Wikibon’s 2018 predictions: Data and the cloud will transform every business
One prediction in today’s tech universe is easy: Digital transformation will remain near the top of 2018 corporate strategies. But what issues will shape the directions transformations take in the next few years?
To answer these questions, analysts at Wikibon, the sister research company of SiliconANGLE, convened recently for our annual predictions webinar. Of the 24 predictions we’ll publish, we focused on 13. Those 13 generally fell into three categories (pictured):
- The role data plays in business is about to get clearer and more intense.
- Software and data further commingle.
- The cloud operating model becomes more important than any specific cloud.
The role of data in business
Wikibon believes that the difference between business and digital business is simple: data. Digital businesses use data as an asset and invest in systems to ensure that their data generates superior returns. Nondigital businesses tend to treat data as disposable. In 2018, we believe more businesses will liberate their digital selves. Why? Competition, experience and GDPR.
The competition claim is pretty straightforward. Data is the basis for improved customer targeting, turning products into services, streamlining operations – you get the picture. Companies that are doing a better job with data-as-an-asset are beating companies that aren’t. Like I said, pretty straightforward.
But what about the claim that the GDPR and experience are going to contribute to a pretty significant change in executive attention? GDPR – or General Data Protection Regulation – goes into full effect on May 28. It provides for dramatically stricter data governance rules and significantly greater fines for failure to properly execute these data governance rules.
Although its jurisdiction is limited to the European Union, an important percentage of our business-to-business clients, especially those that feature the word “privacy” in their title, tell us that their businesses intend to adopt GDPR rules globally. Moreover, we’re also hearing that GDPR and related data concerns are impelling a rethinking of executive responsibilities related to digital transformation: Chief digital officers are moving from strategy to operational roles, bringing all the other chiefs — of information, technology, security, privacy and other realms — with them.
Software and data further commingle
Digital business fosters an array of changes, but Wikibon believes that three strategic business capabilities are especially important and require deep planning to ensure transformation success. First, businesses must excel at capturing data. Second, they must be able to transform captured data and streams into data assets that can be applied to different types of work. Third, they must know how to build systems that can turn these potential sources of value into actions, recommendations and predictions – systems that do things on behalf of brands – that actually are regarded as valuable by customers, partners, employees and shareholders.
At the heart of efforts to create and deploy these new capabilities are technology for the “internet of things” at the edge, big data, artificial intelligence in its various forms and new developer tooling to build the systems that will act on behalf of brands. Our predictions highlighted a number of points, including:
- Edge computing architectures are sensitive to a number of factors, including network costs. While concerns about latency, data governance and intellectual property management will remain central to edge computing, network costs are going to be put under a microscope. In 2018, cloud service providers that seek a bigger slice of the edge IoT pie and have built out extensive global networks may seriously disrupt the data communications market.
- Big-data practices and tooling are rapidly maturing, which will have two immediate impacts. First, we’re going to see greater specialization in the data scientist ranks. Second, we expect a lot of consolidation in the open-source big-data tool market.
- AI is going to have an enormous impact on application development, both as something to use in applications and as a catalyst for change in AI practices per se.
The cloud operating model becomes more important than any specific cloud
The cloud is a marvel of human ingenuity. It really is. However, like all contrivances of human passion that are broadly adopted, the cloud, too, is poised for increasing specialization and multitude of form. Wikibon believes that the impacts of this are:
- Customers are asking for the cloud experience where their data demands. That includes on-premise and near-premise cloud capabilities, which is the basis for Wikibon’s novel concept of “true private cloud.” Our models continue to indicate that the TPC market will be bigger than the infrastructure-as-a-service market by 2024.
- Multicloud is emerging as a reality, which will have three major implications. First, Kubernetes is poised to become a defacto workload orchestrator. Second, the gold rush in the space for multicloud management technologies that employ AI is underway. Third, functional programming that pushes function to data is crucial to solving future, highly distributed business problems.
- Systems technologies are poised for a major makeover. Even as the cloud operating model dominates IT strategies, new, data-focused technologies are entering the mainstream of system design, which will have broad impacts on the types of problems technology can solve, how it solves them, and where infrastructure will be located. At the center of these changes? NVMe-oF, or Non-Volatile Memory Express over Fabrics.
Image: Wikibon
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