Three quarters of small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) do not currently have the required technology to keep afloat in today’s web-enabled economies, and just under three quarters (72%) do not see the need to implement 10 Gigabit according to a new study by networking company NETGEAR.
There is a worrying misunderstanding and lack of knowledge about just how crucial future-proofing the network with 10 Gigabit technology is in an always-on era, despite this being increasingly essential for a business’s success. The network infrastructure of the future will require significantly more bandwidth, as evidenced by increased data consumption, workload-heavy new applications and the predicted rise of BYOD in the workplace, which according to Gartner is set to treble by 2018.
Although all SMBs surveyed agreed they would need to deploy 10 Gigabit switching in their network in the future, only one third (33 per cent) currently have a proportion of the technology in place (greater than 30% penetration). The adoption of 10 Gigabit switching is set to increase by one third in the next 18 months, with 61% of SMBs expecting to have greater than 30 per cent penetration by the end of 2017.
The research showed that a minority of SMBs understand the benefits that 10 Gigabit networks can bring, as only one third (33 per cent) are adopting the technology to solve network performance issues when expanding premises, only one third agreed that 10 Gigabit would be warranted in the event of increasing video or broadcast streaming, and less than half (40 per cent) plan to migrate to 10 Gigabit switching solutions in anticipation of decreasing network bottlenecks. In all suggested use cases, less than half of SMBs considered that 10 Gigabit adoption was warranted.
Tris Simmons, director, global product marketing, NETGEAR says, “Our research highlighted that the number one reason why SMBs are deploying 10 Gigabit, is to address bottleneck performance issues. Such challenges are only going to increase in prevalence and underpin why 10 Gigabit is appearing more and more on the radar.”