As technology continues to evolve, the boundaries of possibility are constantly being
pushed. Each year brings new advancements that reshape industries, redefine business operations, and introduce fresh challenges. 2025 will be no different. But while we stand on the brink of significant changes, one thing remains constant. Data is the foundation of innovation, underpinning everything from AI, through to quantum computing and beyond.
Valerio Romano, Accenture’s Senior Managing Director and Cloud First Lead in EMEA
underlined this at a recent event, stating that data is critical to powering emerging
technologies. But he also said that without a deep understanding of data, it’s impossible to scale innovations. Unifying data via the cloud is the way to drive full value from it. This has propelled cloud to the forefront of business decision-making, moving beyond simple technology transformation to playing a pivotal role in the data strategies that enable progress.
Data is the enabler of innovation
Bringing data together from disparate environments allows organisations to harness its power, utilising the full data set effectively. Only then can organisations focus on advanced use cases. It’s these emerging applications of data that push the needle for businesses. So, what are the technologies and trends that will shape the tech landscape in 2025 and beyond?
AI will be a key theme as businesses continue to experiment with new forms and
applications of the technology:
AI Agents will redefine business decision-making. Currently, AI still falls short
of replicating human-level decision-making, but next year that is set to change
with Agentic AI.
Agentic AI is set to drive a wave of innovation, transforming real-time problem-
solving and decision-making. Expect these AI agents to optimise tasks with ant-
like efficiency, navigating challenges quickly and adapting in real time. This will
see businesses building event-driven architectures that allow AI to react instantly
to real-life events, revolutionising industries like telecoms and logistics.
Agentic AI’s ability to run complex simulations will enable organisations to plan,
test, and optimise faster than ever, offering real-time actionable insights. For
instance, we will see telecom networks become smarter, where AI can anticipate
disruptions like storms, enabling proactive steps to be taken to minimise potential
service disruption while also enhancing the overall customer experience in
unexpected ways.
But with new use cases come new challenges:
‘Always on’ AI will reignite data management challenges. In 2025, we’ll start
to see AI infused into nearly everything, with it switched on by default. Your
phone will automatically analyse your emails to suggest follow-ups or prioritise
tasks based on your daily patterns – with models running locally to preserve your
privacy. Your car will even predict optimal routes based on real-time traffic and
weather data.
With AI everywhere, the amount of new data generated will skyrocket. This will
reignite data management challenges as organisations strive to gain insight from
a growing volume and variety of AI-generated data. Poor data management
could lead to disillusionment as companies find themselves overwhelmed by the
constant stream of information, unable to leverage it effectively.
As AI becomes standard in daily operations, the challenge will be ensuring its
insights are relevant and actionable, meeting minimum security and resilience
expectations, and not just adding to the noise. To unlock AI’s full potential,
businesses will need robust data management and multi-cloud strategies to
access, store, and analyse data – whether on-prem, in the cloud, or at the edge –
to extract the best value.
Meanwhile, emerging technologies like quantum will start to take centre stage:
Quantum computing will ignite the next ‘tech race’. Quantum computing is
set to overshadow AI as the next major technological revolution. Rapid
development is underway, with organisations investing heavily in next-generation
data centres equipped to provide ultra-cold temperatures specialised
infrastructure and massive power requirements required to support quantum
systems.
The potential value of quantum breakthroughs is immeasurable from
accelerating drug discovery and genetic reprogramming in healthcare to pushing
energy closer to fusion, potentially rendering traditional power sources obsolete.
Beyond global leaders such as Google and Microsoft, quantum technology will
also be offered as a cloud service, enabling businesses to access its power
without building their own infrastructure.
As quantum emerges as a game-changer, this shift will trigger a new race as
companies rush to harness quantum’s capabilities, using it to enhance AI
capabilities and gain a competitive edge.
And as companies create their own IP around AI, protecting their assets will become a
priority:
Intellectual property and data protection concerns will drive increased on-
premise and sovereign cloud investments. On-premise investments will surge
as companies seek to protect their data and intellectual property. Companies are
investing heavily in data and AI, developing their own IP that they want to keep
secure. By keeping their data on-premise, businesses have more security and
control, ensuring that proprietary code and project information remains within
their own protected environments.
In addition, interest in sovereign cloud solutions is also growing. Hyperscalers
like AWS and Microsoft have recognised that the repatriation of data will affect
their business models, prompting them to offer more localised, regulatory-
compliant cloud options.
Preparing for the future today
For organisations, the challenge will be to stay ahead of these trends having the ability to adapt quickly to opportunities as they emerge. With data and cloud intrinsically linked to driving innovation, modern data architectures will be more important than ever, providing the foundations for agentic AI, quantum computing, sovereign cloud and the next tranche of innovations – whatever they may be.
The future is coming at us faster than ever, and organisations with the capability to embrace change whilst reducing the challenges presented by new technologies will have the advantage over those that fail to adapt.
Christopher Royles is EMEA Field CTO at Cloudera. He helps organisations innovate through the use of data, working across industries that are regulated and organisations where data privacy is critical. Royles’ focus is on the development of skills and methods for migration to the Enterprise Data Cloud. Royles holds a Ph.D. in Artificial Intelligence from Liverpool University which he subsequently applied to voice recognition and voice dialogue systems. Royles has advised on Government Open Data initiatives as part of the Open Data User Group (ODUG) and sat on the quick wins stream of the UK Government Cloud Program (GCloud). Previously Royles has held roles at Oracle, Pitney Bowes and Vicorp.