Key Tech Trends in 2022
crystal ball
Photo by Virgil Cayasa on Unsplash

The future is arriving faster. Pandemic lockdowns have accelerated the technology adoption, particularly for SMBs and mid-sized companies. What was projected for 2025 has been brought forward to 2021/2022. It’s an exciting but volatile era where tomorrow is getting harder to predict.

But there are some tech trends that we can certainly see evolving and emerging in the next twelve months. Here are five that will be key in 2022:

1. Continued acceleration of digital transformation

The new normal for most businesses is the widespread adoption of technology that wasn’t as ubiquitous to all as it was prior to 2020. People – staff/users/customers – are seeing the benefits and business owners are seeing the results.

But digital is about more than just an individual business going online/into the cloud. It’s about being part of an entire holistic digital ecosphere, with partners, suppliers, customers all connected and transacting online. Every part of the supply chain will be connected digitally, with businesses increasingly adopting intelligent ERP systems that all players can plug into.

2. Connectivity Ubiquity – and the “anywhere economy”

“Always on” means time away for some. It’s important for business owners to feel the real time pulse of their business, which gives them freedom to disconnect. For leaders it’s not necessarily about taking time away, but about being able to take time in other environments whilst still connected. It’s counter intuitive.

With Elon Musk’s StarLink coming to Australia in 2022, a “better than NBN” speed and latency will be available anywhere you can see the sky. It means people can work anywhere – and we’ve moved into a remote work hybrid that’s here to stay even after lockdowns end.

But caveat emptor/buyer beware: if you can move several hours away from the city and do your job from the beach, then it’s just as easy for your boss to work with your replacement in Kuala Lumpur or Manila for a third of the price. Thomas Friedman was right after all – the world is flat.  (flatter now by half)

3. Pushing Up means Pushing Down

As digital transformation accelerates, business adoption of technology and then the complexity and ambition of what it does will increase. People in SMB segments are buying mid-market products. Mid-market companies are buying enterprise-grade solutions. Requirements have changed, and what’s upstream is the new norm.

For technology companies the challenge is how to make enterprise products fit the SMB/mid-market space and to sell and onboard new customers here. Selling becomes remote (as unit economics dictates) but the deal is also smaller so we need to onboard and service this customer on a different cost basis. We need to push down and make it work there too.

4. Asynchronous to become default

Worn out with two years of videoconferencing, people are looking for more efficient ways to collaborate. This means technology platforms that enable asynchronous collaboration, such as a shared Google Doc. Scrambling around to find a timeslot that suits everyone will no longer be an issue.

Shorter, “button-click”, in-app meetings like Slack’s “Start Huddle” will replace longer, scheduled meetings.

5. Trust (as a foundational principle)

2022 will become a year when trust becomes table stakes. We’re going into a trust-heavy year: “I trust this certificate to say you’re vaccinated – you can board the aircraft” “I trust this tech platform with my most important business operational data”. Trust will be critical at every step of the way.

It’s why transparency has become so critical: in corporate culture and practices, in operations, in hiring, in data management and protection, in finance and payments, and in the supply chain. Technology will enable this by providing visibility and ensuring that organisations are accountable for every “cog in the machine”.

The importance of trust also reminds us that the human factor must remain paramount, wherever technology may take us. Digitisation and innovation must go hand-in-hand with robust ethical policies, ensuring progress is responsible and sustainable: that it enhances and improves all our lives.

Charlie Wood is CEO of Wiise

This article was first published by Business IT

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