Source: Veeam infographic for Singapore. Cost of downtime for companies worldwide. |
- Eighty-two percent of enterprises are facing a gap between user demand and what IT can deliver, or an ‘availability gap’
- Unplanned downtime cost enterprises an average of US$21.8 million each per year, up 36% YoY
- Two-thirds of enterprises admit that digital transformation initiatives are being held back by unplanned downtime
The vast majority of organisations (96%) have digital transformation initiatives on their roadmap and more than half of those initiatives are in process now*, placing a huge burden on businesses to deliver access to services, data and apps, at any time and from anywhere 24x7x365, says Veeam Software, the provider of solutions that deliver availability for the always-on enterprise.
However, the industry data** released today from Veeam, shows a major disconnect between user expectations and what IT can deliver that is hindering innovation. In fact, 82% of enterprises admit to suffering an ‘availability gap’ (the gap between what users demand for uninterrupted access to services and what businesses and IT can deliver), which is impacting the bottom line to the tune of US$21.8 million per year. Almost two thirds of respondents admit that this is holding back innovation.
Now in its sixth year, the 2017 Veeam Availability Report surveyed more than 1,000 senior IT leaders from 24 countries and shows that 69% of global enterprises feel that availability (continuous access to services) is a requirement for digital transformation; however, the majority of senior IT leaders (66%) feel these initiatives are being held back by unplanned downtime of services caused by cyber-attacks, infrastructure failures, network outages, and natural disasters (with server outages lasting an average of 85 minutes per incident).
While many organisations are still “planning” or “just beginning” their transformational journeys, more than two thirds agree that these initiatives are critical or very important to their C-suite and lines of business.
The 2017 Veeam Availability Report reveals that while downtime costs vary, the average annual cost of downtime for each organization in this study** amounts to US$21.8 million, up from US$16 million from last year’s report.
Downtime and data loss are also causing enterprises to face public scrutiny, in ways that cannot be measured by a balance sheet. This year’s study shows that almost half of enterprises see a loss of customer confidence, and 40% experienced damage to brand integrity, which affect both brand reputation and customer retention. Looking at internal implications, a third of respondents see diminished employee confidence and 28% have experienced a diversion of project resources to ‘clean up’ the mess.
The report also shows that more companies are considering cloud as a viable springboard to their digital agenda, with software-as-a-service (SaaS) investment expected to increase by over 50% in the next 12 months. Indeed, almost half of business leaders (43%) believe that cloud providers can deliver better service levels for mission-critical data that their internal IT processes. Investments in backup-as-a-service (BaaS) and disaster recovery as a service (DRaaS) are expected to rise similarly as organisations look for these processes in the cloud.
In addition, 77% of enterprises are seeing what Veeam has called a ‘protection gap’ (the gap between what data users are willing to lose and what data IT can protect) with their expectations for uptime consistently being unmet due to insufficient protection mechanisms and policies. Although companies state that they can only tolerate 72 minutes per year of data loss within ‘high priority’ applications, Veeam’s findings show that respondents actually experience 127 minutes of data loss, a discrepancy of nearly one hour. This poses a major risk for companies.
Source: Veeam Singapore infographic. What data loss or downtime can lead to. |
“Today, immediacy is king and consumers have zero tolerance for downtime, be it of a business application or in their personal lives. Companies are laser-focused on delivering the best user experience and whether they realise it or not, at the heart of this is availability. Anything less than 24x7x365 access to data and applications is unacceptable. However, our report states such ubiquitous access is merely a pipedream for many organisations, suggesting new questions need to be asked of transformation plans and a different conversation started about existing infrastructure. Enterprises are facing a major crisis from competitors that are able to offer this uptime and combine that with user experience,” said Peter McKay, President and COO of Veeam Software.
“The results of this survey show that most companies, even large, international enterprises, continue to struggle with fundamental backup/recovery capabilities, which along with affecting productivity and profitability are also hindering strategic initiatives like digital transformation. In considering the startling availability and protection gaps that are prevalent today, IT is failing to meet the needs of their business units, which should gravely concern IT leaders and those who answer to the Board,” said Jason Buffington, Principal Analyst for data protection at the Enterprise Strategy Group.
Interested?
Download the 2017 Veeam Availability Report
View the global infographic
*Source: ESG Research Report,
2017 IT Spending Intentions Survey, March 2017
**Veeam commissioned Enterprise Strategy Group (ESG), an IT analyst, research, and strategy company, to develop and execute the survey for this report. ESG conducted a comprehensive online survey of 1,060 IT decision makers (ITDMs) from private and public sector organisations with a minimum of 1,000 employees***, in 24 different countries, in late 2016. The countries surveyed in Asia Pacific and the Middle East include Australia, mainland China, Hong Kong, India, Japan, KSA, Singapore, Thailand, and the UAE.
**Veeam commissioned Enterprise Strategy Group (ESG), an IT analyst, research, and strategy company, to develop and execute the survey for this report. ESG conducted a comprehensive online survey of 1,060 IT decision makers (ITDMs) from private and public sector organisations with a minimum of 1,000 employees***, in 24 different countries, in late 2016. The countries surveyed in Asia Pacific and the Middle East include Australia, mainland China, Hong Kong, India, Japan, KSA, Singapore, Thailand, and the UAE.
***The average size of company surveyed had 7,500 employees.
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