Work From Home Is Permanent

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90% of Large Enterprises are Maintaining or Increasing Digital Transformation Budgets Amid COVID-19

Though a majority of businesses have seen revenues declines amid COVID-19, 90% of organizations are maintaining or increasing their digital transformation budgets amid the pandemic. This has been finding of a global survey by Tata Consultancy Services among 300 senior business leaders from across North America, Europe and Asia.

Firms
 reporting 
revenue 
decreases 
were
 more 
common 
in
 Europe (70%) and North
America 
(69%)
 than
 in
 Asia (64%). European 
firms are
 significantly 
less
 likely
 to 
expect 
revenues 
to
 recover 
with in
 a
 year 
(10%) 
compared 
to
 Asian
 (22%) 
and 
North
 American 
firms 
(28%).

 Nearly
 half
 of 
European 
firms
 foresee 
revenue 
recovery
 in
 one
 to
 two
 years.
 Asian
 companies 
(19%) said 
it 
is 
too 
early 
to 
tell 
when
 revenues
 will 
recover.

Despite 
the
 budget
 pressure,
 90% of organizations have either maintained or increased their digital transformation (DX). The
 survey 
found
 that
 66%
 of 
respondents
 have 
maintained
 their
 digital
 transformation
 budget,
 and 
25%
 have
 actually 
increased 
it. 

Among
 those 
who 
have 
dedicated
 additional 
funds 
to
 digital
 transformation,
 the
 average
 increase
 is
 33%.

According to the research though
 the 
commitment 
to 
digital 
transformation 
is 
strong,
 there
 is
 a 
significant 
lack 
of 
clarity 
on 
how 
to strategically 
move
 on multiple 
digital 
fronts
 cost effectively
 in 
this 
economic 
environment.

When asked what their 
main pandemic ¬related 
concerns are, 
respondents
 ranked
 “keeping employees healthy, 
 both
 physically
 and
 emotionally” “continuing to serve the customers,” and “shifting 
the office
 work
 to 
remote 
work” as the top three. These were followed by ‘”managing our cash flow & budgets” and “IT security” as well as more than 10 other concerns.

Organizations
 are 
changing
 their
 technology
 investments
 due 
to 
the 
pandemic.
 Increases
 significantly 
outnumber
 decreases.
 The 
most 
common
 increases 
have 
been 
to 
technologies 
that 
support 
remote work.
 These 
include
 “collaborative 
technologies,”
 “cybersecurity” 
and
 “cloud­ native
 technologies.”

While
 the
 pandemic 
may 
have
 accelerated
 investment 
in 
these 
areas,
 TCS’s
 survey
 data 
suggest
 that 
these 
technologies 
will
remain 
critical 
to
 how
 companies
 operate
 in
 the
 future,
 even
 after 
the 
pandemic 
is
 over.

An average of 64% of the workforce of the organizations surveyed worked from home during the pandemic. Prior to the pandemic, this was only 9% which means a seven-fold increase. That percentage is expected to remain elevated through 2025, when the average company projects 40% of its employees will work largely from home.

Geographically, 
70% of employees in Europe currently work remotely followed
 by 
Asia 
Pacific
 (67%) 
and
 North
 America
 (60%).
 After 
the 
pandemic, those 
in 
the
 Asian 
region
 will
 be
 more 
likely
 to
 work 
from 
home
 (45%
 of 
the
 average
 workforce) 
than
 Europeans 
(41%)
 and
 North 
Americans 
(37%).

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