Nutanix announced the findings of its seventh annual
Enterprise Cloud Index (ECI)
survey and research report, which measures global enterprise progress
with cloud adoption. This year's report sheds light on Generative
Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) adoption, investment priorities, and
benefits along with key challenges organizations face to meet the
demands of these emerging workloads.
As GenAI application
adoption and implementation move at a blazing pace, the ECI uncovered
that while the majority of organizations have already implemented a
GenAI strategy, implementation targets vary significantly. Organizations
are eager to leverage GenAI for productivity, automation, and
innovation, but they also face critical hurdles in the form of data
security, compliance, and IT infrastructure modernization. Further, 90%
of respondents expect their IT costs to rise due to GenAI and modern
application implementation. But promisingly, 70% of organizations expect
to make a return on their investment from GenAI projects over the next
two to three years.
"Many organizations have reached an
inflection point with GenAI implementation and deployment," said Lee
Caswell, SVP, Product and Solutions Marketing at Nutanix. "This year's
ECI revealed key trends that we're hearing from customers as well,
including challenges with scaling GenAI workloads from development to
production, new requirements GenAI creates for data governance, privacy,
and visibility, and integration with existing IT infrastructure. To
successfully unlock ROI with GenAI projects, organizations need to take a
holistic approach to modernizing applications and infrastructure and
embrace containerization."
Key findings from this year's report include:
- Application containerization is the new infrastructure standard. Nearly
90% of organizations report that at least some of their applications
are now containerized, and this number is expected to grow with the
rapid adoption of new application workloads like GenAI. Simply put, 94%
of respondents agree that their organization benefits from adopting
cloud native applications/containers. This approach to infrastructure
and application development should be considered the gold standard for
delivering seamless, secure access to data across hybrid and multicloud
environments.
- GenAI application adoption and implementation continue at a rapid pace. Over 80% of organizations have already implemented a GenAI strategy with only 2% of organizations admitting that they have not
started planning their GenAI strategy. That said, implementation
targets vary significantly. Most organizations believe GenAI solutions
will help improve their organization's levels of productivity,
automation, and efficiency. Meanwhile, real-world GenAI use cases
gravitate towards customer support and experience solutions today.
However, organizations aspire to apply GenAI solutions to cybersecurity
and data protection workloads in the near future.
- GenAI adoption will challenge traditional norms for data security and privacy. 95%
of respondents agree that GenAI is changing their organization's
priorities, with security and privacy being a primary concern. Over 90%
of organizations say data privacy is a priority for their organization
when implementing GenAI solutions. Clearly, organizations understand
that security and privacy are critical components of GenAI success.
However, a staggering 95% of respondents still believe their
organization could be doing more to secure its GenAI models and
applications. Security and privacy will remain a major challenge for
organizations as they seek to justify the use of emerging, GenAI-based
solutions and ensure that they adhere to traditional security norms, as
well as new requirements for data governance, privacy, and visibility.
- Infrastructure modernization to support GenAI at scale.
Running cloud native applications at enterprise scale requires an
infrastructure that can support the necessary requirements including
security, data integrity and resilience. Emerging GenAI applications are
no exception to this rule. Almost all respondents (98%) face challenges
when it comes to scaling GenAI workloads from development to
production. In fact, the #1 challenge organizations face when scaling
GenAI workloads from development into production is integration with
existing IT infrastructure. As a result, IT Infrastructure was chosen as
the #1 area of investment needed to support GenAI.
- GenAI solution adoption requires changes to technology and people. 52%
of respondents say their organization needs to invest in IT training to
support GenAI. Similarly, 48% of respondents believe their organization
needs to hire new IT talent to support GenAI. There is no denying
organizations face acute skills shortages and competition for
GenAI-related talent. The good news? Many teams will embrace the
challenge to adopt AI-related competencies and skills organically, as
part of normal work. This year's survey shows that 53% of respondents
believe advancements in GenAI will provide them with an opportunity to
become an AI expert.
For the seventh consecutive year,
Nutanix commissioned a global research study to learn about the state
of global enterprise cloud deployments, application containerization
trends, and GenAI application adoption. In the Fall of 2024, U.K.
researcher Vanson Bourne surveyed 1,500 IT and DevOps/Platform
Engineering decision-makers around the world. The respondent base
spanned multiple industries, business sizes, and geographies, including
North and South America; Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA); and
Asia-Pacific-Japan (APJ) region.
To learn more about the report and findings, please download the full seventh Nutanix Enterprise Cloud Index, here.