Five key business-tech trends in 2013 for enterprises
The new year will see greater adoption of advanced technology to meet changing demands of enterprises while increasing productivity and creating new experiences for customers, according to Verizon’s top business-tech trends for 2013.
“As companies look to transform their businesses in the year ahead, Verizon is zeroing in on the most meaningful opportunities for our enterprise and government clients worldwide,” said David Small, senior vice president and chief platform officer for Verizon Enterprise Solutions. “Next year, we are continuing to sharpen our focus on harnessing the power of our advanced technology platforms to deliver industry-specific solutions that unlock productivity and value for our clients, their customers and society.”
Here are the Verizon Enterprise Solutions five top business-tech trends:
1. The Forecast Is Bright for Hybrid Clouds
Distributed data centers and the intelligent wired and mobile networks that connect them now represent a viable alternative to traditional virtual private network (VPN) methods that long have formed the backbone of distributed enterprise communications for a generation. Next year, there will be a significant shift from VPNs to public, private and, importantly, hybrid clouds. “By 2013, more than 60 percent of all enterprises will have adopted some form of cloud computing,” according to a Gartner report.
“To keep up with the changing demands of today’s enterprise, the ideal platform needs to be secure and easy to use and configure,” said Small. “In 2013, if you can’t switch workloads between public and private clouds, you won’t be competitive. This next year will require a bold approach to embracing change and re-engineering networks in support of cloud-based applications.”
Examples of recent cloud advancements include health care clouds that help the health care industry address the privacy requirements under the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA); clouds that help retail and other business transactions comply with Payment Card Industry standards; and clouds that help the public sector comply with the Federal Information Security Management Act.
2. The Mobile Majority Is Taking Charge
According to Forrester, “a full 66 percent of employees now use two or more mobile devices for work” – and that has far-reaching implications.
“Employees – and the customers they serve – have less and less separation between their work and private lives,” Small said. “Enterprises in 2013 must accommodate and prioritize this new demand for efficiency and productivity, and information technology departments will play a key role in meeting the growing appetite for professional mobility on a personal level.”
As a result, companies will increasingly adopt cloud-based enterprise mobility strategies – creating “personal clouds” where employees can use enterprise applications to do their jobs more effectively. In addition, companies will be more proactive in tackling the challenges associated with dealing with the division of employees’ personal and professional lives, by using mobile-device management and private application storefronts to create a more secure, mobile work environment.
3. Connected Machines Drive New Insights
The “Internet of Things” has arrived, and it will continue to grow to meet specific industry requirements. According to a Gartner report, “In 2011, over 15 billion things on the Web with 50 billion+ intermittent connections will grow by 2020 to over 30 billion connected things, with over 200 billion with intermittent connections.”
Machine-to-machine (M2M) connections now cover much more than smart energy delivery and smart cars. For example, elaborate networks of sensors with direct machine-to-machine connections now underpin connected health care and the first consumer-ready wave of automotive telematics.
“Verizon’s acquisition of Hughes Telematics will help fuel this evolution,” said Small. “In 2013, this dramatic growth will extend to retail, finance and manufacturing.”
The ability to collect, store and analyze overwhelming volumes of data will define which enterprises extract the best insights and make the most agile decisions, to their competitive advantage. As a result, all enterprises – both business and government – will need to work with vendors having strong and global ecosystems.
4. Networks Will Be Smarter Than You and Invisible
An intelligent fabric that connects everything and everyone will render underlying networks invisible to end users, even as overall IP traffic grows at a compound annual growth rate of 29 percent through 2016, according to the Cisco Visual Networking Index.
“Improvements in network reliability and resiliency, coupled with intelligent end points, serve as the foundation for connecting smart machines and smarter people,” Small said. “We will see a shift in 2013 to more dynamic networks, pervasive IP connections, and purpose-built networks that serve businesses, consumers and society.
“From retail transactions to high speed trading to the digital signs that communicate with us on a daily basis, the network is omnipresent in the background. It continues to grow in importance, as well as just how much we take it for granted.”
5. Security is the New Arms Race
In 2013, security will move out of the specialist realm and become a mainstream IT must-have. Security breaches span access, infrastructure and apps. They happen on fixed and mobile networks. They impact physical, intellectual and financial capital. And the scope is global, according to the”Verizon 2012 Data Breach Investigations Report.”
“We expect identity security to be a much more prevalent issue in 2013,” Small said. “Two-factor authentication is already gaining adherents, but it won’t be enough to counteract the increasing amount and intensity of criminal activity pursuing both intellectual property and financial gain.”
“The race is on to protect every endpoint, every device and everything connected to the Internet. While the Internet affords us countless opportunity it also comes with a price. No longer is strong security an option; it’s a mandatory requirement for all organizations to protect their intellectual and physical capital, customer identities and society at large,” Small said.