Leaders Roundtable: Do Your Tech Initiatives Support Your Sustainability Goals? A Reality Check

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Leaders Roundtable: Do Your Tech Initiatives Support Your Sustainability Goals? A Reality Check

Executives across industries are responding to increased demands for transparency and action on sustainability goals. Investors, customers, regulators, employees, and communities are demanding action on Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) concerns.

With benefits such as improvements in customer acquisition, talent retention, brand equity and improved risk management, there are strong incentives for executives to focus on the right drivers for sustainability goals.  However, Ecosystm research shows that while sustainability is a key focus for 61% of Asia Pacific organisations, only 23% feel they have a clearly defined strategy.

A combination of regulatory pressures, and increased demand from our customers, communities, investors, and supply chains is driving a real urgency for action towards achieving sustainability goals.

Join us and your industry peers to find out more about an Ecosystm study on how leading organisations bring their sustainability strategies to life by putting in place the data, systems, reporting processes, and metrics to ensure they can clearly articulate their progress.

During this session we will discuss:

  • The key drivers for sustainability and the biggest business and technology challenges
  • How organisations are evolving their governance, culture, and people strategy
  • What technologies are companies investing in or augmenting, to support the increased need for data and reporting
  • How organisations are evolving roles and accountabilities for non-financial reporting
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Leaders Roundtable: Do Your Tech Initiatives Support Your Sustainability Goals? A Reality Check

No ratings yet.

Leaders Roundtable: Do Your Tech Initiatives Support Your Sustainability Goals? A Reality Check

Executives across industries are responding to increased demands for transparency and action on sustainability goals. Investors, customers, regulators, employees, and communities are demanding action on Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) concerns.

With benefits such as improvements in customer acquisition, talent retention, brand equity and improved risk management, there are strong incentives for executives to focus on the right drivers for sustainability goals.  However, Ecosystm research shows that while sustainability is a key focus for 61% of Asia Pacific organisations, only 23% feel they have a clearly defined strategy.

A combination of regulatory pressures, and increased demand from our customers, communities, investors, and supply chains is driving a real urgency for action towards achieving sustainability goals.

Join us and your industry peers to find out more about an Ecosystm study on how leading organisations bring their sustainability strategies to life by putting in place the data, systems, reporting processes, and metrics to ensure they can clearly articulate their progress.

During this session we will discuss:

  • The key drivers for sustainability and the biggest business and technology challenges
  • How organisations are evolving their governance, culture, and people strategy
  • What technologies are companies investing in or augmenting, to support the increased need for data and reporting
  • How organisations are evolving roles and accountabilities for non-financial reporting
0
Leaders Roundtable: Shift Your Data Strategy from “Cloud-first” to “Data-first”

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Leaders Roundtable: Shift Your Data Strategy from “Cloud-first” to “Data-first”

All organisations today operate as distributed enterprises.

If you are challenged by building the right architecture; integrating security and resiliency; defining management models; and managing the workloads and environment in a single pane of glass – you are not alone. And managing your technology environment is not even your key priority – you have been tasked with empowering a data-driven, digital enterprise, with seamless, real-time data access at the core of the business and technology strategy.

It is likely that your organisation has increased investments in cloud, data & AI solutions over the last few years. However, do you have a robust and futureproof data strategy?

Ecosystm research finds that in Australia:

  • 60% of organisations are concerned about cloud security; 46% worry about data residency regulations when adopting cloud.
  • 52% of organisations consider remote working a major threat to their corporate data.
  • 79% of organisations feel there is a lack of data governance and limited understanding of the risks involved.

Join us for a discussion on what you should be focusing on, as you are tasked with building the right data infrastructure to shape your organisation’s business goals.

The discussion will cover:

  • The importance and challenges of moving from “Cloud First” to “Data First”
  • How to maintain control of the data environment despite the consistent sprawl
  • The role of Governance in building a data-resilient organisation
0
Leaders Roundtable: Shift Your Data Strategy from “Cloud-first” to “Data-first”

No ratings yet.

Leaders Roundtable: Shift Your Data Strategy from “Cloud-first” to “Data-first”

All organisations today operate as distributed enterprises.

If you are challenged by building the right architecture; integrating security and resiliency; defining management models; and managing the workloads and environment in a single pane of glass – you are not alone. And managing your technology environment is not even your key priority – you have been tasked with empowering a data-driven, digital enterprise, with seamless, real-time data access at the core of the business and technology strategy.

It is likely that your organisation has increased investments in cloud, data & AI solutions over the last few years. However, do you have a robust and futureproof data strategy?

Ecosystm research finds that in Australia:

  • 60% of organisations are concerned about cloud security; 46% worry about data residency regulations when adopting cloud.
  • 52% of organisations consider remote working a major threat to their corporate data.
  • 79% of organisations feel there is a lack of data governance and limited understanding of the risks involved.

Join us for a discussion on what you should be focusing on, as you are tasked with building the right data infrastructure to shape your organisation’s business goals.

The discussion will cover:

  • The importance and challenges of moving from “Cloud First” to “Data First”
  • How to maintain control of the data environment despite the consistent sprawl
  • The role of Governance in building a data-resilient organisation
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Leaders Roundtable: Futureproofing Your Investments For A Digital Era

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Leaders Roundtable: Futureproofing Your Investments for a Digital Era

The as-a-service, consumption-based model has proven use cases in many facets of our daily lives – whether it’s cars we drive, our vacation accommodations, or even the offices we work in.

When it comes to technology, the as-a-service model offered by cloud infrastructure and solutions has already demonstrated its benefits. Organisations today want to pay for their compute and storage requirements as they use them, rather than invest in owning them.

However, businesses are discovering that public cloud is not the answer to every infrastructure need. The costs of moving data, the latency of edge services, sunk investments in local data centres, data residency requirements and the evolving capabilities of hybrid cloud management platforms have allowed businesses to reconsider their approach to cloud. Organisations that implement a hybrid cloud strategy enjoy the traditional benefits of cloud and are able to also integrate multiple applications and computing environments.

Ecosystm research finds that, in Singapore:

  • 53% of organisations want the flexibility of running individual workloads on the cloud environment of their choice
  • 56% of organisations are challenged by security concerns when shifting infrastructure to public cloud; 46% have application performance concerns
  • 70% of organisations choose a hybrid option to leverage existing data centre investments

We invite you to join me at our Leaders RoundTable where we will host a discussion on the role of your technology teams to enable new customer and employee experiences; and how an as-a-service approach to infrastructure procurement and management can have positive impact on your business, IT teams and financial performance.

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Leaders Roundtable: Futureproofing Your Investments for a Digital Era

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Leaders Roundtable: Futureproofing Your Investments for a Digital Era

In the 2010s smartphones changed the game for digital engagement. Today, automation, Machine Learning, AI, and the merging of digital and real-world experiences – all of the building blocks of Web 3.0 – will change the game again.

These technologies and capabilities are already available and many businesses are experimenting with them. How they play out in each industry and geography is yet to be determined – but technology and digital leaders need a plan to manage this change to ensure that their plans and current investments will support future business goals.

We invite you to join me at our Leaders RoundTable where I will host a discussion on how the technology team – and the digital systems and processes they support – will enable new customer and employee experiences, and how we can prepare today to reap rewards in the future.

Topics for discussion include:

  • How, when, and why the merging of digital/real-world experiences will impact technology needs and functions
  • How tech and digital leaders can help their businesses get ahead of the coming challenges
  • How businesses are aligning current investments with future capabilities
  • Why businesses are embracing ecosystems and APIs to integrate applications, improve experiences and simplify customer journeys
  • How leading businesses are overcoming the challenges to ride the disruption wave
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Executive ThinkTank: Preparing Your Business To Capture Future Digital Opportunities

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Executive ThinkTank: Preparing Your Business To Capture Future Digital Opportunities

There are significant changes coming to the way your business interacts with customers and employees.

In the same way that smartphones changed the game for digital engagement, blockchain, automation, Machine Learning, AI and the metaverse – all of the building blocks of Digital 3.0 – will change the game again. These technologies and capabilities are available today and many businesses are experimenting with them – some have even gone live. How they play out in each industry and geography is yet to be determined – but technology and digital leaders in ASEAN need a plan to manage the change that is coming and ensure current investments will support future business goals.

We invite you to join Ecosystm and HPE at our “Preparing Your Business To Capture Future Digital Opportunities” Executive Think Tank to discuss how technology leaders are helping their businesses prepare for the changes and disruption that lies ahead. The technology team and the digital systems and processes they support will enable new customer and employee experiences – but we need to prepare today to reap rewards in the future. For many businesses, this will mean tapping into broader ecosystems and partners to power their digital futures.

Topics for discussion include:

  • How, when and why blockchain, the metaverse, general AI and robotics will impact technology needs and functions
  • How tech and digital leaders can help their businesses get ahead of the coming challenges
  • How businesses are aligning current investments with future capabilities
  • Why businesses are embracing ecosystems and APIs to integrate applications, improve experiences and simplify customer journeys
  • How leading businesses are overcoming the challenges to ride the disruption wave
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The Empire Strikes Back – Vendors Respond to Cloud Hype

5/5 (4)

5/5 (4)

“Cloud is universal – everything is going to be on the cloud soon! If you are not moving to the cloud, you are going extinct! AWS, Microsoft and Google are going to rule the world!” This has been the hyped narrative for some time now. But watch out New World – the Old World is fighting back!

Traditional vendors like HP Enterprise, Cisco, and Oracle are all deploying strategies to remain relevant in the new world. For these vendors – especially for HPE and Cisco that come from a predominantly hardware background – the future is hybrid. They picture a world in which the data centre – either on-prem or in a co-located facility – thrives on, in tandem with the cloud. This is a reasonably good bet. For most large enterprises with a huge repository of applications and data sitting in the data centre, migrating everything to the cloud is a nightmare – fraught with risk and very expensive.

Ecosystm research shows that 32% of organisations have deployed containerisation – and this percentage will only grow. The ability for firms to toggle between data centre bare metal based applications and completely on-the-cloud ones is becoming more manageable by the day. This enormous flexibility allows a firm that has large compute needs to keep some stable workloads in a data centre, whether on-prem or co-located, while simultaneously using cloud-based workloads, optimising spends and performance.

Here is a glimpse into the strategies of three key vendors.

HPE’s ‘as-a-service’ Messaging is Spot on   

Two years ago, Antonio Neri boldly went where no HPE CEO had gone before, promising that HPE’s entire portfolio would be available ‘as-a-service’ within 3 years. At the recently concluded HPE Discover event, there were a flurry of announcements to showcase that GreenLake is indeed on its way to meet that ambitious goal in 2022.

HPE’s recent announcements show customers that GreenLake is an end-to-end solution for managing their IT infrastructure moving forward. It ticks all the boxes: providing flexibility and scalability; the advantage of using both data centre and cloud; and high manageability and security with a full suite of applications.

Examples are the partnership with Azure Stack HCI, to add to earlier ones with leading vendors like SAP, Citrix, and VMware. HPE is building a platform that provides customers with the comfort that they can adopt GreenLake and pretty much have access to any application they may choose to implement – offering full coverage from the Edge to the Cloud. It is extremely interesting that GreenLake allows the option of switching on and switching off processor cores as needed, and the customer pays based on usage. This is surely a first for the industry!

Another example is Lighthouse, which allows the customer to rapidly configure, and provision workloads based on dynamic needs. While all the hyperscalers provide similar services when the workload is on the cloud, Lighthouse allows the same flexibility and speed for cloud services which can be run in the data centre, on-prem, co-located, or even at the Edge.

A third example was the announcement of Project Aurora which will add an additional security layer from validating the input data all the way to verifying the workload at the start and then as it is running. It appears to use an AI/ML system that checks for unexpected behaviours to detect any kind of malware.

It makes good sense for HPE to push GreenLake and move to offering ‘everything-as-a-service’. As one of the incumbent enterprise hardware business leaders, this is a good response rather than to watch one’s business continue to shrink YoY. GreenLake is HPE’s way of futureproofing themselves and making sure they stay relevant in the new cloud world.

HPE Discover 2021

Cisco Secures the Hybrid Workplace

Cisco has been active launching Cisco Plus earlier this year, as their bridge to the as-a-service model with a network-as-a-service (NaaS) offering. Somewhat like GreenLake, Cisco Plus offers flexible consumption for compute, storage, and networking. They are committed to offering most of their portfolio as-a-service over time.

Cisco has shown some resilience in terms of revenue but has still been struggling to grow. After a steady growth since 2017, the revenues dropped by 7% in 2020 almost as a direct impact of COVID-19. The post-pandemic world has the potential of being a bigger threat for Cisco. Many estimates show the number of people working from home is likely to go up dramatically and Cisco’s key networking offering could rapidly become redundant. However, at Ecosystm we believe that the hybrid work model will be predominant.   

Cisco is also betting on a hybrid world. No matter where one works from, there are networking needs. Cisco’s focus, therefore, is on security – this will be on the mind of virtually any enterprise as it chalks out its future strategy. With a hybrid environment, making everything secure becomes more complex while continuing to be vital. Cisco has a heavy emphasis on Secure Access Service Edge (SASE) – the idea that the security envelope now has to be a flexible form that has a presence everywhere that the enterprise needs to be. This will make a lot of sense to most enterprises as they tread the hybrid path.

Cisco will offer a portfolio of tools to make it increasingly easier for customers to use multi-cloud, multi-vendor environments, offering the best of both worlds.

Oracle Incentivises Cloud Migration

Oracle has a different approach because they are trying to solve a different problem. They are competing with the hyperscalers, while fully acknowledging a hybrid world. However, as a company with less legacy in hardware, it makes sense for them to focus on migrating to cloud rather than on hybridisation. Oracle has just announced that they will subsidise existing customers who add cloud workloads with them, by providing discounts on the existing licensing fees that the customer is paying Oracle. This discount appears to be around 25% to 33%. In essence, this means that if a customer spends about USD 100k with Oracle on licensing and decides to start moving workloads to the Oracle Cloud worth somewhere between USD 300-400k, they can potentially write off the entire license fees they are currently paying!

Conclusion

There is a strong effort from every vendor right now to retain and consolidate their customer share and build a vision that convinces the customer that they are the way to go. For the traditional hardware players that vision is of a hybrid world – attractive to today’s large enterprise. For the likes of AWS, Microsoft, Google, and Oracle it is all about moving the customer to their cloud. The assumption of course is that moving someone to your cloud will lead to more of your apps being used by the customer. For the hardware vendors like Cisco and HPE, it is all about moving the customer to their own platforms which empower hybridisation. In all cases, a necessary component is to offer ‘everything-as-a-service’ upending the traditional models of selling.

In my opinion, with time the IaaS portion of the cloud is likely to gradually devolve into something like a utility. There will be a lot of upheavals and market disruption before we get there, but eventually, software and other services are likely to stand separate from the infrastructure provider. All the vendors are therefore depending on capturing the customer at the platform-as-a-service (PaaS) level, but even this is likely to get commoditised over time. Eventually, the winners will be disparate providers of the best applications for different functions. Meanwhile, we are in for an extremely interesting ride as we see all the vendors jockeying for space!

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Ecosystm VendorSphere: HPE Discover

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5/5 (5)

Two years ago at Discover, HP Enterprise’s President and CEO, Antonio Neri promised that all of HPE’s portfolio would be available ‘as a service’ within three years.

At the current Discover virtual events, HPE made a series of announcements to showcase that GreenLake is on its way to meet that ambitious goal in 2022. HPE continues to evolve their enterprise capabilities, as is demonstrated by their acquisitions of Determined AI and Zerto.

Ecosystm Advisors, Alan Hesketh, Darian Bird, and Niloy Mukherjee comment on how HPE is preparing for the Hybrid world and the key announcements at HPE Discover, 2021 including GreenLake, Lighthouse, and Aurora.

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