Rapport
For Traditional Enterprises, the Path to Digital and the Role of Containers
For Traditional Enterprises, the Path to Digital and the Role of Containers
How companies can invest in their digital maturity.
Rapport
How companies can invest in their digital maturity.
Dynamic market shifts are propelling traditional enterprises in all industries toward digital. The forces are many: Companies feel pressured to find better ways to engage with customers and make the most of data proliferation while being challenged by disruptive innovators. They all are grappling with the same critical decisions about how to build the digital capabilities that will support their future growth.
Bain & Company wanted to track traditional (i.e., non-digital native) enterprises on this journey to understand how well positioned they are to succeed, what companies farthest along on the digital journey are doing to stay ahead of the competition and which best practices companies can apply to their own digital transformation. We partnered with Red Hat to survey 449 US executives and IT leaders across industries.
Among the objectives of our research: to determine the future role of next-generation technology in digital transformation for traditional enterprises, with emphasis on containers, a new technology that enables software to run reliably when moved from one computing environment to another.
Our research helped us bring digital transformation into sharper focus. Digital disruption is affecting different industries at different rates, but few will avoid its impact. Our research shows that far and away, the biggest disruptive force is digital innovation by competitors, which was cited more frequently than any other factor. This finding reinforces our view that many companies are in a reactive mode and that those that wait to respond to competitors’ moves risk being out-innovated by more proactive companies. Despite the mounting pressures, we found that few traditional enterprises have made substantial progress on the digital journey and even the most digitally mature traditional enterprises are not on the bleeding edge.
In all, we identified five distinct segments of companies:
Across this landscape, one finding underscores the true value that is associated with becoming more digitally advanced. Among the surveyed companies, the 15% of companies that are farthest along on the digital maturity curve are 8 times more likely to have gained share than the 15% of companies that are least mature. This finding is based on data across industries, whether business success is driven by operational efficiency or customer/ product innovation. Digital capabilities are enabling leaders to differentiate and drive business outcomes.
Across segments, companies take a well-defined path toward digital maturity by prioritizing investments in operating model changes to improve decision rights, talent management and collaboration, as well as in the core elements of an IT architecture needed to spur digital capabilities. These investments are the digital foundation that enables more advanced capabilities in customer engagement, analytics and rapid innovation. More digitally mature companies understand that, without having such investments in place, these more advanced initiatives will be limited in their potential impact. Building this foundation is the focus of a comprehensive, cross-functional transformation, and the elements of this transformation are highly interrelated. For instance, before making technology decisions, more digitally mature firms ensure that investments are aligned with the processes, culture and architecture that support digital capabilities.
Specifically in terms of IT architecture, firms invest in technology that delivers adaptability, resilience, speed and the ability to use analytics for better-informed decisions that improve the customer experience and operations. These involve significant investment, with next-generation architecture being a particularly consistent focus. As expected, our research determined that, among the most digitally advanced traditional enterprises, all report that they consider their architectures to be agile, adaptable and scalable, vs. only 16% of those that are least advanced.
More digitally mature companies also tackle the challenges of architecture modernization head-on, seeking to capitalize on infrastructure and invest in differentiators. They recognize that existing infrastructure and applications do not need to be a drag on digital efforts; optimizing and modernizing existing technology should be part of the overall journey. When comparing more and less digitally mature companies, our survey showed that investment varies dramatically in cloud-based architecture, data access and advanced analytics (machine learning, Big Data), infrastructure optimization technologies, and modern application development and deployment platforms such as containers. In the newest of these technologies, modern application development, companies that are most digitally mature are three times more likely to invest than the least mature companies. This emerging investment trend led us to conduct a deeper dive into containers to understand the future role they may play in modernization.
The most digitally mature companies are eight times more likely to gain market share than the least digitally mature. Here’s how containers can help facilitate a digital transformation.
One of the objectives of our research was to determine the likely path of container adoption, as containers directly or indirectly enable several key attributes of digital transformation. Indeed, our survey found that respondents are beginning to benefit from faster innovation as well as improved development and deployment cycles. For example, adopters frequently report 15% to 30% reductions in development time. Adopters also report initial cost savings of 5% to 15% due to greater hardware and process efficiencies. Containers’ greater portability also improves the flexibility and scalability of IT architectures, with some adopters mentioning containers as a step toward migration to more cloud-focused architectures. Given these benefits, container adoption is expected to grow across all phases of the application life cycle (development, testing and production), with the growth being most dramatic in production. Some perceived hurdles to adoption include security issues, the impression that most workloads cannot be containerized (i.e., applicability) and worries about the lack of enterprise-grade persistent storage options. Given these concerns, we wanted to understand if containers could replicate the rapid adoption of analog technologies such as server virtualization once the perceived obstacles are lessened. Our research suggests that there are reasons to be optimistic about the future of containers.
Many companies evaluating containers ask a fundamental question: Are they as broadly applicable as server virtualization to a spectrum of workloads? While overcoming the applicability barrier will be key to containers’ future path, survey respondents do report a growing set of workloads being prioritized for containerization. We are seeing progress on initially more difficult-to-containerize stateful applications, and companies are showing high interest in moving beyond web applications to containerize more traditional applications (e.g., databases, business intelligence/analytics, custom apps) over the next three years. In addition, while today early container adopters are prioritizing net new applications engineered in ways that are easy to containerize (e.g., microservices), we are increasingly seeing examples of companies containerizing older, monolithic applications, further expanding containers’ applicability. As with other applications, containerizing these legacy apps has potential to improve adaptability and cost efficiency by increasing portability, decreasing complexity and streamlining the installation, upgrade and rollback process. Among the companies benefiting from the new technology, Dell has publicly stated that it used the industry-leading Docker container format to containerize a 20-year-old monolithic in-band systems management tool that remained fully functional while leaving no footprint on the host. Containerization simplified installation, upgrade and rollback, and could run on any Linux distribution supporting the Docker format.
As containers grow in value, we are seeing industry momentum increase around them. Battle lines are being drawn in container orchestration and management between lead innovator Docker, which continues to drive the container format standard, and solutions from incumbent software vendors as well as leading cloud vendors (e.g., Google’s Kubernetes), and many respondents are indicating that they are implementing multiple solutions or even developing their own.
Yet, despite the potential for broader ecosystem impacts, we do see containers continuing to coexist with virtual machines (VMs) in the near future, as respondents indicated that over the next three years they will increasingly deploy containers on VMs as opposed to bare metal. Despite the limitations on cost efficiencies from containers when implemented on VMs, companies continue to value VMs’ security, familiarity and integrated solution suites.
Whether or not they replicate VMs’ rapid ascent, as container usage continues to evolve and containers become more applicable, we do see them becoming an increasingly attractive option for companies across many industries, particularly as they struggle to meet the intensifying digital imperative.
Jeff Taylor is a Bain & Company partner based in Boston. Paul Renno is a partner based in San Francisco and Jesse Klein is a manager in Boston. All are members of Bain’s Technology practice.
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