Digital cohesion

Juniper Networks has revealed the results of extensive global market research into business and consumer attitudes towards the readiness for an era of Digital Cohesion, where predictive, automated, network-based mega-services adapt to user behavior, enabling better decision-making and enriching personal and business lives.

  • Monday, 27th February 2017 Posted 7 years ago in by Phil Alsop
The 16-country survey suggests business and consumer users see Digital Cohesion as an inevitable, positive societal development. Consumers anticipate it will bring certain advantages, ranging from improved community infrastructure with more responsive, effective emergency services to more efficient use of personal time, improved education and learning capabilities, lower living costs such as greater home energy efficiency and more informed decision-making. Business respondents say Digital Cohesion will deliver advantages including increased productivity, improved budget efficiency, new workforce management models and business service innovation. And with mobile devices serving as data collection points to drive mega-services, we believe telecommunication service providers will need to re-examine the way they architect their networks in order to support this era.
 
Security Concerns: Users to Make Careful Choice of Trusted Provider Brands
The survey also highlights that consumer and business respondents have concerns about security and compliance around mega-services. It also indicates these concerns will be significantly more influential than design and aesthetic preferences on user behavior and brand choices. These findings suggest that trust is non-negotiable for users and a thoughtful, proactive approach to security provisioning within these mega-services is paramount.
 
 
Highlights include:
 
Consumer Response Data
 
            Living Smarter & Greener
·       Sixty percent of consumer respondents expect their surroundings to become ‘smarter’ over the next five years, as services and apps become more integrated and automated.
·       Fifty-eight percent cite ‘time saving’ as a key benefit of smarter services in their daily lives; 43 percent believe smart services will deliver more useful information leading to better decision making; 27 percent believe it will reduce the cost of living.
·       In a world where Digital Cohesion leads to mega-services, 61 percent of consumers surveyed expect to see improved energy consumption as a result of these services, while 51 percent expect to see better support/response from emergency services.
·       Seventy-five percent of consumer respondents say they rely on mobile connections to live safer, smarter and more efficient lives.
 
Trust Matters
·       Fifty-three percent of consumer respondents specify security as the most important factor when selecting a new smart device.
·       Seventy-seven percent of consumer respondents specify trust as “important” for an integrated, connected service-related device. Seventy-six percent also say brand is an important factor when choosing a ‘smart’ service provider.
·       By comparison, only 20 percent of consumer respondents consider design as a very important factor in smart services.
Business Response Data
 
Driving Business Advantage
·       Ninety percent of business respondents expect business services innovation to result from Digital Cohesion; 91 percent also expect it to enable flexible new workforce management capabilities.
·       When considering the biggest commercial benefits resulting from Digital Cohesion, 60 percent of business respondents cite increased automation and control capabilities and 58 percent cite increased productivity.
·       Fifty-one percent of business respondents also expect Digital Cohesion to deliver improved customer experience within their organizations.
 
Trust is Critical
·       Sixty-six percent of business respondents see security/compliance as the biggest risk factor in Digital Cohesion, yet only 25 percent say they are “completely ready” to trust the security in the underlying networks and devices.
·       When thinking about dealing with the consequences of more smart devices being introduced into an organization’s network infrastructure, 85 percent of business respondents expect to manage the influx pragmatically rather than restricting devices as a way to counteract security concerns.