Subscribe
  • Home
  • /
  • Storage
  • /
  • Fujitsu survey finds CFOs prefer long-term storage investments

Fujitsu survey finds CFOs prefer long-term storage investments


Munich, 14 Sep 2017

News facts:

* Fast-paced digital transformation means escalating data storage and management costs are a top concern for 76% of senior finance decision-makers.
* Survey finds that finance managers are more likely to approve storage solutions that are future-proofed to cope with rapid and unpredictable growth.
* The ability to add capacity without replacing entire storage systems is an important consideration for 67% of finance managers.

Data storage requirements for small and mid-size businesses are predicted to double over the next four years, according to a new Fujitsu study1 among senior finance professionals in small and medium-sized businesses (SMEs). In turn, this high growth is causing widespread concern (76%) that high or unpredictable data growth will lead to escalating data storage and management costs.

According to a survey conducted among 182 Chief Financial Officers across Europe, the Middle East, Africa and South Asia, three in five see technology as an important enabler of operational efficiency during digital transformation (59%). More than a quarter of CFOs surveyed view technology as a key source of competitive advantage (28%).

However, with a keen eye on risk, issues of data availability, data protection and data security are front of mind for finance decision-makers, who also expressed anxiety about the implications of an unexpected growth in data volumes. Top issues include the need to fund additional storage capacity and concerns about spiralling data management costs due to rapidly increasing data volumes.

Senior finance professionals are also acutely aware of the challenges that traditional disk and tape-based storage solutions bring and expressed frustration at factors such as systems hitting an expandability wall, leading to investment requests coming out of the blue; the waste of equipment which prematurely reaches end-of-life; and a high reliance on skilled IT staff and the challenges associated with maintaining these skills.

Looking forward, finance professionals outlined the key characteristics they expect to see in relation to new storage technology - highlighting three factors as most important: automation to reduce reliance on manual skills to minimise both cost and risk; the ability to add capacity as demands increase, without replacing entire systems; and overall system flexibility to better deal with high and unpredictable data growth.

Olivier Delachapelle, Head of Category Management Data Center at Fujitsu in EMEIA, comments: "The findings from our survey of CFOs confirm that security and data protection are key objectives for any storage modernisation initiative. With nine in 10 senior finance professionals putting general future-proofing high on the agenda, the days are clearly numbered for the traditional scale-up approach to storage. In the digital business landscape of today, more than ever, small and mid-size businesses need storage solutions that aren't going to hold them back, no matter how fast growing or unpredictable their demands for data storage and backup."

1 The survey, A Finance Perspective on Storage Investments, sponsored by Fujitsu, was conducted in June 2017 among 182 senior finance professionals across Europe, the Middle East, Africa and South Asia. The participants worked in small and medium-sized enterprises, drawn from a variety of industry sectors, including manufacturing, retail, travel/transport, financial services, telecoms, healthcare/life sciences and automotive.

Online resources:

* Read the Fujitsu blog: http://blog.ts.fujitsu.com
* Follow Fujitsu on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/Fujitsu_Global
* Follow us on LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/fujitsu
* Find Fujitsu on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/FujitsuICT
* Fujitsu pictures and media server: http://mediaportal.ts.fujitsu.com/pages/portal.php
* For regular news updates, bookmark the Fujitsu newsroom: http://ts.fujitsu.com/ps2/nr/index.aspx

Share

Fujitsu South Africa

The evolving nature of every business means changes, enhancements and upgrades to its data centre infrastructure. Businesses are finding data centre upgrades to be not only disruptive, but also costly. There is a constant need to retrain and re-skill data centre staff in order to effectively manage applications while ensuring data availability, security and energy consumption optimisation. Not to mention maintaining compliance and service level agreements.

Fujitsu South Africa's approach to servers, mainframes, storage and integrated systems offers the flexibility to tailor data centre technologies to its customers' specific requirements. It provides the benefits of secure, robust, future-proofed technologies from a single source supported by a unique, consultative approach. This ensures you get exactly what your organisation demands, bringing true business value to companies.

http://www.fujitsu.com/za/
https://www.linkedin.com/company-beta/5386506/

Fujitsu

Fujitsu is the leading Japanese ICT company, offering a full range of technology products, solutions, and services. Approximately 155 000 Fujitsu people support customers in more than 100 countries. Fujitsu uses its experience and the power of ICT to shape the future of society with its customers. Fujitsu (TSE: 6702) reported consolidated revenues of 4.5 trillion yen (US $40 billion) for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2017. For more information, please see http://www.fujitsu.com.

Fujitsu EMEIA

Fujitsu enables customers to capitalise on digital opportunities with confidence, by helping them to balance robust ICT and digital innovation. Fujitsu's full portfolio of products, solutions and services gives its customers a competitive advantage in the era of digital transformation. In Europe, the Middle East, India and Africa (EMEIA) the company employs more than 29 000 people. For more information, please see http://www.fujitsu.com/fts/about/.

Editorial contacts