JumpCloud announced the findings from its Q2 2022 SME IT Trends Report, "IT Evolution: How IT Is Securing the Next Stage of Small and
Medium-Sized (SME) Workplace Models." The report provides updated survey
results and new findings to its biannual SME IT Trends Report first released in
June 2021. Now two years into the transition to hybrid-remote workplaces, IT
teams report that employees are becoming better partners in securing company
data and their organizations are investing in IT.
JumpCloud commissioned this biannual survey of SME IT admins to
gain unique insights into the day-to-day experiences of IT professionals who
ably power and secure operations without enterprise-level budget and staff. The
most recent survey results highlight that while IT teams are successfully
managing hybrid-remote work, they are still burdened with a glut of tools
despite a strong preference for more centralized IT management. 43.7% of
employees now require six or more tools just to get their job done, but
74.6% of respondents preferred a single tool.
External events like the war in Ukraine and uncertainty in
financial markets introduce more complexity, adding another layer of
operational concern for SME IT teams. Despite these challenges, SME IT admins
remain dedicated to their jobs and responsibilities even while feeling
overwhelmed by them.
The results of the JumpCloud Q2 2022 SME IT Trends Report are
available in JumpCloud's ebook, "IT Evolution: How IT Is Securing the Next
Stage of SME Workplace Models," which can be downloaded for free here.
Key findings include:
Business outlook:
- Nearly half of
workers are back in the office. 47.1% of workers are in the office full
time in 2022 versus 40.1% in 2021. Remote workers are 24.8% today versus
22.6% in 2021, and hybrid workers are down to 32.5% compared to 42.5% a
year ago.
- World economic
issues are impacting business. 61.4% report that supply chain disruptions
or product shortages have hurt their business (30.5% significantly, and
2.8% disastrously). 57.6% say labor shortages have been an issue for their
business (26.3% significantly, and 5.1% say it's been a serious business
limiter).
- Labor shortages
impact the US more than the UK. 37.1% of US respondents report that labor
shortages have been significant or a serious business limiter versus 25%
in the UK reporting the same.
- War in Ukraine is
also impacting business. 40.5% of all respondents say the war in
Ukraine has impacted their organization. 58.6% agree that the war in
Ukraine has increased their organization's focus on security. In the US,
64.4% agree the war has increased their organization's focus on
security versus 52.7% in the UK.
Security:
- Security is the
biggest challenge in 2022. 59.4% said security was their number one
challenge, followed by device management (48.1%) and migrating all workers
to fully or partially remote (47.8%).
- Majority of
organizations require the use of biometrics for employee authentication. 55.9% currently
require biometrics now. In 2021, only 22.3% of admins reported that
biometrics had been implemented.
- Balancing security
and user experience is a growing challenge. 66.1% agree that
adding security measures generally means a more cumbersome user
experience, an increase from 58.1% who said the same in 2021.
- Outside threats
loom large.
The three biggest security concerns are network attacks (39.7%), ransomware
(30.9%), and software vulnerability exploits (30.6%). In 2021, the three
top were software vulnerability exploits (39.4%), use of the same password
across applications (39.4%), and use of unsecured networks (37.9%).
- Patch management is
seen as successful. 78% are confident that their organization's patch
management strategy is sufficient to protect against known
vulnerabilities. In terms of patch timing, 60.1% are patching within seven
days and over one-third (35.8%) deploy patches ASAP.
- Patch management is
intentional.
Nearly half (47.1%) use a security staff member dedicated to identifying
vulnerabilities and performing fixes, as well as managing the execution,
mitigation, and remediation of patches. 46.7% follow patch schedules
according to vendors' patch release dates.
- Many leave
responsibility to users. 39.4% said patch management is the user's
responsibility to update when prompted.
- Single sign-on
(SSO) is picking up steam. In terms of SSO adoption, 33.9% use it
across their entire organization, 35.6% use it for a limited number of
apps or devices, 17.95% use it for collaboration tools, and 12.5% haven't
deployed it. In 2021, only 20.4% of IT admins had already implemented SSO.
- Organizational
interest in passwordless is strong. When asked if passwordless authentication
is a priority for their company, 62.6% agreed versus 17% who disagreed.
- But IT admins
aren't entirely sold on the importance of passwordless. 52.6% agree that
passwordless authentication is more of an industry buzzword than it is an
IT priority. Only 23.6% disagreed.
- Biometrics are seen
as secure but difficult to implement. When ranking the most secure step
for multi-factor authentication (MFA), the top answer was biometrics
(34.2%) but it's also seen as the hardest to implement (37.6%).
- One-time passwords
(OTP) will likely stick around. When ranked, OTPs are seen as easiest for
users (35.5%), the second most secure (29.7%), and easiest to deploy
(37.6%).
- IT admins
personally use biometrics. Personally, 74.5% use biometrics to secure
their devices through a variety of methods: fingerprint (52.9%), face
recognition (31.7%), voice recognition (10.1%), and liveness detection
(4.9%).
IT management:
- Migrating workers
to remote or hybrid work continues to be a challenge. 47.8% report it's
one of the biggest challenges for their IT team over the last year, versus
41.6% reporting the same in 2021.
- IT admins are a
little happier and not as overwhelmed. 60.4% report being happier in their
job than a year ago versus 56.5% reporting the same in 2021. 59.4% in 2022
are somewhat or very overwhelmed versus 66.9% in 2021.
- Device breakdown
continues to be heterogeneous, and a little heavier on Windows. The combination in
2022 is 68.1% Windows, 20.2% macOS, and 16.9% Linux, compared to 58.2%
Windows, 24.6% macOS, and 20.6% Linux in April of 2021.
- Recession and
inflation concerns loom. 26.2% report they are actively doing
recession planning, while 57.4% are either considering recession planning
or think it's a good idea. Only 5.1% say inflation worries them "not at
all," and 70.4% report some concern (31.2% consider it a big worry, and
8.1% consider it an existential threat).
- Tool creep is a
risk.
The majority of teams (42.7%) use two to three tools to manage the
employee lifecycle and 38.2% of teams use three or more tools.
Life of IT admin:
- Remote work is
easier to manage. 50.7% agree that it's as easy to manage remote/hybrid
workforces as fully in-person workforces. In 2021, 55.8% of admins said
that ongoing management of remote workers was the biggest challenge for
their IT teams.
- Centrally managed
IT tool is highly desirable. 74.6% agree they would prefer to use a
single solution/tool to do their job over managing a number of different
solutions, an increase from 69.7% in 2021 (Dec).
- IT teams use a
number of tools to do their job. 41.1% of IT admins estimate employees need
three to five tools to do their job.
Managed
Service Providers (MSPs):
- SMEs see MSPs as essential partners. 88% say they
currently use an MSP or are considering one. SMEs are most commonly using
MSPs to support their internal IT team (38%), though almost one-third
(27%) use one to completely manage the IT program.
- Knowledge, cost-savings, and user
experience are key MSP benefits. The top three reasons IT teams turn to
MSPs are that they are up to date on the latest technologies (61%), can
provide a better user experience (53%), and are cost-effective (52%).
- MSPs are deployed for a wide range of
functions.
SMEs rely most heavily on MSPs for cloud storage (51%), system security
(48%), system management (48%), and system monitoring (43%).
- MSPs are seen as invaluable for efficiency,
security, user experience, and overall support. 70% say use of an
MSP has resulted in better security, 53% report a better employee
experience, 37% say it has made their IT jobs easier, and 33% say it makes
them more effective at managing IT.
- IT independence, overtooling, and cost, are
the biggest barriers to MSP implementation. For those who
don't use MSPs, the top reasons are that they prefer to handle IT
themselves (56%), that MSPs offer more than they need (33%), and that MSPs
are too expensive (29%).
- IT admins are cautious about MSP security. MSPs would be wise
to have a solid security approach in place and communicate it clearly -
despite high integration with MSPs, over one-third of SME respondents who
currently work with an MSP have concerns about how their MSP manages
security (37%).
- US admins rely more heavily on MSPs than
their UK counterparts. In the US, 34% say an MSP completely manages their IT
program, including technology, process, and support versus 20% in the UK.
9% of US admins have no plans to work with MSPs versus 16% in the
UK.
- US admins are more concerned about MSP
security.
Despite higher MSP rates in use, more US admins (41.5%) report concerns
about MSP safety than UK admins (34.3%).
Geographical differences:
- The UK is unhappier
in their job and sees more challenges. 15.2% of UK admins disagreed that
they were happier in their job versus 9.7% of US counterparts. More UK
respondents also disagreed that it is as easy to manage remote/hybrid
workforces as fully as in-person (33.1%) versus 24.1% in the US. UK admins
also had more budget decreases (7.05% versus 2.4% in the US).
- Roadblocks for
consolidating IT products were the same on both sides of the pond. The top three
reasons for not consolidating were that no single product out there that
will meet all needs (35.7% in US, 46.9% in UK), not wanting to be
dependent on a single product (32.5% in US, 36.9% in UK), and too much
existing infrastructure (31% in US, 37.7% in UK).
- US admins are more
skeptical of passwordless than UK counterparts. In the US, 57.3%
say passwordless is more of an industry buzzword than an IT priority
versus 47.7% in the UK.
- The US requires its
employees to use more tools. 48% of US admins estimate employees need
six or more tools to do their job versus 39.3% in the UK who need the
same.
- UK admins leave
less security management up to users. In terms of enabling employee
access to resources, 17.8% in the US say all accounts are unmanaged and
security requirements like MFA are encouraged but not mandated versus only
9% in the UK.
"From complicated tech stacks to the downstream impact of global
events, IT admins are working to secure and simplify workflows in
less-than-ideal circumstances," said Rajat Bhargava, co-founder and CEO,
JumpCloud. "As IT teams sound the alarm about increased threats, SMEs should
acknowledge these professionals are needlessly juggling a sprawling tech stack
that isn't efficient or cost-effective and that introduces unnecessary risk.
While SMEs look to invest more heavily in IT infrastructure, a platform
approach can improve employee experience and productivity, and provide safe
access to critical applications and data - all for a lower TCO than bespoke
point solutions."
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