Security fears and inadequate infrastructure investments shake IT confidence

Intermedia releases its inaugural IT Confidence Index.

  • Thursday, 15th December 2016 Posted 8 years ago in by Phil Alsop
Intermedia has released the results of its inaugural IT Confidence Index, pinpointing the biggest challenges across IT functions. Revealing a modest overall Confidence Score of 7.2 out of 10, IT decision makers (ITDMs) expressed concerns about the resources available and allotted to them for addressing cybersecurity threats and meeting current and future business demands.
 
The Index surveyed 350 ITDMs, statistically measuring IT confidence levels on a 10-point scale (where zero represents “not confident at all” and 10 represents “extremely confident”). Questions spanned across four topic categories – Security, General IT Services, Infrastructure and Skilled IT Workforce.
 
Jonathan Levine, CTO at Intermedia, said: “Given the critical role IT plays in underpinning business today, a Confidence Score of 7.2 is worrisome. You wouldn’t feel comfortable boarding an airplane if the pilot had a 7.2 confidence level in the plane’s airworthiness. This modest confidence suggests that organisations may be more exposed than leaders realise. We’ll be watching closely to see if further cloud adoption helps improve confidence, or if the insufficient attention given to IT concerns today will further erode confidence in the coming year.”
 
Index finds that small companies are struggling the most
Across all four categories, the Index revealed a stark contrast in overall confidence levels with small companies with fewer than 50 employees (Confidence Score of 5.9) versus medium to large companies, which had higher Confidence Scores (8.7 and 8.9, respectively). As company size and cloud adoption increased, so did confidence levels.
 
Michael Gold, CEO of Intermedia, said: “Consistently, IT professionals at smaller companies measured as less confident than larger ones, expressing concerns about their ability to protect and support their organisations. This uncertainty presents MSPs with a real opportunity to help SMBs that don’t have the resources to run IT on their own.”
 
Other highlights include:
 
·         Cyber threats take a toll on confidence: Relative to the Security category, ITDMs were the least confident in their organisation’s ability to prevent, withstand or stop ransomware, botnets and DDoS Attacks.
·         Cloud applications have overtaken on-premises applications: On average, 56 per cent of internal IT applications currently run in the cloud. Thirty-seven per cent of ITDMs expected to increase this number over the next six months.
·         IT investments are inadequate for current and future business needs: Relative to infrastructure[1] spending, ITDMs gave an IT Confidence Score of 6.5 – the lowest of all categories tracked – indicating that companies may not be investing enough.
·         MSPs and VARs need to adapt: Thirty-three per cent of ITDMs felt that IT consultants were too hardware focused, and 24 per cent felt that IT consultants weren’t putting enough emphasis on cloud solutions, demonstrating that MSPs and VARs have a long way to go in their cloud transitions to catch up to the market.