Member Insights
Digital transformation programs that focus principally on high-level benefits cannot risk overlooking integration.
Digital transformations tend to focus on the desired high-level benefits such as greater efficiency and profitability, more operational and business agility, and better customer experience. This top-level view overlooks a major, pivotal element of digitalization which is foundational to the success of all transformation efforts – integration.
Integration is what pulls technology initiatives together into a cohesive, actionable strategy. It is especially important as communications service providers (CSPs) of all sizes and types evolve into extended enterprises – that is delivering services, solutions, and products via an ecosystem of partners through platform-based business and operational models.
This shift to platform models is only part of the story though: CSPs are running their IT systems across many different infrastructures, from on-premise, to public, private, hybrid and multi-cloud. Integration is what enables them to work seamlessly, and the systems to become infrastructure agnostic.
As digital initiatives accelerate, integration is a critical factor in determining the success and speed of digital transformation. What’s more, integration’s importance and impact are expanding all the time as:
Gartner’s solution to many faceted challenge of transforming integration as an enabler of wider digitalization efforts is the hybrid integration platform or HIP. The ‘hybrid’ in HIP describes the essential co-existence of legacy and modern integration technologies as part of digital transformation.
What should a HIP offer?
It is likely that some application teams are already updating and extending their tools to support the migration to cloud services, mobile apps, IoT and AI, for instance. Typically, they are using integration platform-as-a-service (iPaaS), often with an API management platform, and these two elements form the core of hybrid integration platform.
An iPaaS provides subscribers or tenants with the capabilities to implement integration projects involving any combination of cloud-resident and on-premises endpoints, including APIs, mobile devices and IoT. This is done by developing, deploying, managing and monitoring integration processes and flows that connect multiple endpoints, allowing them to work together efficiently.
However, many companies have a piecemeal approach to digitalization, which means many prototype HIPs lack some necessary functions and cannot deal with the most demanding integration tasks.
In Gartner’s view, a successful hybrid integration platform needs to include these four dimensions:
Many CSPs are committed to taking the HIP path to transformation, but don’t know where to start, what to prioritize, to identify what should remain as legacy integration and what should be modernized, or what their overall integration landscape should look like. On top of grappling with new technologies and the greater urgency for digital transformation that has been underscored by the pandemic, it is too difficult to attempt digitalization without specialist help. This includes integration transformation, which is at the heart of the wider effort, but is unchartered territory for most.
The ‘hybrid’ in HIP describes the essential co-existence of legacy and modern integration technologies as part of digital transformation. In the sample table below, there will be a progressive move to the newer tools and approaches, which form the building blocks of modern integrations.
The best way to approach any highly challenging and complicated task is to break it down into manageable, contiguous steps. Transforming integration with a HIP is no exception.
This is reflected in the specialist consulting and implementation services offered by Torry Harris Integration Solutions (THIS), specific to integration transformation and the HIP approach.
Governance is critical to the success of all transformation, and arguably even more important when you have a HIP as teams may not be aware of how the company is going about transforming its legacy IT to a modern stack and how to maintain the right level of hybrid integration. Having witnessed and addressed these issues first-hand with clients, THIS launched its integration governance and empowerment framework.
Good governance sets up the structure and processes required to produce the desired results for all stakeholders, making the best use of an enterprise’s resources at any given time.
As a foundation, governance must identify three key profiles:
The governance and empowerment framework facilitates good governance, allowing the initiative to evolve, and iteratively present best practices based on results. The framework is also designed to enable cohesive integration across the enterprise so that all elements are connected, rationalized and organized to provide consistent guidance and incentives that executives and leaders of business units require.