Wednesday, April 30, 2008

The Future According to You

I'm planning to write a series of white papers about local software matters this year. First I was undecided on the first topic, now I'm not sure. It's a toss up between software innovation and software trends.

Of white papers and dithering
As the end of March deadline for our own Leapfrog Award draws nearer and I dust off my power suit to attend the TT100 awards, my thoughts are turning to innovation. But we're wrapping up interviews for our local software research, I can't wait to chair the IT confidence panel discussion again in March, and I have a press deadline on local software for Monday. So local trends are hovering in the ether too. For this article, local trends has won the flip of the coin.

The million dollar question
We asked CIO's a particularly spicy question in our software survey this time: "What do you think the 3 most important software trends will be in the next 5 years?" And we got some VERY interesting answers. Better yet, we got some great conversations started on the way the software word is heading and how this impacts local companies. Many of the responses confirmed our own predictions about local software trends (see www.nfold.com/5trends.html).

Top Trends
But there are some new trends emerging that we also think will be big. And our local CIOs seem to agree, with 100% of the responses agreeing mentioning one of our original trends or the following ones we think are emerging.

Convergence - by this we mean not only more functionality available in fewer software systems, but also fewer devices delivering more useful features. And communication is becoming unified too.

Integration - as technology to integrate becomes cheaper and interfaces between systems become more standard, the dream of keeping data where it belongs and delivering it to where it's needed becomes more achievable.

Configurability - software has become more modular and can now deliver off-the-shelf what used to require custom development. It has also become more aligned to business processes rather than forcing customers to adapt to its own features. The race for features is over.

Mobility - with widespread adoption of mobile phones that have become ever more like mini-computers, software features are now delivered to the palm more easily. Already calendaring, messaging and collaboration are at our fingertips. Other features are following fast.

Surprise!
Less popular, but equally interesting, were some more trends we think worth watching:

Voice over IP - it's hard to argue with free communication over existing data networks that are becoming cheaper to grow.

New Interfaces - will voice and touch replace the keyboard & mouse?

Social Networking - the way we communicate is evolving, and could transform the workplace.

Clean Green
Yet another email in my inbox, with the catchy title "shed your load...", is a call for papers from ITWeb for its GreenIT summit. This is a new one on me and was not mentioned by any of our CIOs in the survey so far. But I can see how online meeting software can cut down on the need to travel and burn up fossil fuels. And shifts in behaviour mean that people are more ready now than ever for the idea of a virtual office. Imagine how working from home could impact on your lifestyle and those traffic jams in Jozie! Telecommuting is the way to go.