Ten years ago, business technologies had saturated to breaking point. The potential they offered were diminished by their deployment and maintenance costs. Then virtualisation, cloud and similar technologies emerged to offer new capacities and optimisation. Companies were able to vastly simplify their technology stacks, as is evident by even large enterprises moving wholesale to service-centric models where you own less and get more.
But that pendulum was going to change direction eventually. The arrival of the cloud world wasn't just about creating efficiencies. It introduced radical new ways of creating applications and deploying services. The initial gains in terms of efficiency were just the start; once the cloud engine started firing on more cylinders, its true potential came to light. Artificial intelligence, real-time data, IOT infrastructure and other cutting-edge services became widely feasible and affordable.
The modern technology era is powerful because of its modularity, but this creates a new type of complexity headache. Several reports have highlighted concerns among modern CIOs that complexity is getting out of hand again. One study found that a single Web transaction used to interact with around 22 technology systems a few years ago, whereas today the number is more than 35. That's a 59% increase in complexity.
The major bite is coming from managing multi-cloud environments. Today's organisation is spoilt for choice. It can juggle hyperscale environments, co-location arrangements, private clouds, application containers and straight service pipes to create the best combination of technologies that enable its desires. But the simple beauty of grabbing an iPad for a performance dashboard belies the agile and complex relationships making that happen behind the scenes.
I can tell you that Dell EMC has been mulling this long before it became a clear challenge. Even before the successful merger that created Dell Technologies, we already pursued ways to better manage the complexity created by cloud environments. I don't say this to advertise our services, but to point out that we never bought into a blue-skies view of cloud. The complexity was bound to return. If it isn't contained and disciplined, then the promise of cloud would soon devolve into the familiar muck everyone's trying to break free from.
We're not alone: the market has been reaching this conclusion as well. A recent VMware survey found that 83%of cloud adopters are seeking consistent infrastructure and operations from the data centre to the cloud. In other words, they want as seamless an experience as possible between the various moving parts of their technology investments.
Digital maturity isn't a single curve. It's more akin to a radar chart, with different indicators spreading outwards to complete the picture. The ability to curtail multi-cloud complexity is increasingly a dominant indicator of digital proficiency. But the means to create that control will depend heavily on the partner of choice.
Reining in cloud isn't just about a nice management suite. It has to cover a powerful integration of hardware, software, services and consumption options. It also can't exist to try and cap your cloud capabilities for the sake of stability. Cloud management has to remain dynamic to allow for the agility, accelerated innovation, improved economics and reduced risk that are the promises of the cloud era.
This requires a multidisciplinary approach that no single vendor can comprehensively provide. It needs a stable of different capabilities, such as virtualisation, infrastructure management and mature business thinking. When a company wants to avoid or untangle the new complexities wrought by cloud, the solutions don't lie in services but how rich the partner landscape is that provides the management services.
Multi-cloud environments are delivering both expected and unbelievable gains, often as smooth interactions for end-users. But the background complexity can diminish returns very quickly and erode digitisation gains. This is the technology conversation of the year and foreseeable future, so let's start talking.
We will be hosting our Dell Technologies Forum on 27 June at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesburg.
Register now and take this opportunity to raise your feelings about complexity and how to keep the cloud in line with your business expectations.
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