Back-to-Office Canceled: The New Phase of IT Spending

As we hit IT budget season for 2022, many organizations are delaying their back-to-the-office plans. Here's what that will mean for CIO IT spending priorities next year.

Jessica Davis

September 14, 2021

2 Min Read
Back-to-Office Canceled: The New Phase of IT Spending
(Source: Pixabay)

As IT budget season begins, is your company’s workforce headed back to the office, will workers have a choice of whether to return or not, or will workers remain remote for the foreseeable future? The answer could impact where you spend your organization’s IT spending and budget as we enter 2022 close to two years since the COVID-19 pandemic began.

A few months ago, it may have seemed that some organizations were pushing for workers to return to the office, at least a few days a week. But the Delta variant of COVID-19 and a new wave of infections with the virus seem to have caused some organizations to reconsider those plans.

In late August Gartner polled 238 Human Resources leaders and found that 66% of organizations are delaying reopening their offices due to new COVID-19 variants.

If organizations are delaying a return to the office, what does that mean to the IT budget? While organizations made those first big purchases back in April 2020 to enable workers to complete their tasks from home, now the focus is shifting to helping those workers be productive in a remote setup, according to Gartner VP and forecaster John-David Lovelock.

That means the big spikes in purchases of laptops and desktop computers won’t keep going up. But normal refresh cycles apply to these pieces of equipment, so organizations may be looking to refresh the ones that were out in the field before the pandemic hit. Spending on PCs, laptops, tablets, and mobile phones hit $84 billion in 2021, according to Lovelock and will remain essentially flat in 2022 at $80 billion. But that’s a lot higher than forecasts made before the pandemic hit expected those numbers to be.

“Not that long ago we thought 2022 spending in this category would be $67 billion,” he says. Other areas of spending will focus on improving the productivity and security of the remote work experience. That will include tools around unified collaboration, security, and video conferencing.

Plus, with all the extra traffic going over networks, organizations may also be looking to upgrade the networking of their remote users, keeping an eye on security, too.

Read the rest of this article on InformationWeek.

About the Author

Jessica Davis

Senior Editor, InformationWeekJessica Davis has spent a career covering the intersection of business and technology at titles including IDG's Infoworld, Ziff Davis Enterprise's eWeek and Channel Insider, and Penton Technology's MSPmentor. She's passionate about the practical use of business intelligence, predictive analytics, and big data for smarter business and a better world. In her spare time she enjoys playing Minecraft and other video games with her sons. She's also a student and performer of improvisational comedy. Follow her on Twitter: @jessicadavis.

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