Are you under the impression that having a backup is the same thing as a successful recovery? These days, businesses think they are mutually exclusive, but the fact remains that having a backup synced to the cloud is not enough to keep your business running when the odds are against you. In fact, your files might be fine, but your business could be dead in the water due to ongoing downtime.
In the frantic dash to deploy generative AI and predictive analytics, most leaders obsess over the glamour work: picking the right LLM, tweaking hyperparameters, or polishing the UI. But beneath the hood, a gritty, structural reality is causing high-budget projects to stall out before they even leave the garage: Data Silos.
Is your network infrastructure a Frankenstein’s monster of mismatched tools and quick fixes? This is what most small business IT looks like; companies adopt solutions without a thought as to how they are supposed to work together, and it ultimately ends up impacting operations. This creates tech debt, and not the monetary kind, that is hard to bounce back from without taking a serious look at your IT practices.
There are two types of digital transformation. There’s the kind that streamlines a business into a powerhouse, and there’s the kind that turns into a ghost ship; perfectly automated, technically efficient, and completely devoid of life. Right now, we are witnessing a massive shift in the way people do things. While your competitors are busy bragging about replacing their support staff with agentic AI, what they are often doing is building a wall between themselves and their customers.
Business technology is the foundation of modern enterprises, crucial for growth and competitive advantage. Yet, many organizations fall into a critical trap: becoming too attached to their initial technology investments, even when they’ve become a liability.