

This is a Wikibon Voice of the Community Report, sponsored by Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. Voice of the Community posts are identified paid posts that appear on all pages of SiliconANGLE.com, supporting editorial efforts.
Firms must transform crucial digital business capabilities, but most struggle with the concept. Without information technology leadership, the struggle will continue, but many technology leaders are unsure how to appropriately support and lead these transformations. It is clear that new IT disciplines are necessary and new hybrid cloud management stacks are essential.
The most important force of change to business in 50 years is digital business transformation. Most businesses are not prepared for it; indeed, most struggle to understand it. However, Wikibon thinks it can be understood in simple terms: Digital business transformation is a response to the rapidly evolving role of data in business. Simply put, a digital business uses data to differentially create and keep customers. Moreover, one business can become more “digital” than another based on how much better that business uses data. During their journey, customer typically perceive improved customer experience when interacting digitally and are biasing choices to work with “more digital” brands.
The central role of data and the strategic impact of better data usage means that IT leaders must play a central role in digital business transformation. However, just as business leaders need to be educated on digital business transformation, so too must IT leaders better understand the crucial role that they will play and what they must do to play that role. However, the emergence of cloud computing appears to diminish the influence of IT just as it should be rising, but that’s mainly because a significant portion of traditional IT practices are rooted in managing system resources. IT leaders must start reengineering IT, establish new disciplines and adopt new hybrid cloud management stacks capable of supporting the rapidly evolving needs of digital business. But how? What should the priorities be?
To answer these and other questions, Wikibon convened a CrowdChat to discuss the impacts of cloud computing and digital business on technology and business professionals. For an hour in late January 2017, 88 industry experts who are part of the Wikibon community met online to discuss this topic. The conversation comprised nearly 350 collaborative observations that generated nearly 3.4 million customer impressions. Among the key findings from the collaboration (a summary of that CrowdChat can be found here):
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CrowdChat is a community engagement tool used by Wikibon to research innovation. A CrowdChat brings together – online – experts in a domain to discuss complex technology, social and business issues. Wikibon posts questions to these experts, which catalyzes a bloom of conversational interactions about the subject. Wikibon analysts then combine these interactions with other research sources to develop the findings that we publish in a Voice of the Community research paper.
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The first challenge facing any IT executive seeking to establish new functional priorities is to understand the fundamental nature of the business issues driving digital business transformation and, ultimately, the general impact these changes will have on IT functions. At its core, digital business transformation builds on previous periods of transformation, each of which matched new technologies – including information technologies – to large scale business challenges to alter business propositions and models, industries, even entire economies (see Figure 1). Using technology, businesses have transformed by learning how to optimally move things, manufacturer things and manage physical and financial assets at scale. Each of the transformations were made possible by IT inventions.
Today, we can move, manufacture, and manage almost anything at scale, but are the things the right things, at the right prices, and in the right volumes? And that leads to the challenge driving much of the digital business transformation: How to handle the problems of customer demand. Business executives are pushing each other to address concerns like: What do customers want? How much of it do they want? Where do they want it? How do we rapidly respond to changing customer interests? How can we gain favored status? These questions, and so many more, are motivating digital business transformation.
But businesses have been asking these complex questions for years. Why is digital business transformation happening now? Two reasons. First, customers are using powerful computing devices to change the balance of market power in the economy. Today’s customer has more choice precisely because the costs of discovering, evaluating, choosing, configuring, using and retiring options are dramatically lower than ever. And they’re executing that choice by being more discriminate, price conscious, and social in their market behavior.
As consumers use these devices and share their preferences and experiences, they generate and expel enormous volumes of data, which provides deep insights into wants, needs, and expectations — much of which is making its way into the cloud. And that – the emergence of the cloud – provides the second basis for the digital business transformation. The transformation is driving three new “truths” within IT that will dominate all digital business technology and organizational choices. They are:
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Figure 1. Historical business transformations
Figure 2. Strategic capabilities for digital business
Figure 3. Data lifecycle for digital business
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Traditional IT disciplines are incapable of planning, building and running the sophisticated new technologies and applications required to service customers, establish new digital business capabilities and support a new data lifecycle. IT leaders must enact a new framework of disciplines, cutting across people, process, technology and information. Wikibon calls this new framework the Digital Business Platform, or DBP. It’s comprised of five interrelated approaches to the work of architecting, developing and operating crucial data-driven, digital business capabilities (See Figure 4):
Figure 4. Wikibon’s Digital Business Platform
Cloud computing is the natural target for implementing DBP. However, any large enterprise will require a hybrid mix of cloud computing resources to operate. Some workloads will be too costly or impossible to run in public clouds; a sizable percentage of edge IoT workloads, for example, feature data requirements and cost profiles that demand local execution (see Figure 5). Leading systems companies are delivering true private cloud, or TPC, options that offer the cloud experience – workload plasticity, pay-as-you-use capacity matching and automated administration – in on-premises packaging. Because of these practical workload realities, Wikibon believes that SaaS and TPC options will dominate IT spending over the next decade (see Figure 6).
However, to realize the promise of the cloud experience across a hybrid of public SaaS, public IaaS and TPC resources, enterprises need a new technology and sourcing foundation for ensuring simple multi-cloud management. While pieces of this new foundation are in place, significant new technology invention and innovative packaging of current and future cloud-related technologies are required. An end-to-end framework for hybrid cloud management is emerging, where end-to-end refers to data lifecycle, application lifecycle and execution pathways. These “hybrid cloud management stacks,” or HCM Stacks, will provide:
Figure 5. Data movement costs can make public cloud options impractical
(Source: Wikibon, “The Vital Role of Edge Computing for IoT: 2016 Update,” 11/8/2016)
Figure 6. Wikibon worldwide enterprise IT projections
Figure 7. Who most strongly influences cloud adoption
(Source: Wikibon CrowdChat, January 2017)
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Digital business transformation, at scale and across cloud suppliers and locations, will require an intensive and coordinated effort by business – an effort that IT must help lead. The effort must start with a global understanding of the challenge, which Wikibon characterizes as the “problem of demand.” Solving that problem – which is the basis for most business change today – requires IT groups to center designs on customer experience, excel at crucial digital business capabilities and institutionalize work around a new data lifecycle.
Wikibon believes that technology organizations must point toward a “digital business platform” that provides direct support for the new types of work digital business requires. This platform will be based on five different classes of service disciplines, one each for handling data assets, accelerating development, managing APIs, automating deployments and modernizing operations. Taken together, these disciplines are the basis for modernizing IT and comprise the roadmap for the technology and data underpinnings of any digital business.
Instituting the DBP requires more than architectural concepts. New hybrid cloud management stacks for enfranchising distributed cloud resources into coherent and reliable business assets are emerging. HCM stacks must support traditional and emerging technology roles, work streams and service relationships. This will be an area of intensive technology invention and fevered market competition. HCM stacks will be highly strategic to any digital business. HCM stack adoption must be planned and committed to succeed.
Digital business transformation is inexorable, as is its impact on IT professionals and organizations. CIOs and IT leaders must devise a strategic roadmap to deploy a digital business platform capable of sustaining digital business and over time deploy hybrid cloud management stacks capable of sustaining end-to-end planning, building and running of complex hybrid cloud workloads.
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