Let me pose a (hopefully) hypothetical scenario: your business has relied on your server since 2019. Each and every day, it handles every request that your business has had of it, but on an otherwise uneventful Tuesday, it suddenly conks out, dead as a doornail. So, what do you do?
This is just one example of why an IT roadmap is a non-negotiable need for modern organizations. That still leaves an important question… what should this roadmap include?
Once upon a time, most threats could be pretty effectively stopped if you had a big enough moat around your castle. In many cases, this remains the case… the moats have just become digital. Instead of a drawbridge and a portcullis, we now have defenses such as zero-trust architecture and advanced threat detection that’s powered by AI.
This is a good thing, because these are the kinds of protection a modern business needs. Attacking armies once observed holidays and considered how the weather might impact their success. Cybercriminals don’t operate like that.
Your responsibility is to strategize ahead of time—as in, three to five years in advance—to ensure you are proactively prepared to maintain your compliance standards, particularly in terms of their costs.
We are at a stage where almost any technology a business considers could be the difference between success and falling behind.
Therefore, whatever you’re thinking of adding to your business, it is important to first figure out where it can do the most good for your business. One effective way to do so: ask your team!
Collect their insights as to where they feel their productivity suffers because of the minutiae that interrupt them. Do they repeatedly need to move data from one place to another before they can use it? Modern tech helps move these tasks into the background, giving your team more time back.
Plus, if your team sees direct benefits to their own productivity, especially those that let them divert more attention to their role-based responsibilities over administrative ones, they are more likely to accept and amplify these changes.
While on the subject, there are plenty of opportunities to embrace AI and other advanced technologies that benefit your team members as much as they benefit the business as a whole.
A short list includes things like streamlined customer service tools (giving your team members more context into an issue before they interface with the customer directly, if they even have to), to improved document management and processing (helping with everything from bookkeeping to document searchability). All in all, there are various opportunities to offload certain responsibilities from your employees.
Many small businesses start out hosting their own technology, and while growth can entail expenses, staying in place is expensive in its own way. We recommend making a plan to process all in-house technology within five years, helping manage the budgetary impact and stagger it over time.
Throughout this process, it is important to keep in mind that the cloud can play a valuable role, whether you use it to fully cover certain needs and processes or simply as a supplement to your existing business technology. The cloud may become increasingly suited to your needs as your growth continues.
Having this kind of roadmap is valuable for any business dedicated to reaching its goals. We’re here to help! Reach out to us at (780) 409-8180 to take the first step!
