Virtualization and Cloud executives share their predictions for 2016. Read them in this 8th Annual VMblog.com series exclusive.
Contributed by Mark Barrenechea, CEO, OpenText
OpenText CEO Predictions For The Enterprise In 2016
1. The IoT will be reality
In
2016, we'll work smarter, not harder. Human beings, appliances, homes,
factories, cars, businesses, and
cities will become more interconnected. If these items aren't already,
they'll soon be "talking" to the Internet of Things (IoT). In a few
short years, there will be more than
25 billion devices generating data about every topic imaginable. We'll see broader enterprise adoption of the IoT due to its
economic impact (which analysts
estimate to be between $4 trillion to $11 trillion in the next few
years), as well as in terms of opportunities to improve productivity and
gain better business insight.
The
IoT will cause massive disruption through better automation,
integration, and communication. Insurance
companies are deploying sensors and software to monitor how drivers
behave and generate risk profiles using big data analytics that
accurately align to or construct on-demand products to suit individual
behavior. Thermostats communicate with residents and
accumulate behavioral data to formulate the most energy efficient and
comfortable schedules and settings. Software agents move money, stocks,
goods, and people around the world, routing, optimizing, and transacting
innumerable times a year-and these are just
three examples already in enterprise use today. They will quickly
evolve and proliferate into 2016.
As
we move forward through 2016 and beyond, more devices, agents, sensors,
and people will join the IoT. Perhaps
we will even progress as a society to a post-scarcity economy and
information itself will become our commodity of trade. Monetizing the
exchange of information, micro-licensing, and transactions become
prominent tasks as our automation and machine-to-machine
networks take care of daily needs. Imagine algorithms as apps for
applying big data analysis over the connected masses of information
generated by the IoT and its billions upon billions of connected devices
in every aspect of our lives. Owning the data, analyzing
the data, and improving and innovating become the keys to corporate
success-all empowered by a connected digital society.
Though
this may have some Orwellian overtones, the IoT is really about the Zen
of Things-our application of
software and technology to help customers consume products and to help
businesses build better products and deliver better services. In 2016,
the IoT will continue to combine big data, analytics, the Cloud,
Artificial Intelligence (AI), robotics, and automation
to propel industries forward and create the next industrial revolution.
2. Millennials enter the management ranks and reshape the world
In
2016, we will see Millennials enter management-level roles. These young
leaders will radically restructure
all aspects of business-from productivity tools to HR policies (like
working from home and remote offices), and organizational structure to
corporate cultural-essentially reinventing the workplace as we know it.
As
managers, Millennials will be in a position to transform corporate
culture, accommodating expectations like
social media freedom, device flexibility, and a high tolerance for risk
taking. Innovation will be a key competitive differentiator and its
application will be based on new ways to collaborate that include
crowdsourcing and co-creation with customers. Communication
will be open, two-way, and always "on." The office of the future will
take root in 2016. Holographic images, interactive surfaces, and video
conferencing will begin to replace the boardroom in earnest. The mobile
office will replace the cubicle and work and
life will reach an equilibrium and intermixing we haven't seen before
in this digital age.
As
Millennials undergo a professional "coming of age," the enterprise will
follow suit. Culture will be a determining
factor for failure or success in the digital world. Millennial managers
will pull from a global pool of talent, hiring the best employees from
around the world to create highly skilled, dispersed teams.
Organizations with cultures that can attract (and keep)
top talent will emerge as winners, changing the game and disrupting
traditional business models-and even entire industries.
3. Fast-growing, no-profit SaaS companies will collapse
The
rise of Internet-based, Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) companies over the
years has been tied to a new model:
cash over time, rather than the traditional cash upfront model. But,
the aim of profitability remains the same: no more waiting. Cash is
still king and businesses need profit.
Many
of these so-called multi-billion dollar businesses have no revenue, no
asset value, no employees and no
chance of survival, as long-standing, cash, asset, idea, and
employee-rich companies reorganize to compete. Nimble, fast, and
flexible is great-and the startups have done a great job in cornering
that market. Enterprises might learn slowly, but they learn.
And the further along they are on their journey towards digitalization,
the more market share they can win back. So, as quickly as the
fast-growing, no-profit SaaS companies have appeared, they will now
begin to collapse.
4. Digital becomes top priority for CEOs
It's
clear that in 2016 digital disruption will impact all markets. Earlier
this year, I predicted that 50%
of all market leaders will be obsolete in the coming decade because of
digital disruption. Competition will come fast and furious from
unforeseen sources. In a 2015 CEO survey, 58% of CEOs surveyed consider
the rapid-fire rate of digital disruption a challenge
to their business. But where there is risk there is also opportunity:
80% believe that disruptive technologies (mobile, the Cloud, analytics)
will bring tremendous value to their business.
That's a heartening statistic.
To
capitalize on opportunity, CEOs will need to understand how disruption
impacts all functions of their organization.
In 2016, CEOs will become the drivers of digital transformation
initiatives, incorporating them in their corporate strategies and all
parts of the business. Adaptive and creative leadership will succeed.
Across the C-Suite, transformational leadership will
overcome outmoded structures and old management styles to empower
Millennials to self-direct, make decisions, experiment, innovate, and
take risks; while providing the systems, structure and governance to
protect the company, its assets and information from
this ‘digital sandbox' style cultural transformation. CEOs will have to
obsess even more about the customer and rethink customer value and
experiences. They will extend their ecosystems with a new willingness to
partner to discover new consumers and markets.
Over
the next five years, CEOs will lead by example, adopting a Digital
Mindset. The Digital Mindset is driven
by disruption, immediacy, and scale with centricity on journeys,
experience, and a real-time-ness. Just like we have an IQ and EQ,
organizations need to develop a DQ, a digital quotient, where strategy,
culture, people, and capabilities converge. The CEO will
lead this charge.
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About the Author
Mark Barrenechea , CEO, OpenText
As
CEO of Canada's largest software company, Mr. Barrenechea oversees the
strategic direction of the organization and upholds the company's
position at the forefront of the
industry. Under his direction, the company has grown both organically
and through strategic acquisitions, into a $1.85 billion technology
company.
Before
joining OpenText, Mr. Barrenechea was President and Chief Executive
Officer of Silicon Graphics International Corporation (SGI), where he
also served as a member of
the Board.