Industry executives and experts share their predictions for 2022. Read them in this 14th annual VMblog.com series exclusive.
Information Technology Industry Insights for 2022
By
Bruce Friedman, Network & Infrastructure Architect, MNJ Technologies
What a year 2021 was for the information technology industry.
The global pandemic forced a widespread shift to an increasingly remote
workforce, which pressured IT departments to deliver better tools for
collaboration, improved resource provisioning, and stronger endpoint security.
As the pandemic spread, many IT leaders thought they could handle
the change to a remote workforce and keep their businesses running smoothly. But
then everything kind of blew apart at the seams when people realized this disruption
was completely resetting expectations for both employees and management. Our
work life will never be the same as it was before the Covid-19 outbreak.
Going into 2022, many of the solutions we adopted for remote
work are reshaping how the IT department functions. At the same time, many workers
are rethinking their careers and deciding not to return to work in a
pre-pandemic way. As a result, we are creating a permanent hybrid workforce, in
which employees and their IT needs are based at home, at an office, or anywhere
else around the globe.
This growing trend for a hybrid workforce has deep
implications for IT departments, and we should expect to make more refinements to
address this change over the coming year. Most organizations are getting better
at managing remote meetings and securing data at many more endpoints, out of
sheer necessity. But we are still experiencing these rapid changes, so we
should expect the coming year to be a time to wash, rinse, and repeat more of
the same while we learn from each new project and experience.
As we reflect on the past year and look ahead in the New
Year, it's helpful to consider some of the top trendlines facing IT organizations
today.
The
Hybrid Workforce Is Driving Hybrid Cloud Adoption
Many companies are still reluctant to move all their business
processes to a hybrid cloud architecture for various reasons, especially in the
midmarket. Some are concerned about forsaking control of data, while others are
stymied by internal inertia. However, most organizations will end up in the
hybrid cloud eventually.
Hybrid cloud adoption combines in-house private datacenters with
leased space on public cloud platforms such as AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google
Cloud, and Alibaba. The private cloud approach requires managing datacenters
in-house or leasing dedicated racks of servers, processors, and storage from
managed service providers such as Rackspace. That can be a costly proposition,
but in some cases, the private cloud approach makes sense to closely hold
sensitive data such as personal health and financial records, or a company's
intellectual property assets.
That said, there is undeniable value in moving many aspects
of traditional business IT to the cloud. A classic example involves Microsoft
Exchange. Most organizations historically managed their own Exchange systems
in-house because email was such a business-critical function. But when
Microsoft introduced Microsoft 365 as a cloud service, it offered greater
convenience and stronger security protections than most companies could provide
on their own. Today, most organizations have converted their email systems to
Office 365.
Common
Missteps When Buying Tech Gear
Unfortunately, many organizations are reluctant to expend
capital on technologies they don't really understand, especially at midsized
companies. The common mindset is to be conservative and hold down costs,
without really grasping the relative value propositions of their IT
investments.
This frugal mindset can end up costing more money in the end
because much of the technology that people buy is already dated by the time it gets
implemented. The biggest mistake comes in blindly pinning the technology
problem to a line-item capital expense, rather than doing a complete analysis
of the overall value and return on investment for each purchase.
Even large companies can get complacent about purchasing IT
based on "how it has always been done before." Those who have long bought
servers through the same purchasing processes time and again will often fail to
do a server utilization analysis to assess whether the server purchases were worthwhile.
IT buyers should revise their purchasing systems and
evaluations to be more precise and targeted over the coming year and beyond. In
this way, they can reinvest all the savings they accrue to improve other higher
value aspects of the IT role.
Addressing
the Nagging Shortfall of Qualified Talent
Right now, everyone is facing a very tight market for talent,
which makes it hard to hire the right people with the right skillsets to do the
work. That is one of the biggest challenges for IT today, and it gets even
harder to find practitioners who possess a high-level expertise to meet complex
business objectives through technology.
The demand for talent has outpaced supply over the past
decade, and this problem shows no signs of slowing down. Due to the dire shortage
of IT skills, the market faces growing pressure to hire new staff at a
competitive pay scale.
Part of the blame for this problem rests squarely with
technology companies and leaders themselves. We need to do a better job of
investing in local talent development, such as through educational programs in
schools that can engage student geeks to get more excited about computers at a
younger age. As an industry, we must work harder to create a more robust
pipeline of talent over the next decade.
Strengthening
Security in the Time of Covid
Faced with the mass exodus to a remote workforce, the top
priority for IT leaders today is ensuring appropriate levels of security to
protect their highly distributed business users and assets. This issue will
remain a central concern in 2022 and beyond.
We know that cybercrimes will also continue to rise with the
growing prevalence of digital data stores around the world. After all, it is
easier to sit at home and hack into a computer system than it is to throw a
brick through the window of a physical bank. Also, it becomes harder to assess
and observe the potential attack surface for legions of employees who now work
from home offices. Organizations will need to become more adept at
understanding the contours of these distributed attack surfaces.
To overcome all these pressing challenges, IT leaders will need to pursue effective strategies
for digital transformation that can solve real business problems through
technology adoption. A successful digital
transformation strategy combines several elements, but the most important points
are to align the right people with the right technologies and processes. From
there, the focus should be to continually improve those processes through ongoing
software development and staff training.
The pandemic has created enormous challenges for everyone,
but IT leaders can emerge from this crisis in stronger shape by reevaluating
their technology roadmaps with a clear plan to streamline their processes in
the year ahead.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Bruce Friedman is the Network & Infrastructure Architect for MNJ Technologies and Ignyte, MNJ’s new digital transformation aggregator business. Bruce joined MNJ in 2019 and he has been employed in Information Technology since 1995. Bruce earned his Architecture title in 2005, and he has worked in IT architecture in the healthcare, finance, defense/government, transportation and logistics, insurance, and legal industries.