NEW YORK, USA: How are small and mid-market organizations responding to trends like cloud computing, mobile deployments and increasingly complex IT requirements? OS33 shares five top IT drivers for SMB decision makers, giving insight into the factors that will be influencing their IT budgets and purchasing decisions in 2012. This is a recommended read for all IT Service Providers as they prepare to deliver on the IT needs of their customers in 2012.
Growth in Mobile and Distributed End-User Workforce
Mobility and "anywhere computing" is transforming business, driving productivity and efficiency. Today's workforce needs to have all their IT tools accessible in one place, standardized across all their devices and networks, while IT managers need the flexibility to adapt to various users needs (ie CEO vs. Sales Team).
Delivering on Increasingly Complex IT
End-user IT needs are rapidly growing more complex. Today's IT is consumed using web-accessible SaaS and Line-of-Business applications, new collaboration tools, using data in the cloud and locally, and across multiple devices. The provisioning, management and maintenance of these many individual components is highly complex and extremely costly for an SMB. CIOs, in study after study, are looking for a simple, integrated way to deliver comprehensive IT to their workforce from one provider.
Security and Compliance Requirements
Companies are becoming more and more reliant on data and are increasingly at risk from cyber security threats, data-theft, malware, device loss and more. Compliance and control of high-value corporate data across devices, SaaS apps, and social media are increasingly complex, and the cost of downtime in dollars, as well as company productivity is extremely high.
Business Continuity and Performance Expectations
SMBs demand enterprise-level performance, business agility and resilience from their IT, and are calling for risk management planning and integrated disaster recovery. Yet with today's economic conditions, shrinking IT budgets are causing decision makers to look for options that deliver IT more efficiently and cost effectively without sacrificing on performance, availability and features.
Increased Presence of Brand Name Options (Google, Microsoft, Amazon, IBM)
Cloud computing is entering the mainstream with awareness being driven by solutions from major brands, and creating competition for existing managed service providers. While not every technology is right for every company, SMBs are reviewing these branded offerings, and evaluating if there is room for additional value from service providers in terms of customer satisfaction, flexibility, and/or product features.
"Two obvious issues point to the need for a unified cloud platform," says Jacob Kazakevich, OS33 president. "1) Google and Microsoft both make great applications, but they've drawn hard lines in the sand with their competing products and are not planning on building a platform that will let them work together. 2) The business world is filled with custom Line-of-Business applications. Google does not make them work in the cloud and unify them and nether does Microsoft. So the question remains, who does? That is the power of OS33."
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