For the majority of surveyed CIOs (75 percent), the network is an issue in achieving their organization’s goals; and for almost a quarter, it is a “significant” issue, according to the Brocade Global CIO Survey 2015.
The continued rise of new technologies, which fundamentally change the way businesses operate and engage with their customers, are responsible for a dramatic renaissance of the IT department. This has led to CIOs facing a range of challenges to contend with, and ultimately highlights a clear need for them to understand and embrace the opportunities offered by the New IP.
Ken Cheng, CTO and Senior VP of Corporate Development and Emerging Business for Brocade, commented, “The role of IT is changing from being an administrator of infrastructure to becoming an enabler of the business — driving innovation and new ways of working to revolutionize customer engagement and transactional processes. More than ever, the CIO has a critical role in advising the board and senior management on strategic business investments, but legacy infrastructure remains a major roadblock, prohibiting business agility and innovation. The New IP offers a way of addressing this, enabling business objectives to be met.”
The survey, conducted by Vanson Bourne, also found that over half spend more than 50 percent of their time reactively citing network downtime/availability as one of the most likely reasons especially for CIOs with more than 1,000 employees in their organization.
CIOs top concerns are security and fast deployment of and access to new applications and services, more than big data and analytics, communication and collaboration, or compliance with regulations.
The top four technology issues CIOs need to address are: operational platforms (Oracle, SAP), data center upgrade/expansion, virtual, security, network upgrade/expansion.
Forty percent of CIOs claim to be concerned about choosing the right vendors to deliver what the business is asking.
Controlling the cloud: A different matter
On the topic of cloud, the survey found that cloud is a given (90 percent have some form of cloud within their organization) but control of cloud acquisition is a different matter. Over one third of respondents state that cloud adoption without involvement from IT is not allowed but does or may happen anyway.
CIOs concerns about non-authorized cloud include its (negative) impact on owned infrastructure performance, inability to manage the network and IT disputes with cloud providers. These are more likely to be worries than security, compliance, poor SLAs, inability to access data or the cost to the business due to duplication of spending.
Eighty-three percent of CIOs believe procurement of cloud services without IT engagement will increase, while 82 percent admit this leads to fears about their job security, and one in five find such activities cause them extreme stress.
When questioned what most worries them in their role, the 79 of respondents were worried about the delivery of new services to support business growth. Seventy-seven were concerned about delivering better analytics/data mining.
The study also found that 68 percent of CIOs were worried about improving delivery of services, with the same percentage citing fast deployment of new applications as a significant concern. Reducing organizations operational expenses was a top concern for 65 percent of the respondents
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