It's hard to believe it's 2019, and another year in the 21st century came and went. 2018 was like a blur, especially in the world of technology. The pace at which innovation and change is happening continues to accelerate, which creates opportunities and challenges. I feel like as I grow older, I begin to realize the duality of opportunities, they are both opportunities and challenges - and the same goes for challenges, they are both challenges and opportunities. In his book Great by Choice, Jim Collins discusses this in some context around the concept of good and bad luck, which we could consider to be opportunities and challenges. His final conclusion is that it isn't about who has the most good or bad luck, it is who has the highest return on luck, or ROL. Basically, when faced with good luck or bad luck (which we are all faced with opportunities and challenges) the companies, or individuals, who are able to capitalize on those events will ultimately become great - or win, and those who fail to capitalize on them will be mediocre or lose. In 2018 at The IT Company, we had our share of good and bad luck events, some we capitalized on and some we didn't. In the course of this I continued to learn the valuable lesson that good things and bad things are going to happen, I can't always control them, but what I can control is how we respond to them and what we do about them when they come.
This blog post is lengthy, but worth reading as a business owner, business leader or anyone charged with overseeing IT in a small business. It will help you get a feel for what to expect in the world of technology and how it affects your business and a little bit about how we are aligning our organization for the next wave in our industry. I've been in this business now for 25 years, since 1994. In many ways it started well before that- when I was playing with my Atari and Odyssey game systems as a child, writing basic programs in Junior High in Florida, and helping my neighbor trick out his Jeep CJ7 with technology back in 1986. A lot has changed, but now I'm a veteran with some perspective.
So, this blog post is generally written for the business owner or business leader, for understanding a little more and getting a sense of what you should be doing and thinking about related to IT in 2019. I'm breaking this blog post down into the following categories:
Cyber Security - Challenges and Opportunities:
2018 proved to be another wild year in Cyber Security, but that is now to be expected. Like the mafia gangsters of late 19th and early 20th century, Cyber Criminals are becoming more highly organized both as criminal syndicates (many of which are legitimate business operations in 3rd world countries) and as nation states such as China, North Korea, etc. Most, if not all, Nation States engage in Cyber Warfare - including the United States - so there's that. Regardless, it is big business with a wide-ranging footprint that is moving and complex. I went to the Retr3at conference in Asheville, NC, this year at Montreat College and one of the sessions I attended included former high ranking generals and other officials and members of cyber teams within our government, and even they admitted that the rules of engagement are complex and nothing like traditional warfare. The greatest war and military institutions, and our governments, are all struggling to understand how to fight this battle on the various fronts, how to engage the community at large and how to integrate all the various stakeholders in an effort to combat a dark and stealthy enemy, who in many cases go to work every day with the sole intent to commit cybercrimes on businesses, consumers and governments. It's complicated, challenging and full of opportunities!
Big Highlights:
So, what do we do about it, what are the opportunities, where do we capitalize on the good and bad luck?
From the perspective of Cyber Security and Cyber Crime this is a tough one, but the greatest opportunities, in my opinion, lie in these categories:
1. Education: it seems that most everything in human life is dependent on quality education. This is not specific to school per se but being well educated in your area or areas of expertise creates effectiveness, efficiency, higher performance, etc. We are all looking for ways to improve ourselves, and our team members, in order to extract the highest value - and that is true with cyber security. We need to continue to engage deeper and broader in educating folks in the areas of cyber security. If we create a well educated and sufficiently paranoid set of consumers, and therefore employees we will "raise the bar" on the low hanging fruit, where the criminals focus on the weakest points - the uneducated end user - and dramatically decrease the rate of incident of breaches that occur. So, I have broken this down into three categories of focus:
2. Community: we are all fighting a common enemy, in each sector and category. From consumers to businesses, to local, state and the federal government and all law enforcement agencies. We need an increasingly better system for building community and collaborating, sharing issues, outing known criminals and those individuals who are lurking in the dark shadows. This is a tough and tall task to accomplish full of challenges, but with a lot of opportunity. Let's opensource communication and collaboration and use the community and social tools we have to be better educated and work together. It hearkens back to the days of the neighborhood watch, but the neighborhood is now our global world. We can figure this out, we owe it to ourselves… our neighbors, the world and our kids.
3. Technology: One of the biggest challenges we face is the criminal use of technology and the increase in the use of AI and Machine Learning by criminals, a challenge that will never go away. It is very similar to physical security, if someone wants in, they will do it - you can't stop crazy and determined people - BUT the minimum best safeguards will thwart the average criminal. The same rings true in cyber security. Criminals are smart, and lazy - or maybe efficient. For the most part the average criminal wants to find the fastest and easiest way to exploit your data, personal, business, etc. The exception here may be nation states after nation states - that's a different ballgame, although likely attempting to exploit the low hanging fruit here. Again, similar to a home or business - jimmy the locks, try the windows - criminals will look for the weakest points first and exploit them, which will almost always be your people. Therefore, using technology to both educate your employees continually AND doing AT LEAST the minimum is to protect and defend yourself and your business is the first step. What is the minimum? Check out this blog post series we wrote discussing the CIS controls and how to protect and defend yourself. The other part of this opportunity is in the hands of those building the software.
The Cloud - where's it headed next?
The cloud continues to be all the buzz in our industry and largely in the global economy, and to that we are reaching the saturation and maturity point where most folks are no longer leery or scared of this still very nebulous cloud idea. It seems most of us are using some type of cloud service, from our email to things like DropBox or Google Drive for our personal storage, to banking and other financial services, the cloud has made it so easy and speedy for use, access and efficiency. The rise of cheaper and faster internet service AND the corresponding rise in the power and performance of mobile devices, primarily phones, has largely driven this more than anything else. In most primary and secondary markets, and now in the "tertiary" markets, 100MB to 1GB internet speeds are readily available at affordable prices, and 4G wireless is fully saturated in most of the United States. The promise of the next generation of wireless, labeled 5G for fifth generation, promises to bring the same type of speeds (and many times faster) than we get at home and work to our mobile devices. This will continue to create dramatic shifts in services and technology that can be delivered. Because of this confluence of cheaper and more accessible bandwidth and the rise of mobile devices, the "cloud" has been able to foster unbelievable innovation for businesses, both old and new, and mostly leveled the field for entering new markets. In many cases it is almost impossible to tell the difference in a Fortune 100 company and a startup because the access to technology, power and innovation that the cloud has provided. Here are some of my thoughts and predictions for 2019 and beyond.
I've been involved with cloud technologies since before it was cool, pushing the first hosted application delivery of medical practice management and EHR systems locally in Knoxville way back in 2003 and 2004. It was painful, but it began to shift the tide for customers and ushered in a new way for businesses to access systems and take advantage of the value of centralized hosted systems with great physical and cyber security without investing hundreds of thousands of dollars in capital. A full fifteen years later the key elements of bandwidth and performance of devices has finally caught up with the vision driving new opportunities and innovation. The companies that can take advantage of the race to the bottom, the "as a service" economy structure by demanding that the SaaS application vendors are building their applications with a security mindset to ensure the protection of data will race ahead of their competitors and peers.
There are a slew of folks making tech predictions, so here are some other interesting articles:
Inc Magazines 31 Tech Predictions
Forbes Magazine's 60 Cybersecurity Predictions
Information Week's 10 Tech Predictions
Symantec's 2019 Cybersecurity Predictions
What's next for The IT Company?
So, with all of this context, what's next for The IT Company and the overall Managed IT Services space? It's a question we debate often, and for years (and continuing) folks have been predicting the demise of our industry. There is no doubt that the tidal wave of Software as a Service driven by ubiquitous internet and inexpensive and highly available cloud computing is making it easier and easier for businesses, especially very small businesses, to operate without the same needs they once had for technology services from companies like ours. At the same time, we continue to see companies make major mistakes in evaluating and implementing technology, and then maximizing the investments they have made and are looking to make. Just like anything else, implementing a solution (especially a good solution) on top of bad process, poor culture, or a bad business model will only serve to do two things; A) Magnify the problems you have but are ignoring and B) Doom the implementation and all the good intentions, promises and value of the solution. On top of this there are still major issues around security, privacy and overall efficiency and effectiveness of a business around technology. We continue to see that small business owners and leaders want someone they can trust and partner with who are committed to providing great service and a great experience, and have the operational maturity to deliver consistently. We are more confident than ever that businesses, especially those smaller businesses (sub 100 employees/users) will continue to rely on companies like The IT Company to navigate the waters of IT and help them maximize the value of their investments and go further, faster.
For us, we continue to focus on the evolution of our business within our industry in delivering solutions to customers BUT more importantly to build strong relationships with a select group of new customers annually (we only accept 10 to 12 new customers every year) who believe in working with an IT business that has (and continues to) invest in their operational maturity, committed to delivering on safety, reliability and availability, and is focused on delighting customers and truly becoming an integrated part of their team - so they can focus on their business, not on IT, BUT ensure IT is performing, is protecting and is delivering value to their business, and to their delivery of their products and/or services.
We are making some changes, but those changes are focused on the inside of our business, delivering consistently to our customers, and to continuing to identify high-caliber businesses who want to work with mature organizations to improve our businesses. For our customers we will be reaching out directly to you to make you aware of the tweaks and changes in our business that will affect you.
There are two major changes we are making that will directly, and positively impact our customers:
1. Improving our customer relationship organization by reforming our client account and technical account management roles. Look for an email from us explaining this structure and how it will help you and your business.
2. Going all in with Amazon and Microsoft Azure public cloud platforms. The sun has set on the days of owning and operating your own private cloud infrastructure for companies like ours. We have done it since 2005 and are well versed in the good and the bad, the challenges and the opportunities. While it's fun, sexy and exciting to say you have your own cloud it is also expensive, time consuming and risky to continue to operate a private cloud for public consumption when Microsoft and Amazon continue to invest billions every year in theirs. We've found we can actually deliver a better experience, higher degree of performance and assurance with greater disaster recovery options for the same or less - who wouldn't take that deal. So, keep watch as we talk to our existing customers about cloud transitions and work with new customers to turn up services on these platforms.
In closing, if you are a friend, partner or customer I just want to personally thank you. The greatest joy of what I do is building relationships in the community, making a positive impact in the communities we live in and hopefully making a positive impact on the people we work with - inside and outside of our organization.
We all wish you the best 2019 has to bring.