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Business Management Review | Friday, December 09, 2022
Discussing the latest trends and changes that are reshaping and refining businesses.
FREMONT, CA: The following are the top five predictions for 2023, covering everything from handling cost pressures and outsourcing IT to leveraging the power of data, the emergence of specialised cloud platforms, platform engineering, and the hyperscale boom.
Managing IT Digitisation Will Experience Increased Friction as Economic Uncertainty Continues
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The rapid digitalisation observed in Australia and New Zealand during COVID-19 will continue. However, as organisations attempt to strike a balance between managing talent shortages and the projected economic slump while moving forward with digitisation efforts, expect more friction. Businesses must balance continued digital expansion with spending reductions by getting more value out of their IT budgets.
Outsourcing IT services will become the standard due to the growing cost pressure and the continued talent gap. By selecting managed services, organisations may reduce resource spending and concentrate on the activities that will provide the most value to their operations without compromising on the performance, security, or stability of the data they seek to acquire.
Tapping into Data-focused Managed services Will Enable Businesses to Generate More Value from Data
Most businesses already recognise data as an asset, but many are still working to realise its full potential for developing fresh goods and sources of income. This is the exciting part of outsourcing large data management. Businesses that collect all of their data and put it into a managed service effectively free up time to concentrate on innovation rather than maintaining their databases.
Businesses may make smarter decisions and create a positive feedback loop of new revenue sources producing new data and increasing consumer value if they have a better understanding of their data. In addition, utilising well-established managed services enables organisations to concentrate on developing new products using their datasets, such as gaining more value from the various connections between their data.
Specialist Industry Cloud Platforms Will Drive More Open-source Adoption
The world has changed and is still changing because of clouds. To build out data infrastructure and subsequently assist firms in managing and operating data infrastructure securely and effectively, different specialists are already available. However, they anticipate that the trend toward deeper specialisation will continue in 2023. Building specialised industry cloud platforms on top of managed cloud services now in place to speed up problem solutions and bring everything together.
As industry cloud platforms expand, organisations anticipate that more open-source software will be adopted, particularly in managed services. After all, it doesn't make much sense for specialised cloud firms to use proprietary software. The real advantage of these industry-specific cloud computing platforms will be in providing deeper industry knowledge, which is the next layer of fabric for delivering hyper-specialized technologies.
The healthcare business is one in which we are observing this specialisation emerging in Australia and New Zealand, with the digital health record being a perfect example of this trend in action. New tools are being built on top of existing technologies to deliver sector-specific cloud solutions. This is just another element that will help companies create high-quality services for medical professionals and, eventually, patients.
Platform Engineering Will be Outsourced to Maximise Resources and Spend
Platform engineering is a crucial component of outsourcing industry cloud platforms. According to the Equinix 2022 Global Tech Trends Survey, the lack of available IT talent, in the opinion of 65 per cent of Australian IT decision-makers, is one of the biggest dangers to their company.
Platform engineering outsourcing is becoming much more prevalent when resources are scarce, and companies seek ways to save costs and increase revenue. While everyone is affected by this trend, small and medium-sized organisations can benefit from a managed services partner with expertise in platform engineering.
In particular, it can expand the capacity for open-source data products, broaden the range of cloud provider options, and speed up development. Compared to other solutions, it can lower expenses and help increase revenue streams while keeping secure and compliant and with less risk and downtime.
Hyperscaling Will Grow in Popularity as Businesses Look for Solutions that Will Scale Up and Down at Will
While approximately half of Australia's cloud market is made up of Software as a Service (SaaS), Platform as a Service (PaaS) and Infrastructure as a Service are growing at the quickest rates (IaaS).
According to Gartner researchers, as businesses adapt to a new business environment, the spike in cloud spending seen during the pandemic is anticipated to continue. Hyperscale service providers increased their presence in the ANZ region last year, with Microsoft Azure's New Zealand data centre joining the three already operating in Australia and Amazon Web Services (AWS) establishing new on-premises zones in Perth and Brisbane with Auckland in the works.
Businesses looking to avoid vendor lock-in are looking for IaaS capabilities and open-source solutions inside the hyperscale boom. Overall, businesses need the best-of-breed solutions to meet their developmental needs, including the capacity to maintain flexibility and agility while managing workloads and accelerating innovation in a disruptive industry by fusing software, platform, and infrastructure. This is because modern cloud infrastructure is more complex and requires the best-of-breed solutions.
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