In this piece, Tata Communications’ Steve Jenkins, Vice President, Solution Sales, Europe, explores how major technology companies pivoted their digital infrastructures...
The COVID-19 pandemic has forced businesses and individuals across the world to adapt to a ‘new normal’. In this blog, Tata Communications’ Pathmal Gunawardana, Vice President – Americas, explores how the global crisis has impacted Tata Communications and other major tech companies.
As I start writing this, even after months into the global pandemic, I still imagine readers sitting at a desk in some corporate office when, in fact, you might be in your garden, sitting room, patio, city apartment or anywhere. “Change is as good as a rest” they say. However, most of us this year have been forced to squeeze a two-year digital transformation roadmap into just two or three weeks! No super-computers or complex statistical models were prepared to predict what we are currently going through. Take my position - before this crisis, my job entailed travelling at least 80% of the time. But this year, my family has probably seen me more than they've seen me for last 15 years. It's a big change. It is great – except I am also aware of
"As a digital ecosystem enabler, we also provide a broad range of collaboration services for remote workforce, enabling cloud, network, security services – and that part of the business is doing very well."

So, in my eyes, the social, economic and political landscape may evolve but, as long as our solutions and value proposition remain strong and our customer service superior, I don't expect major disruption to our business. These questions have been high on my agenda since I was invited to a fascinating NetEvents Inter@ctive CIO round table discussion, chaired by IDC analyst Brad Casemore, on ‘ How Networking and Collaboration Support Business Resilience and Continuity During and After Times of Crisis’. The discussion began with interesting data points from Brad, showing what the market expected to be the key investment areas post COVID. Not surprisingly, the Cloud rode high. More significant was the changing role of working from home. Before the crisis, over 90% said less than a quarter of their work had been from home, and that fell to less than 10% since lockdown. That was hardly surprising as a response to lockdown regulations."Ultimately, our core value proposition is anchored on customer centricity that supports customers in their digital transformation journey by enabling a holistic digital ecosystem that gives them a competitive edge in the market."
What was encouraging among the other speakers on the discussion (seven CIOs from major tech companies) was how well they had all managed the crisis. You might have a picture from media headlines, of a business world knocked senseless by the impact of the crisis. In fact, most of the participants had already weathered severe crises of one sort or another – bushfire, hurricanes, market collapse – and had come out of it having learned sound lessons of crisis management and being prepared, of having something in reserve for the unexpected. I have already mentioned humanity’s superb ability to adapt. Another common factor was the recognition of the importance of a ‘human-first approach’. When the pandemic struck, there were two parallel considerations: employees, and customers. The general business expectation is that ‘the"What was surprising was the expectations for 2021: IDC’s research indicated that only about 40% are still expecting less than a quarter of home workers, whereas nearly as many reckoned on up to 50% workers at home, and a significant number of companies estimated more than three quarters of their employees would be working from home."

- Analyst Chair: Brad Casemore, Research Vice President, Datacenter Networks, IDC
- Pathmal Gunawardana, Head of Americas, Tata Communications
- Russ Currie, Vice President, Enterprise Strategy, NETSCOUT
- Bill Miller, Chief Information Officer, NetApp
- Christina Kite, Vice President, Global Business Strategy & Analytics, Oracle
- Dan Krantz, Vice President, Chief Information Officer, Keysight Technologies, Inc.
- Kevin Herrin, VP, Infrastructure Platform Engineering, Dell Technologies
- Veresh Sita, Chief Digital Information Officer, F5 Networks
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