Reliance on partners when embracing hybrid IT

Digital Realty partners with HPE on research that explores the opportunities and challenges driving enterprises when it comes to digital and IT transformation
Pro

4 November 2022

In association with Digital Realty Ireland

Data acts as our digital currency – it powers our economy, drives innovation, and demands that we optimise how we manage and organise our data to ensure we can derive the insights necessary to deliver better business outcomes. It empowers us to serve our customers more effectively, while also helping us to navigate phases of rapid change and tumult in the world around us.

Data has been a critical resource for decades and yet many organisations, specifically those in Ireland, rate data management and all that it entails as one of their biggest challenges.

 

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According to a recent research report, commissioned in partnership with Hewlett Packard Enterprises (HPE), nearly one in three (28%) respondents said they grapple with the management of the ever-growing amounts of data within their organisation and over a third (36%) of organisations reported they would like to understand how to make better use of their data. Overwhelmingly, 64% said data security was their main IT challenge.

Critical to underpinning the right data management strategy is having the right IT infrastructure to meet the rapidly changing business requirements Irish businesses now face. Encouragingly, Irish businesses are recognising that a move away from solely storing data in owner-operated server rooms is required, and almost half (45%) of Irish organisations are making a move towards a Hybrid IT approach, whereby they plan to leverage both on-premises systems and off-premises cloud/hosted resources to support their IT infrastructure. Taking this further still, our research indicates there will be a significant (63%) reduction in the reliance of on-premises facilities over the next two years.

Seamus Matthews, senior director, strategy & business development, Digital Realty Ireland, explained: “To meet the growing demands of data management and data gravity, we see enterprise and public sector customers becoming ever more dependent on a mix of hybrid cloud resources, channel partnerships and their in-house capabilities. They are also becoming more vulnerable to security concerns, technological disruption, and unsustainable facilities. This is particularly evident if they remain tied to internal server room installations, often expensive and inflexible and certainly lagging in terms of connectivity.  This is often compounded further when managing incredible volumes of data and data growth.”

While the benefits of embracing a Hybrid IT approach remain clear, making such changes are not without complexity.  For many, the reality of transforming an organisations’ IT infrastructure remains daunting. That is why finding partners to influence the design of, deploy and support new hybrid IT environments requires careful consideration before embarking on any transformation journey – often taken one application or workload at a time. This claim is mirrored in our findings, with the majority of enterprises saying that they rely on partner vendor support to enable them to achieve their IT goals.  

In fact, a third (31%) of Irish enterprises currently use systems integrators or managed hosting providers to manage their infrastructure. The ecosystem doesn’t end there, with almost all the companies surveyed saying they rely on multiple software and hardware vendors, consultants, and cloud services providers to navigate their IT transformation journeys. While a fifth (21%) of companies stating they plan to use a data centre or colocation provider to support the deployment of their hybrid IT strategy.

“Delivering a hybrid strategy demands flexibility, investment and partnerships that can meet the need for public cloud access, capacity assurance, security, connectivity, compliance, and cost-effectiveness – all of which were highlighted in our survey findings. Today, many Irish businesses are only at the beginning of their digital journeys, while others are well underway. The wider impact on our domestic economy, and for the future of society more broadly, promises to be both challenging and exciting,” said Matthews.

To read a full copy of the report, click here.


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