search
close-icon
Data Centers
PlatformDIGITAL®
Partners
Expertise & Resources
About
Language
Login
Connect with us
banner
Article

3 Takeaways from the Data Gravity Index™ 2.0

Tony Bishop, Senior Vice President, Platform & Solutions

Since the release of the Data Gravity Index™ 1.5 in 2020, we've witnessed the explosive growth of data creation globally. In recent years, global economies transformed from physical-powered to digital-powered. And now, we are in the next phase, transforming to become ‘data-powered’with high density data fueling economic growth.

This explosive data growth increases Data Gravity, which means that as more data is created and shared, the speed at which we can transmit that data decreases—increasing ‘gravity’ as a result. As businesses of all sizes innovate to create better goods, services, and customer experiences, understanding how quickly data creation and utilization grows becomes a competitive edge to plan for infrastructure and capacity needs.

Digital Realty published recent findings in the Data Gravity Index™ 2.0, derived from 1 billion operations against over 100 million data point across more than 190 countries and 500 metros. The Data Gravity Index™ 2.0 forecasts that global enterprise data creation will reach 1.2 million exabytes in the next three years. 93% of this data will be created outside of the public cloud.

Global 1.2 million exabytes

The growth of data among public cloud and private data centers represents a significant shift in how data is created, processed, stored, and exchanged. To keep up, enterprises must build a data-centric architecture to seize the $100+ trillion opportunity at hand.1

Additionally, there are three key insights from the Data Gravity Index™ 2.0 that business leaders should takeaway:

1. As trade flows, data flows

Since its inception, the global economy has depended on the physical movement of people, goods, and services across geographic regions. We saw the evolution of the physical economy to a digital economy with the advancement of digital transformation.

Physical Digital Data

And now, the data economy stems from the abundance of data created from digital interactions. The physical locations at the center of trade are also now the centers of enterprise data creation, processing, and exchange.

Enterprise data creation and Data Gravity are correlated with gross domestic product (GDP). As the GDP of a location rises, so does its data. The correlation between GDP growth and Data Gravity means multi-national companies should establish a new architecture that puts data at the center. This new architecture brings the system to the user.

2. Secular trends drive data exchange

According to the Data Gravity Index™ 2.0, 1.2 million exabytes of incremental enterprise data will be created in the next three years. 93% of that data creation will happen outside of the public cloud.
Major population centers create and exchange the most data. As a result, this is where Data Gravity grows the fastest. Three macro trends centralized in metropolitan areas drive the propagation of Data Gravity, they include:

  • Mergers and acquisitions
  • Data regulations
  • Maturity of digital technology adoption

According to McKinsey2, "companies with flexible, adaptive architectural platforms are less likely to experience post-merger integration difficulties." However, mergers and acquisitions increase digital workflows that propagate Data Gravity. And, as Data Gravity increases, special consideration should be given to how infrastructure and data sets are deployed and connected.
Data sovereignty, residency, and regulation requirements around the globe also drive Data Gravity's increase. In North America; Europe, Middle East, and Africa (EMEA); and Asia Pacific (APAC), Data Gravity intensity grows in all environments, mirroring the global increase. APAC leads the way in Data Gravity growth, with 461K exabytes created in the next three years. In all three regions, 90% or more of data processing and usage will exist outside of the public cloud.

Regional Forecast

Enterprises located in major population centers lead innovation with their use of analytics, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and Big Data initiatives. To accommodate the data economy-led world, enterprises must be proactive in their capacity, deployment, and connectivity plans.

3. As data grows, infrastructure capacity grows

Multi-cloud and hybrid cloud adoption is becoming more common, which is contributing to the rise of Data Gravity.

According to the Data Gravity Index™ 2.0, 243 million incremental storage devices, evenly split between public and private on-premises storage, will be required to address enterprise Data Gravity. These storage devices must be cloud adjacent, as growth will occur between the cloud and the edge.

Enterprise Storage

In enterprise compute, data processing is going to occur outside of the public cloud and require 15.3 million incremental servers in the next three years.

This is significant capacity growth all around the world that impacts how business leaders think about and plan for their infrastructure capacity to accommodate data-intensive industries. Companies that capitalize on new product growth and profitability around data-first strategies will win.

It's time to prioritize "Data First" architecture

In today's data-driven landscape, businesses face the impact of Data Gravity head on. As they adopt data-centric approaches and calibrate their capacities, they strive to stay ahead in an interconnected world where data is at the core of every decision.

To dive deeper into Data Gravity insights and forecasts, download the Data Gravity Index™ 2.0 today.

Check back for more Data Gravity-related articles that dive deep into:

  • Macrotrends influencing Data Gravity
  • Quantifying Data Gravity
  • Key factors driving metro growth
  • Implications for Enterprises, Cloud & Network Providers
  • Capacity Planning
Tags

1. World Economic Forum. $100 Trillion by 2025: the Digital Dividend for Society and Business, January 2016
2. McKinsey Quarterly, Understanding the Strategic Value of IT in M&A, 2011.