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Modernise and adapt or “find yourself on the wrong side of the digital divide”

digital transformation

Businesses with legacy technology, particularly in their data tiers, must modernise as a matter of urgency or risk being “completely upended”, according to an industry expert. Organisations that are over a decade old are more likely to run on older technology stacks that may require modernising. Ravi Mayuram, CTO at Couchbase.

He warned against taking the easy route through digital transformation. Organisations have a tendency to prioritise updating customer-facing systems such as their user interfaces (UI) and application logic tiers, but they should instead focus on the data tier as a matter of urgency.

“The place you had delayed the most to make changes is in your data tier, because that’s the toughest and that’s your foundation, right? That’s the one you didn’t want to move all this while because it delayed it as much as possible, because you could get away with it,” said Mayuram.

“Now you can’t, you have to realise that, that the more you sort of stick with legacy systems, the more obsolescence and the cost of it. And it’s not just the bottom line, it’s a top line. Also, you’re no longer able to attract more new customers, because you’re not accessible to so many of them, or you’re not easily available to them, those kinds of issues show up.”

Firms with legacy systems deeply entrenched within their stack could find replacing them an extremely difficult task. This is especially the case with legacy systems that support vital services that customers expect to be able to access around the clock.

“Those systems were not built for this, they could take a downtime of a night. Nowadays it’s five nines (99%) availability, you cannot have the systems go down for more than five seconds in a year.”

He also pointed to the elasticity offered by cloud computing as a major advantage for tackling this problem, and argued that the use of a hybrid cloud approach and increased server redundancy during transformation can offer improved flexibility and avoid costly outages. A recent example saw more than 11,000 flights delayed and more than 1,300 cancelled across the US when the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) suffered a major system failure.

The FAA later stated that the systems error occurred as a result of contractors accidentally having “deleted files while working to correct synchronisation between the live primary database and a backup database”. It still relies on a wide variety of legacy solutions, with Reuters having reported that despite digital transformation efforts some air traffic controllers will continue to track flights with paper strips until 2029.

“And that’s where we saw, even in the recent airline situation, it was a data infrastructure tier issue which somehow bubbled up to be this bigger issue.

“So you just have to modernise that tier, and that’s not for the faint of heart, so to say. And that’s why it has come this far. Now, if you don’t take that challenge and start the journey now, you will find yourself on the wrong side of the digital divide. You may not cross the chasm and things will pass by, or you will be completely upended.”

Legacy systems pervade tech departments around the world and can cause significant problems if not handled properly.

In November 2022, 50% of surveyed UK civil servants said that legacy technology in their departments was no longer fit for purpose and was holding back meaningful efforts at digital transformation. A December 2022 report on legacy systems at the UK government’s Department for Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs (Defra) revealed that almost a third have reached end-of-life (EOL) status.

This has left the UK’s public sector vulnerable to cyber attacks, particularly as applications that have exceeded their developer support phase may contain zero-day vulnerabilities.