IT Help Desk

Survey Finds IT Teams Rising to COVID-19 Challenge

In many ways, the COVID-19 pandemic has been the ultimate test for IT teams. The bulk of many workforces overnight became remote workers. Many of those end users are now starting to return to the office, but no one knows for sure if they will be sent back home again because of another flare-up.

A survey of 519 IT professionals conducted by ManageEngine, a provider of IT service management (ITSM) software, suggest most IT teams have risen to the COVID-19 challenge. According to the survey results, 85% of respondents said they were equipped with the right remote-support equipment or were able to procure it quickly to enable a productive remote work environment. In addition, 83% of respondents said they believe IT will be better appreciated in terms of budgets, salaries and recognition in the wake of the COVID-19 crisis.

Overall, nearly three-quarters (72%) said the ITSM tools continue to be effective despite remote work conditions. For example, 40% cited knowledge management as their greatest challenge, while just over 50% noted that prior to the pandemic Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) policies were non-existent in their organizations.

In terms of mobile computing devices, only 32% said they were already providing them. Nearly half (47%) are now planning to provide them.

Self-service support options aren’t being used by 28% of the organizations, and of those who do use them only 40% found they truly helped. Among the respondents who use chatbots for their self-service, 50% found them beneficial for remote support. Only 7% of respondents felt that the service desk wasn’t up to meeting the remote IT support challenges that the pandemic presented.

In addition, only 40% said they are equipped to tackle the increase in security and privacy concerns that result from more employees working outside the office.

Cloud services were also critical, with more than half of respondents (53%) saying such services helped their organization’s business continuity. However, 20% of respondents said they did not have a business continuity or disaster recovery plan in place for emergency situations. Among those who had them, 50% were happy with those plans. Almost a third (29%) of respondents admitted they did not do enough prior testing of their action plan.

A fifth of respondents also noted shadow IT is impacting services and applications, while nearly a third said they were unsure.

Pradyut Roy, a product manager for ManageEngine, said it’s apparent many IT organizations will need to update IT policies and processes in the wake of the pandemic. It’s also probable the IT environment will become more heterogeneous in the wake of the pandemic as, for example, more desktops move into the cloud, said Roy.

In general, IT teams will need to adjust to a much more fluid IT environment. Many more end users will be rotating in and out of the office to enable organizations to comply with social distancing mandates. Regardless of what the new normal becomes, however, it should be apparent to all by now that IT will play a more central role in most business decisions from here on out.

Mike Vizard

Mike Vizard is a seasoned IT journalist with over 25 years of experience. He also contributed to IT Business Edge, Channel Insider, Baseline and a variety of other IT titles. Previously, Vizard was the editorial director for Ziff-Davis Enterprise as well as Editor-in-Chief for CRN and InfoWorld.

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