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Your IT Strategy for 2024

Your digital environment will be a defining factor for businesses, no matter what your industry or niche.

Elizabeth Moss

By Elizabeth Moss

BairesDev Business Development Executive Elizabeth Moss is responsible for partnership growth, increasing profitability, and customer acquisition.

6 min read

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The past few tumultuous years have led many businesses to reconsider their operations, procedures, and processes. What may have worked well in a pre-pandemic world no longer flows as seamlessly these days, particularly in the wake of constant upheaval.

In 2024, your information technology (IT) team and strategy, in particular, are probably at top of mind for you and your business. With many businesses largely continuing to operate remotely, IT will keep serving as the backbone of your business and allow you to carry on smoothly despite the disruption.

That means that you’ll have to put a lot of thought into your IT goals for 2024, as your digital environment will be a defining factor for businesses no matter what your industry or niche. What should you focus on in terms of your IT strategy this year and beyond, then? Here are some ideas to incorporate in a year that will hopefully be less fraught with challenges and disruptions.

Prioritize Cybersecurity

The global annual cost of cybercrime is projected to reach $8 trillion USD in 2024, with cybercriminals getting increasingly savvy.  Cybersecurity has never been a “nice-to-have” — it was always a mandatory part of your IT strategy — but now it’s more essential than ever before. This is particularly imperative as many businesses make cloud computing an integral part of their workflow — more on that below — since sensitive, personal information is out in the ether and must be protected. 

Considering how many of your employees now have access to important data from remote locations while they work from home, you need to ensure that all protections are extended to any individual who has access to your systems and information. A sound cybersecurity infrastructure can stop data breaches and other attacks before they happen, repair them quickly, and curb the possible damage, particularly as security and data breaches grow in sophistication and ubiquity.

Rely on Cloud Computing

You’re probably highly familiar with cloud applications by this point. Even if you weren’t relying on them before the pandemic, they’re now pivotal for keeping the work going while employees are largely staying at home. They make it possible to access important files, use pivotal tools like word processing, and collaborate with colleagues and others.

Cloud computing must be a central part of your IT strategy, as remote work is now the new norm, and people must be able to access important materials and work with others from different areas and environments. We’re heading toward a world where people in all sectors will work remotely or at least partially remotely, and this is truly a step toward making your business location-independent. 

In fact, Gartner predicted that worldwide end-user spending on public cloud services would grow 20.7% in 2024, demonstrating that users and businesses alike are invested in this strategy.

Embrace Artificial Intelligence (AI)

Have you harnessed the power of AI yet? This can be a game-changer for your business, allowing you to resolve customer queries quickly and easily, enabling you to provide customized and personalized experiences for your users, and much more. Given how reliant the world has become on tools like ChatGPT, this should hardly come as a surprise. 

Take the chatbot as an example. It seems simple enough, but it can completely revolutionize customer service, cutting down on the time a human customer service representative needs to spend resolving issues and giving them back time to work on more complex issues that require their interventions. Meanwhile, the chatbot helps resolves customers’ problems in record time, much more quickly than a human could. 

As the technology becomes more sophisticated, more and more organizations are looking to incorporate AI into their business models for a variety of purposes, with substantial benefits, from efficiency to cost-savings to improved experiences. 

Leverage 5G

5G offers so many advantages, from increased bandwidth and capacity to significantly lower latency. While it was previously discussed as a thing of the future, 5G is becoming more of a reality, with many cities across the world, including more than 500 in the US, already offering it. The 2022 Ericsson Mobility Report projects that 5G subscriptions will reach 4.4 billion globally by the end of 2027

What does this mean for businesses? One major opportunity is the development of initiatives related to the Internet of Things (IoT). Because the capacity of 5G exceeds that of 4G substantially, the network can accommodate many more users and devices. This means more users and devices are able to communicate with one another, with little to no disruption or time lags, thanks to the ultra-fast speeds.

As 5G becomes more widely available, businesses will see plenty of new opportunities for improving services and products and will rely on a solid IT infrastructure to make these possibilities a reality.

Consider Edge Computing

Along with cloud computing, edge computing is becoming an important resource for remote work. This model is decentralized, and it places applications closer to the sources of their data, such as repositories, edge servers, and devices. This offers better bandwidth, reduced latency, efficiency, and more helpful qualities. 

In contrast to cloud computing, edge computing is largely used for information that is time-sensitive, such as when individuals are controlling a driverless car. Gartner predicts that there will be a move away from more traditional data centers — saying that approximately 80% of enterprises will shut these centers down by 2025 — and edge data centers offer better opportunities for remote work.

We have certainly had a lot to cope with the business world and beyond in the past year. Hopefully, we are emerging from a crisis-ridden few years into a better landscape — technology, work, and others — for 2024. But businesses will need to adapt to the current circumstances while also developing, growing, and innovating — thriving, not just surviving.

Defining and refining your IT strategy in 2024 is an important step for assessing your entire business plan. While it’s always important, it’s absolutely critical to ensure that you’re technology-strong now. From ramping up your cybersecurity efforts to considering new delivery models, these strategies will help you stay resilient this coming year and ensure that you’re prepared for new and current obstacles.

Elizabeth Moss

By Elizabeth Moss

Business Development Executive Elizabeth Moss helps support and grow BairesDev by forming strategic partnerships, increasing profitability, and aiding in customer acquisition. Her previous work experience includes success at tech giants such as Adobe and Jalasoft.

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