CLOUD: The future of business

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Published May 31, 2017

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The future of business is in the cloud. That is the message from global analysts as the latest IT sales figures show a marked shift away from hardware. The shift to cloud services and other digital business solutions has slashed Gartner’s global IT spending growth forecasts by half: a cut of $67billion (R864.36bn) for this year alone, with data centre growth predicted at a modest 0.3percent in 2017.

This is not necessarily bad news, depending on where you are with your digital transformation journey.

The same Gartner report expects growth in enterprise software spending of 5.5percent.

This was echoed by SAP’s first quarter 2017 revenue figures: cloud subscriptions and support revenue in the Europe, Middle East, and Africa (Emea) region grew 43percent, with an overall revenue growth of 10percent for cloud and software revenue across the region.

In South Africa, the results were even more indicative, with triple-digit software growth recorded.

The shift to widespread adoption of cloud services in essence turns traditional IT capex into opex. This is how it works:

Take a data centre as example. From the rebar in the foundations to the halon extinguishers in the ceiling and everything in between, it all sits on your balance sheet as an asset.

As chief executive, you have to create a return on your capital employed. That becomes hard to do when your scale is sub-optimal, and you need to keep in mind the added costs of development, testing and quality assurance systems.

Systems sprawl

Often, you end up with systems sprawl that becomes ever more complex to manage, and makes those positive returns all the more elusive.

Cloud computing takes those assets off your balance sheet and turns them into opex: this makes it far easier to predict and extract positive returns on capital employed, especially when working with the leading global cloud vendors such as SAP.

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Because they’re operating at a scale that most businesses are unlikely to ever reach, they are able to determine best-practice processes quicker and transfer these learnings on to their clients. In addition, they can provide cloud solutions at lower costs and offer clients the flexibility of a subscription model that scales with the business - this is highly impractical when you’ve invested huge sums into physical data centres.

Every chief executive needs a business strategy for the digital economy.

The ubiquitous and constant generation, processing and consumption of information and content is an inescapable part of life for all but the most marginalised.

The latest global statistics show that there are currently more than 3.7bn Internet users, of which 2.7bn use one or more social media.

In Africa, Internet penetration is still low at around 29percent, but rapid urbanisation and continent-wide investment in especially mobile Internet infrastructure is driving web usage growth.

All of this would point to the need for a digital strategy for every organisation doing business on the continent.

Digital economy

But the modern business does not need a digital strategy. The modern chief executive needs a business strategy for the digital economy.

Chief executives today are tasked to improve shareholder returns, help the business become more profitable, ensure the business survives and grows, attract and retain scarce talent, reduce risks to the business, and drive innovation.

This last point - innovation - is critical. More than half of the Fortune 500 from 2000 are gone. In their place are a highly innovative new breed of digital business: think Netflix, Amazon, Facebook, Tesla and more. These companies leverage technology to become more competitive and create new profit pools, upending entire industries seemingly overnight.

Cloud computing enables innovation by levelling the playing field. All modern innovation requires a solid technology backbone to achieve the type of scale that would help translate innovative ideas into commercial drivers.

By eliminating the complexity and managerial burden associated with running on premise IT, businesses can direct their IT to address tomorrow’s business problems instead of maintaining yesterday’s landscape.

By virtue of their size and scale, leading global cloud services providers get the benefit of feedback from hundreds of millions of users, giving them unique insights into the types of innovations and improvements they have to make to ensure their cloud services are delivering optimum value.

This ensures that the cloud technology supporting modern businesses is constantly improved and remains ahead of the innovation curve.

Leveraging the power of cloud solutions brings every aspect of the business together, seamlessly integrating customers, operations, devices, and business partners. It allows you to focus on innovation, freeing you up to reimagine your future in a digital economy.

Can you afford anything less?

Cameron Beveridge is a director at cloud, SAP Africa.

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