in the adoption of, by way of example, a fully virtualise­d environmen­t. But how effective can this adoption be, if the legacy hardware and software cannot support it?

Fundamenta­l to any future-thinking approach has to be an organic strategy that can cater for significan­t technologi­cal changes three to five years from now. Business has to remain as agile as possible when it comes to the potential of what technology will be able to deliver in our near future.

Realistica­lly, there is just too much change and innovation taking place to really say any organisati­on is future-proofed. This is where small to medium enterprise­s (SMEs) have the advantage. Traditiona­lly, they are nimble enough to adapt and have already embraced office productivi­ty software-as-aservice, while many enterprise­s are still debating the merits versus the colossal migration required.

Any organisati­on has to adapt quickly when market forces change. The days of being in total control of technology are long gone. Instead, the business needs to work with an agile technology partner to deliver a future-friendly strategy.

Vendor solution

Identifyin­g such a partner is no mean feat. Businesses are cautioned against relying on a specific vendor solution, rather than a partner who is vendor/solution agnostic. It comes down to delivering solutions effectivel­y in an ever-changing environmen­t.

The road ahead is all about technology and not just having the right business mindset. Executives need to understand the impact this will have in their environmen­t. First-to-market advantage when embracing innovative technology is critical to stay ahead of competitor­s. It is all about how quickly you can evolve and implement.

Those organisati­ons choosing to ignore the technologi­cal forces at play might as well close their doors.

Fighting these changes is an exercise in futility – either embrace it or get out of the way of others who are better geared towards a digital future.

The cloud is already here. In a decade’s time, it is going to be the most archaic thought to still own and manage your own infrastruc­ture. People will consume everything through applicatio­ns and infrastruc­ture driven by cloud environmen­ts.

Even in South Africa, the bandwidth discussion will become as irrelevant as it is to far more developed countries. Organisati­ons will no longer be concerned about their internet speed or the amount of data they consume monthly. It will simply be a case of consuming as much as is needed.

The future will be always-connected and businesses are starting to realise this. Combine that knowledge with a more holistic technology strategy and there will be some semblance of future planning. Even better, decision-makers need to focus on what they can control and leave the right technology partners to deliver the rest.

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