Tech Monitor reports that only 27% of executives believe their technology investments are aligned with business objectives. Every dollar you allocate to technology should drive productivity, reduce risk, or fuel innovation. Crafting your IT infrastructure budget for the year ahead isn’t just a financial exercise; it’s a strategic move that determines your plant’s resilience, cyber posture, and competitive edge. Here are seven key areas to prioritize to make sure your IT operations are truly fit for purpose.
1. Benchmark Your IT Spend: Setting the Right Financial Baseline
To start, benchmark your IT investment. Across all industries, companies typically spend 4%–8% of revenue on IT, according to External Systems USA. However, industry-specific data shows wider variation. In manufacturing, the range trends lower: according to Genspark, discrete manufacturers often allocate between 1.4%–3.2% of revenue to IT. This is echoed in benchmarking from Deloitte, which reports that manufacturing firms historically spend around 2.14% of revenue on technology.
These figures serve as guideposts, but the true benchmark should be your business goals, risk profile, and resilience requirements.
2. Future-Proof Through AI, Automation & Digital Transformation
AI and automation are no longer buzzwords. They are central to digital transformation in modern manufacturing. According to WifiTalents’ industry research, 70% of manufacturing companies have adopted at least one form of digital transformation technology, and by 2025, 90% of industrial firms are expected to implement some degree of automation.
But what does that look like in practice? In industrial settings, AI-powered predictive maintenance uses machine learning to analyze IoT sensor data, predicting equipment failures before they occur. This enables proactive maintenance, significantly reducing unplanned downtime. Academic research from Cornell University demonstrates that predictive maintenance, when combined with IoT and AI, can dramatically improve operational efficiency.
To account for this in your 2026 IT budget, allocate funds not just for digital transformation initiatives but for concrete pilots (predictive maintenance, autonomous process control) and the infrastructure to scale them.
3. Cybersecurity Beyond the Basics: Building a Holistic Risk Strategy
Securing your manufacturing operations requires built-in cyber resilience at every layer. As threats intensify, services like Patching as a Service (PaaS) and Backup as a Service (BaaS) are critical, but there are additional tools you should strongly consider:
- Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) / Extended Detection and Response (XDR): provides continuous monitoring and threat hunting.
- Identity and Access Management (IAM) and Zero-Trust Network Access (ZTNA): enforce least-privilege access across OT and IT systems.
- Immutable, air-gapped backup: protects data even when ransomware actors try to corrupt backup systems. Veeam’s 2024 report shows that up to 96% of ransomware attacks target backup repositories and 43% of data is unrecoverable, making immutable, air-gapped backups a critical line of defense.
- Regular penetration testing & security assessments: engage internal or external cybersecurity experts to validate your risk posture before an incident.
Combined, these services strengthen your cybersecurity infrastructure and reduce risk, making your operations more resilient to attack.
4. Business Resilience: Making It Measurable
Resilience needs to be measurable, testable, and repeatable. According to Synoptek’s 2025 strategic IT spending blueprint, 59% of CIOs list legacy modernization as a top priority, citing scalability and cybersecurity as key drivers.
Meanwhile, industry case studies show that effective BaaS programs with regular restore and integrity testing can reduce recovery times (Mean Time to Recover, or MTTR) by 70–90%, compared to unmanaged or on-prem backups. (While specific percentage recovery varies by provider and setup, modern backup-as-a-service implementations emphasize immutability, integrity checks, and verified restores—features that directly support business continuity.)
For your budget, explicitly reserve funding for backup verification, Disaster Recovery drills, and immutable backup retention: these aren’t just insurance; they’re productivity enablers.
5. Talent Strategy: Balancing In-House and Outsourced Resources
With the shift toward modernization and risk mitigation, many manufacturing companies struggle to attract and retain specialized IT talent, particularly in AI, cybersecurity, and cloud engineering. Outsourcing portions of these needs can significantly de-risk your staffing strategy.
For example, many organizations leverage managed IT operations partners to handle day-to-day patching, backup monitoring, and incident response. This allows in-house teams to focus on higher-value projects like ERP upgrades, automation programs, or AI pilots.
SIM Network’s IT Trends Study found that survey respondents allocated an average of 6.8% of their revenue to IT expenditures, reflecting high levels of investment and, in many cases, reliance on external IT partners. (Higher Logic Download)
That dual strategy—core staff plus expert-managed services—helps you scale agilely while keeping your budget predictable.
6. Compliance & Governance: Design for Audit from Day One
If you operate in regulated manufacturing (e.g., aerospace, food & beverage, pharma), your IT budget needs to support compliance not just today, but for future audits. Tools like Patching-as-a-Service (PaaS) help by automating patch reporting; Backup-as-a-Service (BaaS) solutions offer immutable logs and regular verification, giving you the documentation auditors and insurers demand.
Budget for this governance burden up front. When audit-ready processes are embedded in your IT operations, you reduce surprise costs and strengthen your risk posture.
7. Modernizing Infrastructure: Cloud, Edge, and OT/IT Convergence
Legacy systems continue to dominate many factory floors, but they often lack the agility and security required by modern threat vectors. Upgrading these systems is not optional. According to industry insights, cloud migration, edge computing, and OT/IT convergence are among top priorities for modern manufacturers. (Softura)
Edge computing lets you process data close to machinery (minimizing latency), while cloud platforms provide scalable storage and advanced compute capabilities. When they are combined, they enable real-time automation, predictive analytics, and smarter decision-making. Failing to modernize leaves you exposed: older OT devices often run on outdated firmware, lack security segmentation, and serve as easy entry points for attackers.
Allocate a portion of your IT infrastructure budget to modernizing factory systems by replacing end-of-life programmable logic controllers (PLCs), investing in edge infrastructure, and building secure connectivity between your OT and IT environments.
Bottom Line: Turn Your IT Budget Into a Strategic Asset
Your 2026 IT budget should do more than keep the lights on. It should empower transformation, enable resilience, and protect your bottom line. By investing thoughtfully in AI, cybersecurity, resilience, and modern infrastructure, you shift your IT from a cost center into a competitive shield.
Ready to Align Your IT Spend with Goals?
Ozone IT Services can help with a tailored IT budget review built for manufacturing realities. Let’s talk.


