Intelligent CIO Middle East Issue 13 | Page 86

FINAL WORD I n 2016, Middle East enterprises went through one of the biggest transitions in a decade as they began to embark on their digital transformation journeys. Characterised by growing uptake of third-platform, enterprise mobility and big-data initiatives, all supported by increasingly complex hybrid networking infrastructures, this necessary evolution has not been without its challenges for businesses in the region. Enterprises move toward a strategic architecture for digital transformation IDC predicts that, by 2017, 60% of digital transformation initiatives will be unable to scale due to a lack of a strategic architecture. And by 2018, 70% of siloed digital transformation initiatives will ultimately fail due to insufficient collaboration, integration, sourcing, or project management. Research from MIT Sloan Management and Deloitte University Press concurs. They found that less-mature digital companies tend to take a tactical, piecemeal approach as they solve discrete business problems with individual digital technologies. As a result, they don’t fully integrate digital technologies with their business operations, don’t solve the underlying infrastructure problems that cause frequent application performance issues across the enterprise, and fail to deliver the required technical capabilities at scale. Prediction: Enterprises will realise that, for application, compute, storage, and networking infrastructure to work optimally, it all must work together, seamlessly, as a system. Any point of weakness or failure anywhere in the infrastructure can make the whole system fail. Thus, a strategic architecture must extend across the enterprise and unite all the components into a seamless, software-defined system delivering high-performing applications, data, and services. Everything becomes softwaredefined Whether it is compute, storage or networking, you can see increased impact and adoption of software-defined everything. In the software-defined world, 86 INTELLIGENTCIO TAJ ELKHAYAT Regional Vice President, Middle East and Africa at Riverbed Technology DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION ISN’T A FAD AND WE EXPECT TO SEE THE MIGRATION OF CRITICAL APPLICATIONS TO THE CLOUD INCREASE IN 2017 ACROSS ALL MARKETS. LARGE ENTERPRISE CLOUDS ARE NOW BEING ADOPTED BEYOND JUST CUSTOMERFACING RESOURCES LIKE ECOMMERCE WEBSITES Prediction: Enterprise organisations will implement technologies that ensure agility, visibility and performance in order to transition more and more to a software-defined enterprise. This is a new development as internalfacing applications are traditionally kept internal. The challenge with migrating old systems and applications to a newer encrypted approach is that the network capabilities can be stretched thin or become too fragile. This ultimately creates complexities tied to application planning, performance monitoring and final migration to the cloud. Digital transformation drives next wave of cloud Enterprise-level internal resources including business-critical applications are now being moved to the cloud. Prediction: Digital transformation isn’t a fad and we expect to see the migration of critical applications to the cloud increase in 2017 across all markets. Large enterprise clouds are now being adopted management and control of computing environment, storage and networking is automated by intelligent software and not by the hardware components. www.intelligentcio.com