
For decades, organizations measured Enterprise IT by workforce size. More employees typically meant more applications, servers, offices, and data. Employee count became a convenient proxy for IT complexity. Backup vendors adopted the same logic when defining enterprise-class software, and the industry rarely questioned that approach. That definition no longer reflects reality. Enterprise IT has evolved […] For decades, organizations measured Enterprise IT by workforce size. More employees typically meant more applications, servers, offices, and data. Employee count became a convenient proxy for IT complexity. Backup vendors adopted the same logic when defining enterprise-class software, and the industry rarely questioned that approach. That definition no longer reflects reality. Enterprise IT has evolved Read More DCIG For decades, organizations measured Enterprise IT by workforce size. More employees typically meant more applications, servers, offices, and data. Employee count became a convenient proxy for IT complexity. Backup vendors adopted the same logic when defining enterprise-class software, and the industry rarely questioned that approach. That definition no longer reflects reality. Enterprise IT has evolved […]