If you’ve spent the last few years talking to enterprise IT buyers about cost efficiency, you weren’t wrong. That was the conversation. But over the past few months, things have clearly shifted.
The outbreak of war in the Middle East, with its direct impact on people and organizations in the region, as well as broader effects on energy costs and IT manufacturing supply chains, is a primary driver. At the same time, early AI buildout pressures on memory supply were already raising concerns.
Today, when CIOs and their teams make technology decisions, the question is no longer, “How do we optimize spend?” It’s, “How do we keep the business running when things break?”
This shift shows up clearly in data from two major surveys on IT priorities and spending plans conducted in February and again in March. Concerns about hardware supply constraints have increased by more than 15%, and geopolitical risk is rising quickly. Meanwhile, traditional cost pressures, while still present, are starting to take a back seat.
This is not because cost no longer matters. It is because cost is now seen as downstream. If systems go down, supply chains stall, or cyber incidents escalate, cost becomes secondary very quickly.
What are IT buyers most concerned about in 2026?
When you talk to IT leaders today, the tone is different. There is more urgency, more realism, and more skepticism. They are thinking about exposure:
- Where are we too dependent on a single cloud region?
- What happens if a supplier cannot deliver?
- How quickly can we recover from a cyber event?
Increasingly, they recognize that these risks are interconnected. A geopolitical event can disrupt supply chains, which impacts infrastructure, which affects applications, and ultimately hits revenue.
That is why IDC is seeing a clear pivot toward resilience.
Cybersecurity has moved to the top of the investment list globally, not just as a defensive measure but as a core part of keeping operations running. At the same time, organizations are accelerating investments in multi-region cloud architectures and backup strategies. Cloud security and multi-region resilience are now leading priorities across every major region.
IDC is also hearing from CIOs about a growing push to reduce dependency. CEOs are placing more focus on diversifying suppliers across all parts of the business. CIOs are responding by exploring sovereign cloud options and rethinking how and where infrastructure is deployed.
AI has not disappeared from the agenda, but it is being reframed. It is no longer just about innovation. It is about using automation and intelligence to keep systems stable under pressure.
Put simply, IT buyers are trying to build systems that can bend without breaking.
What does this shift mean for IT suppliers?
For suppliers, this shift creates both risk and opportunity.
The biggest risk is continuing to sell the way you did before. Leading with performance benchmarks, cost savings, or incremental features will not resonate the same way.
The opportunity is much bigger. Buyers are actively looking for partners who can help them navigate uncertainty. They are asking tougher questions:
- What happens if this service goes down in one region?
- How quickly can workloads move?
- Where are the hidden dependencies?
- How exposed am I if conditions worsen?
If you can answer these questions clearly and credibly, you move from being a vendor to becoming a strategic partner.
How should IT suppliers respond to rising resilience demands?
The challenge is that resilience means something different depending on where you sit in the ecosystem. The common thread is this: you must show how your offering performs under stress, not just under ideal conditions.
Cloud providers: How to prove resilience beyond scale
For cloud providers, this is a moment to rethink the narrative.
Scale and efficiency still matter, but they are no longer enough. CIOs want to know how your platform behaves when a region is disrupted, connectivity is constrained, or workloads need to move quickly.
This means making multi-region resilience the default, not an add-on. It also requires transparency about risk exposure and greater flexibility around sovereignty and localization.
In short, you are not just selling capacity anymore. You are selling survivability.
SaaS providers: Why continuity is now a core differentiator
SaaS providers are increasingly part of the critical path of operations. If your application goes down, the business feels it immediately.
Buyers want reassurance. They want to understand your disaster recovery posture, regional architecture, and dependencies. They want to know how their data is protected and how quickly services can be restored.
The vendors that stand out will clearly articulate how they maintain continuity, not just deliver functionality.
IT and professional services firms: From transformation to readiness
For services firms, the conversation has shifted from long-term transformation to immediate readiness.
Clients still care about transformation, but right now they need help answering urgent questions: Where are we exposed? What should we fix first? How do we prepare for multiple scenarios?
There is a real opportunity to lead with practical, actionable support. Rapid assessments, scenario planning, and resilience design are where clients need help now.
Speed matters. Clarity matters even more.
Communications providers: Why network resilience is now critical infrastructure
Connectivity has always been important. Now it is critical infrastructure in the truest sense.
Organizations are looking for redundancy, alternative routing, and, in some cases, entirely new connectivity models, including satellite and hybrid networks.
The differentiator is reliability under pressure. If you can demonstrate that your network keeps people and systems connected when other options fail, that becomes a powerful advantage.
Infrastructure vendors: Delivering certainty in uncertain supply chains
Hardware vendors are facing a different kind of scrutiny.
Availability and certainty in delivery are becoming as important as performance. Buyers want to know not just what the system can do, but whether they can actually get it, deploy it, and rely on it.
Transparency into supply chains, flexibility in configurations, and the ability to adapt to constraints are becoming key differentiators. In this environment, certainty is value.
Why IT buying decisions are shifting from optimization to assurance
Stepping back, what we are seeing is a shift in how technology decisions are made.
It is less about optimization and more about assurance. Less about peak performance and more about consistent operation.
The suppliers that win over the next six months will be the ones that can answer a simple but critical question:
What happens when things do not go according to plan?
From an enterprise IT leader’s perspective, that is no longer a hypothetical. It is the reality they are planning for every day. Resilience is no longer just a capability. It is the basis for trust.
What should IT suppliers do next?
If you are an IT supplier, now is the time to recalibrate how you engage with customers.
Start by pressure-testing your value proposition:
- Can you clearly articulate how your offering performs under disruption?
- Can you quantify how you improve resilience, not just efficiency?
- Can you help customers understand and reduce their exposure?
Just as importantly, ground your strategy in real buyer insight.
IDC’s latest Future Enterprise Resiliency & Spending Survey (March 2026, Wave 2) provides a detailed view into how enterprise IT leaders across regions are reprioritizing risk, resilience, and investment decisions in response to geopolitical and supply chain disruption.
We encourage you to explore the survey findings to better understand:
Suppliers that align early with these shifts will be better positioned to engage, differentiate, and win. Because in this market, insight isn’t just helpful.
It’s your competitive edge.