In March 2017 the Cloud Industry Forum (CIF) revealed that the overall cloud adoption rate in the UK now stands at 88%, with 67% of users expecting to increase their adoption of cloud services over the coming year. These figures are borne out by our own research.
There are an increasing number of applications being adopted by business that are born in the cloud and not based on existing applications, but businesses do have many legacy applications that either do not have a cloud delivery option or simply are workloads that are not suited to the cloud. It is now reasonable to say that all businesses are digital businesses as even the local plumber runs a website and does his banking and accounting on line. In larger businesses, IT is now critical for business operations and can give companies a competitive advantage. Whether automating manual tasks, analysing data that was hitherto trapped within disparate data bases or providing more powerful tools to the internal teams, the increase in computing power has had a direct effect on business performance. Some of the many reasons why cloud is so attractive.
However, British businesses need to become more productive through the use of technology, our productivity is currently at 26% behind Germany and even 9% behind Italy according to the Office of National Statistics in Q2 2017. Labour productivity, measured as output per hour, fell by 0.1 per cent in the second quarter of this year (2017), from the first. On the plus side, services productivity rose by 0.2 per cent.