F5 announced the availability of its 2021 State of Application Strategy report.
In its seventh iteration, this annual survey identifies several
converging trends, many of which have been significantly impacted as
organizations revamp digital experiences to address the evolving
realities of COVID-era consumers. Companies have significantly sped up
their digital transformation efforts in the past year, a theme
anticipated to persist beyond the pandemic. With limited in-person
interactions, applications-and the digital experiences they
facilitate-have become synonymous with an organization's presence and
ability to thrive.
"This
year's report highlights the many contrasting priorities that IT teams
are currently facing. Of course, there's the familiar one of flexibility
and convenience versus security, but then you also have organizations
generating an immense amount of data while seeking ways to extract
meaningful insights from that data," said Kara Sprague, EVP and GM,
BIG-IP at F5. "Similarly, we find companies relying more on automation
to reduce operating costs while increasingly tailoring applications for
customer-centric digital experiences. Many of these are a function of
the speed in which the industry has responded to COVID-in that it forced
a myriad of operational considerations, concerns, and opportunities to
be addressed simultaneously almost overnight."
Improving
connectivity, reducing latency, ensuring security, and leveraging data
insights are now even more essential, as IT teams have found it nearly
impossible to keep pace with the rate of change and digitization of
experiences. Moreover, while microservices, APIs, and containers may
accelerate individual application rollouts from a DevOps perspective,
the reach and pervasiveness of modern apps has also resulted in
heightened complexity-with many organizations lacking the skill sets to
truly streamline deployments. This is especially the case when managing
broader application portfolios that span multiple generations of
application architectures. Correspondingly, this new research centers on
the following four trends, pointing to an elevated interest in cloud
and as-a-service offerings, edge computing, and application security and
delivery technologies that require less expertise to deploy and manage
while providing out-of-the-box insights.
Continued Modernization of Apps and Architectures to Enable Better Digital Experiences
According
to the survey, 87% of organizations operate both modern and traditional
architectures, with modernization deemed necessary when legacy systems
are too rigid to adapt to rapidly changing business conditions. More
than three-quarters of respondents (77%) reported that they are
presently modernizing internal or customer-facing applications, with
APIs as the primary method given their ability to combine capabilities
of traditional and modern application components. In addition, the
percentage of organizations maintaining multiple app architectures is
growing, with the survey also affirming that as-a-service and managed
service offerings continue to be viewed as replacements for some
applications where vendors can provide cloud-friendly alternatives.
The Rise of the Edge as Containerization Expands
Edge
computing generally refers to operations performed outside of a
centralized data center. With employees and consumers logging on from
increasingly distributed locations, edge computing has been identified
as a significant means to reduce latency and increase the real-time
responsiveness required by today's applications. Accordingly, the edge must evolve to
better support modular application components such as containers
residing across multiple cloud locations. In addition to promoting
faster and more efficient deployments, placing containerized
applications at the edge can improve scalability and the customer
experience. Demonstrating an appetite for these advantages, survey
results note that 76% of organizations have implemented or are actively
planning edge deployments, with improving application performance and
collecting data/enabling analytics as the primary drivers.
Accelerating Growth in SaaS and Cloud Deployments, Balancing Flexibility and Security
With
the percentage of applications deployed in the cloud rising‚ more than
two-thirds of respondents (68%) are also hosting at least some of their
application security and delivery technologies in the cloud.
Simultaneously, organizations are positioning themselves to address the
architectural complexity that results from adding SaaS and edge
solutions, maintaining on-premises and multi-cloud environments, and
modernizing applications. Successful integration of these elements
within a cohesive application strategy will require up-leveling how
tools, skill sets, IT processes, and analytics are applied across
dynamic architectures. Security continues to be a key driver, with
efforts to stay ahead of attackers frequently requiring capabilities
beyond what organizations have the resources to manage on premises.
Further highlighting this challenge, SaaS for security was identified as
the top strategic trend among survey respondents.
The Importance of Telemetry in Meeting Evolving Customer and Business Expectations
Harnessing telemetry to turn large volumes of data into business insights is essential for adaptive applications.
Even still, an overwhelming 95% of respondents believe they are missing
insights related to performance, security, and availability, indicating
a desire for a much clearer end-to-end picture than their current
monitoring and analytics solutions provide. Individuals across
organizational roles were in uniform agreement on the topic, citing the
top three insights missed as: the root cause of application issues;
performance degradation causes; and potential attack details. In
parallel, nearly three-quarters of respondents intend to leverage AI to
better utilize telemetry data, and more than half are looking toward AI
to help their organizations transition to applications that can
automatically adapt to better defend themselves and respond to changing
conditions.
The
report represents more than 1,500 respondents worldwide from a breadth
of industries, organization sizes, and professional roles.
Fundamentally, the survey focused on IT decision-makers to best
highlight the priorities, concerns, and expectations of those most
responsible for meeting the toughest challenges of today's digital
economy. Together, their responses form a compelling perspective of how
organizations are evolving application strategies to better serve the
current and anticipated needs of customers.