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Maintaining Legacy Systems Main Reason for Overspending

Endava has launched an IDC InfoBrief, sponsored by Endava, Navigating the Digital Shift. The IDC InfoBrief explores how AI can unlock new potential for organisations, but only if they are supported by the right core infrastructure investments.

Compiled from IDC surveys across Europe, APAC and the Middle East, the paper reveals that digital services revenue is set to rise by 44%, expanding from 34% to half (49%) of organizational revenue by 2029. However, the paper highlights an urgent need to modernize for greater operational efficiency. Half of all surveyed firms (49%) attribute overspending on digital infrastructure to the cost of maintaining legacy systems, underscoring the need for change.

The research also reinforces the importance of data quality as the backbone of resilient core infrastructure, yet one in three companies report that poor data quality or inadequate infrastructure hampers their ability to achieve higher success rates in generative AI projects. This could have a significant impact, given that 70% of firms believe generative AI has either begun disrupting their business or will do so in the next 18 months.

With this in mind, AI solution spending aligns with growth expectations, with 51% of organisations prioritizing IT investments to enable growth, followed by access to skills (41%) and addressing insufficient internal capacity (38%). This is also driven by the C-Suite agenda; while transforming business processes is the leading short-term modernization and transformation initiative in support of digital business ambitions across all personas (as nominated by 54% of IDC survey respondents), 60% of CEOs highlighted deploying AI, machine learning or GenAI, making it their leading priority.

Analysis found that we’ve moved from a state of “generative AI scramble” from 2023-24 to “the AI pivot” in 2025-26, to result in “the AI fuelled business” in three years’ time. These findings highlight a critical juncture for organisations to move beyond experimentation and adopt a structured approach to AI projects, aiming to operate AI-fuelled businesses. Additionally, 47% of firms identified strong strategic partnerships as the key factor in the success or failure of generative AI projects. 50% of organisations are set to expand and diversify their partner networks, recognizing collaboration as key to unlocking AI’s full potential.

To learn more about how modernizing for AI-led digital transformation, including strategies for rising above challenges, read the InfoBrief here.

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