A survey published today suggested that technical debt is starting to take a heavier toll as IT environments continue to become more complex to manage.
The survey of 400 IT leaders at organizations with 1,500 employees was conducted by Foundry, the market research arm of International Data Group (IDG) on behalf of Insight Enterprises, a provider of IT services. The survey found that 86% of respondents reported their organization was impacted by technical debt over the past 12 months, with the top areas affected being the ability to innovate (43%), meet service level agreements (41%) and avoid downtime (37%).
Technical debt is created when organizations cut corners and leave known bugs in the race to meet application delivery deadlines. Application code is often not as thoroughly tested as it should be. In some cases, it turns out that what was intended to be a minimum viable product doesn’t scale all that well. Quick fixes needed to improve performance are also frequently undocumented. Inefficient code also winds up consuming more IT infrastructure than required, which adversely impacts everything from cloud costs to the amount of carbon generated.
Juan Orlandini, chief architect for the Cloud + Data Center Transformation (CDCT) division of Insight Enterprises, said every organization struggles with technical debt; it will never be eliminated, but it does need to be contained, he added.
The challenge is instead of trying to keep the proverbial IT lights on during the COVID-19 era, IT teams are now being asked to innovate to advance digital business transformation initiatives, said Orlandini. A full 87% of survey respondents cited modernizing critical applications as a key success driver.
As a result, many organizations are embracing platform engineering to bring more structure to their DevOps processes, he noted. The challenge, however, is striking a balance between a more centralized approach to DevOps and maintaining the ability of developers to innovate, said Orlandini.
The issue, of course, is that in addition to massive technical debt, the latest generation of applications are more distributed than ever. The survey found 91% of respondents now rely on multiple public cloud providers for different workloads, with 54% of data residing on a public cloud. However, the survey also found on-premises IT environments are still relevant, with 20% planning to repatriate select public cloud workloads to an on-premises model over the next 12 months.
Nearly three-quarters (72%) of respondents also noted data volumes are growing faster than their ability to manage them, with 64% ranking implementation of a data governance program to improve data management as their top data-related objective this year. Just over a third (35%) of the data estate is now, on average, driven by edge workloads, with 29% of respondents reporting that at least 50% of data volumes now reside on the edge. Nearly two-thirds (64%) expected that to increase in the next 12 months.
A total of 85% of respondents also indicated their organization is using artificial intelligence (AI) to some degree to drive business insights and/or efficiencies, although only 36% reported having optimized their use of AI and machine learning (ML) across the enterprise.
Finally, cybersecurity also remains problematic, with 51% reporting they were impacted by a cybersecurity breach over the past 12 months. Just 20% resolved their issue in one day, while 31% needed less than a week. Nearly half (49%) required one week or more to recover.
It’s clear that IT isn’t becoming any easier to manage. IT teams need to find ways to build and deploy new applications while reducing technical debt so it doesn’t strangle future innovation.