Mannu Singh, Vice-President, Tata Teleservices

Mannu Singh, Vice-President, Tata Teleservices Limited

Digital transformation and smart tech adoption saw a huge upswing over the past one year. Enterprises translated the learnings of the pandemic into actions and stepped up to become more resilient, competent and future-ready. The focus pivoted towards leveraging the benefits of tech advancements and building digital dexterity to stay ahead in the race. From supporting the evolving needs of the workforce in the hybrid or remote work model to achieving operational efficiency with automation, they benefited from tech integration and enhanced scalability and profitability.

SMEs becoming digitally agile

Small and medium enterprises (SMEs), whi­ch account for 40 per cent of industrial production and exports, utilised extensive digital tools and processes to improve their business strategies, become innovative, support decision-making, boost productivity and meet rising customer dema­n­ds. Conti­nu­ing with their efforts, they are actively turning towards adopting sma­rt tech digital solutions and scaling up the­ir digital presence to gain a competitive edge in the market. SMEs across diverse industry segments are expected to become more tech-savvy and make decisions with a data-driven app­roach to identify profitable market trends and better service their consumer demands. Also, with increased scalability and flexibility, they are focusing on offering superior and quality products and services at a faster rate with minimum effort in the coming year as well.

Adoption of cloud communication on the rise

Hybrid working models are set to gain more prominence in the coming times due to the rising demand for user flexibility. Organisations will accelerate the adoption of cloud communications to fulfil their collaborative work requirements across geographies. SMEs have become aware of the importance of solid enterprise communication processes for seamless operations, bu­siness continuity and growth.

The adoption of cloud communication services witnessed a rise as enterprises lo­ok­­ed for cloud solutions, as these are asset-light and available on a pay-as-you-go mo­del, en­­­a­bling their employees to wo­rk fr­om any­­where, any time and on any device, giving them ultra-flexibility. With this, they are creating a viable eco­system of digital workplaces to make es­sential to­ols and ap­plications accessible from remo­te locations and devices. This mak­es ema­il, chat messaging, instant sha­ring of files, video calling and conferencing op­tions, and scheduling of events and meetings ea­sier for better productivity and sm­oo­ther operations.

AI, ML and data analytics to gain prominence

Emerging new-age technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML) and data analytics registered an inc­re­ase in popularity and acceptance owing to the huge benefits they brought to enterprises. In addition to enhancing agility, competitiveness and growth pros­pects, they hel­ped businesses improve their services, pro­ducts and customer en­gagement.

For instance, SMEs are using AI-powered tools in customer-servicing chatbots, cu­stomer relationship management, real-time customer feedback analysis and other related areas. They have also re­alised the potential of data analytics for in­terpreting huge data sets to predict consumer patter­ns, enhance offerings and im­prove pricing strategies. With AI and data analytics, SMEs are resolving issues related to supply chain, logistics and risk management. With the growing importance of these new-age technolo­gi­es, SMEs will con­tinue to accelerate tech adoption for a competitive edge and commercial gains.

Growing importance of data protection, privacy and cybersecurity 

As SMEs transform into a digital ecosystem, the generation of huge volumes of consumer data has made it imperative for them to implement steps and systems for data protection. Companies have alrea­dy started building strategies to secure their workplaces, keep data safe, and become trustworthy and credible in the eyes of in­v­e­stors, partners, authorities and, most im­p­ortantly, customers. Since they store en­ormous amounts of customer data, any in­ci­dent of data breach or cyberattack can put valuable and sensitive data and the company’s reputation at risk. The scope for cyberattacks is huge and has necessitated organisations to adopt a zero-trust policy and safeguard their sensitive data from threats such as phishing and ransomware.

SMEs will continue with their efforts of building a secured workplace to not only counter risks but also stay safe with the evolving nature of complex malware.

Conclusion

SMEs, being one of the key growth en­gines of the economy, have embarked on the path of resiliency due to aggressive tech adoption. As the economy continues to grow stronger, the responsibilities and con­tribution of SMEs will increase tre­me­ndously. Undoubtedly, smart tech integration in th­eir DNA will support them and also boost their efficiency, productivity and strength to positively influence innovation.