Datrium, pioneer of the secure
multicloud platform for the resilient enterprise,
today announced the findings of its industry report on the State of IT
Transformation, which dives into the critical data center challenges
confronting IT organizations, the barriers preventing them from reaching their
IT transformation goals and the steps they are taking to overhaul their IT
infrastructure to better meet the complex demands of modern applications. The
findings laid out in the report were based on the results of a survey of more
than 540 IT professionals. The research results strongly suggest that although
the vast majority of IT organizations have implemented a broad variety of systems
and tools to modernize, simplify and streamline data center operations, many
are still burdened by inefficiencies, security risks and performance gaps in
their IT infrastructure as well as the excessive time it takes to manage legacy
infrastructure.
"In today's always-on business
climate, digital transformation is key to creating competitive advantage.
However, to achieve complete digital transformation, IT must be transformed as
well. Unfortunately, for many organizations, the time, energy and resources
that should be dedicated to the execution of strategic digital transformation
initiatives are instead being wasted on running antiquated legacy
infrastructure that's overly complex and time-intensive to manage," said Tim
Page, CEO at Datrium. "It's no wonder that 70 percent of businesses today are
in favor of primary and backup storage on a single platform that doesn't
require paying extra for backup."
Liberated by Automation, IT Would
Transform Faster to Support the Always-on Business
With the exponential growth of data
that organizations are producing, storing and analyzing, IT organizations are
becoming increasingly overburdened by the need to manage infrastructure that is
ill-equipped for the ever-more complex data center.
More than 87 percent of respondents
stated they would
spend more time on strategic initiatives if they were able to simplify and
automate routine tasks. However, inadequate infrastructure frequently keeps
this goal out of reach.
- As 41 percent of
respondents identified, the time required to manage legacy infrastructure
is one of the most significant barriers preventing their companies from
reaching their IT transformation goals.
- For many
respondents, the most critical challenge caused by the growth in the
volume, variety and velocity of data is the excessive amount of time spent
managing infrastructure.
- In fact, after
cost savings, time savings was identified as the second most common
consideration IT organizations take into account when assessing if their
infrastructure is meeting expectations.
More Than Half of IT Pros Cite
Performance Deficiency Due to Volume, Variety and Velocity of Data
Among the various challenges caused
by the exponential growth of data, application performance deficiencies were
the biggest concern for organizations, with more than 50 percent of respondents
identifying this as an issue.
- 40 percent of IT
professionals surveyed believe their data center infrastructure is either
not adequately equipped, or only somewhat equipped, to manage all of their
organization's demanding workloads.
- Nearly one-third
(28 percent) of IT professionals find it challenging to provide adequate
data security in the face of exponential data growth
- The top concern
among those claiming their infrastructure cannot properly manage their
demanding workloads is that the hyperconverged systems do not scale to
meet their needs.
Despite Budget Constraints,
Majority Plan to Increase Spend on IT Transformation
Cost is a major consideration for
organizations when implementing IT transformation initiatives. According to
survey results, cost savings was selected by 52 percent of respondents as the
primary measurement of whether IT infrastructure is meeting the goals that have
been set for it.
When asked about barriers to
achieving their IT transformation objectives, nearly half of survey respondents
(49 percent) named budget constraints as a reason.
- Although
transforming IT can be a costly upfront endeavour, many organizations also
view it as an investment that will help provide longer-term cost savings.
- At 86 percent, the
vast majority of respondents anticipate that their company will increase
its investment in IT transformation over the next five years.
Asked whether they would find value
in having their primary and backup storage on a single platform that doesn't
require paying extra for backup--thereby reducing IT spend--70 percent of
respondents agree that it would be valuable.
The Modern Data Center is Becoming
Increasingly Multicloud
The State of IT Transformation
survey showed that the most common steps companies have taken to modernize and
transform IT are related to the implementation of cloud in the data center. The
top three steps respondents identified were the use of private cloud
infrastructure (43 percent), public cloud infrastructure (42 percent) and
hybrid cloud (35 percent). In fact, many organizations are using multiple
public cloud providers to manage their data and transform IT.
- 42 percent of
respondents operate a multicloud data center, with 32 percent using a
combination of on-premises infrastructure and multiple public clouds,
while 10 percent are only using multiple public clouds.
After cloud initiatives, the IT
transformation technologies that respondents reported having already
implemented most were: virtualization, data management automation and
hyperconverged infrastructure.
- Regarding the use
of hyperconverged infrastructure (HCI), 56 percent of respondents noted
that their organizations already have HCI deployed in their data centers,
while an additional 18 percent are currently evaluating the technology.
- However, 34
percent of IT respondents say the HCI systems they are aware of don't
scale to meet their needs
The complete State of IT
Transformation Report is available for download at: https://www.datrium.com/docs/Datrium-Survey-Report-2019.pdf
"We've heard similar challenges and
intentions from our customers as they've been working to transform their IT,"
Page said. "To liberate IT from complexity, modern infrastructure must provide
all five core services-primary storage, backup, DR, encryption and mobility-on
a single data plane. This is why we created a fundamentally new approach that
provides all five key functions from a unified management platform, out of the
gate."