Technical Debt Stifling Path to AI Adoption for Global Enterprises, Says Research
Outdated legacy technologies costing organizations the ability to innovate, money, time – and, potentially, even customers
The study found that two in three (68%) respondents say legacy systems and applications are preventing their organization from fully embracing more modern technologies. An overwhelming majority (88%) are also concerned about how their technical debt impacts their ability to keep pace with more agile, innovative competitors – with one in three (29%) indicating either ‘clear’ or ‘significant’ concern. More than half (57%) even acknowledge their reliance on legacy systems ‘likely’ or ‘highly likely’ causes customers to defect due to the resulting poor experiences.
Other findings from the research include:
- Legacy dependency: Almost half (48%) say they can’t stop supporting their legacy applications – despite wanting to – because the systems are still business critical. Almost half (47%) say their oldest legacy application is between 11-20 years old, while more than one in ten (16%) run apps between 21-30 years old.
- Legacy Ineffectiveness: Two thirds (68%) of respondents say legacy systems are preventing their organization from operating as effectively as possible, citing time spent on maintenance (44%), the siloed nature of disconnected systems, and the cost of maintenance (both 37%) as the leading contributing factors. Just 7% feel legacy applications caused no problems for their business whatsoever.
- The customer does not always come first: Three quarters (74%) of respondents agree their business prioritizes investments that improve profitability instead of ways to improve customer experience, such as technologies to help modernize legacy applications. This echoes research conducted by Pega earlier this year among consumers, 69% of whom felt businesses were prioritizing profits over positive customer experiences in their IT investments. It could also help explain why one in three (32%) say the average resolution time to customer queries has increased between 26-50% in the last 12 months – a direct result of staff running multiple or outdated legacy applications.
Quotes & Commentary
“This study highlights how easy it can be for enterprises to get dragged down by outdated systems that are unwieldy to use and resource-intensive to maintain – perpetuating an organizational culture of waste,” said
Notes
Pega surveyed more than 500 IT decision makers worldwide on their legacy transformation projects, how they work, and the challenges and opportunities they present. The results included responses from
Methodology
For all respondents, Pega defined ‘technical debt’ and ‘legacy systems’ as outdated hardware, software, or technology platforms that remain in use due to their critical role in business operations. This is despite challenges such as limited scalability, security vulnerabilities, high maintenance costs, and incompatibility with modern technologies. Technical debt is the implied, often intangible, cost of additional work, or strain using them places upon the business.
Additional Resources
- Unlock rapid enterprise modernization: Pega Blueprint
- More information: Pega Blueprint
-
Demo video: See
Pega Blueprint in action - Other background: Pega Gen AI and Pega Infinity
About
Pega is
All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250602034043/en/
Press:
jon.brigden@pega.com
Source: