When it comes to enterprise technology discussions, we tend to highlight AI, data, cloud platforms, analytics and automation. The real story happening in organizations today goes beyond that. The key change is operational as companies are moving from recording transactions and reporting results to identifying issues earlier, coordinating decisions and taking action while operations are still unfolding. This challenge affects manufacturing, distribution, healthcare, retail, financial services, energy, government and even professional sports.

Sports may seem an unlikely way to learn about enterprise technology. Most aren’t aiming for championships or managing global events. From an operational standpoint, sports organizations are similar to the environments managed by CIOs, operations leaders and supply chain teams. They’re interconnected, data-driven, complex and demand quick, real-time decision-making.

What makes sports interesting is not the competition itself. It is the visibility. Operational successes and failures occur in public, under significant time pressure, with little room for error. That makes sports a useful environment for understanding where enterprise operations are heading and why the next phase of ERP, supply chain, data, security and AI is centered on execution.

The Vendor Ecosystem Tells An Important Story The technology companies investing in sports are also helping organizations modernize ERP, supply chains, data platforms and operations. IBM supports Wimbledon, the US Open and the Masters through watsonx. Microsoft applies Azure and Copilot across the NFL and Premier League. AWS and Google Cloud provide infrastructure for Formula 1 timing, NFL analytics and MLB Statcast. These examples demonstrate how AI, data, cloud and operational platforms are becoming integral to real-time decision making and execution.

The data story is just as interesting. Snowflake serves as the official data collaboration provider for the LA28 Olympic and Paralympic Games, highlighting the growing importance of trusted information sharing across complex ecosystems. Databricks and Teradata are both helping organizations address enterprise data, analytics and AI requirements, with examples that include Spain’s LALIGA soccer league, the Texas Rangers, the New York Giants and the LA Clippers. Qualcomm's investments in connectivity, including its work with Manchester United and Old Trafford, reinforce a theme seen across enterprise operations. Data, analytics and applications are important, but infrastructure is what brings them together.

Individually, these relationships may look like sponsorships. Collectively, they highlight where enterprise execution is headed. These are not just sports technology partnerships. They represent many of the same platforms organizations use to modernize ERP, supply chains, data and operations.

Sports As An Event-Driven Enterprise Modern sports organizations generate a continuous stream of operational events, from player tracking and ticketing transactions to security monitoring, inventory consumption and fan engagement. The challenge is not collecting data. It is determining which events matter and responding quickly enough to influence outcomes.

The same challenge exists across industries. Manufacturers monitor equipment and production systems. Distributors track inventory, suppliers and logistics networks. Healthcare providers manage patient capacity and clinical operations. Financial institutions evaluate transactions, fraud indicators and risk events.

Across all of these environments, the objective is to improve execution. This is why event-driven architectures, operational intelligence platforms, workflow orchestration and AI-assisted decision support have become priorities. Organizations want to identify issues earlier and act before they affect outcomes.

Formula 1 Shows What Enterprise Execution Looks Like Formula 1 is an example of where enterprise operations are heading. Behind every race is a complex operation involving procurement, inventory, assets, maintenance, logistics, suppliers, workforce planning, financial controls and regulatory compliance. While the environment differs from manufacturing, many of the underlying business requirements are similar.

A Formula 1 team moves thousands of parts and significant volumes of equipment around the world on a fixed schedule. Inventory must be available when needed, suppliers must perform consistently, engineering changes must be tracked and costs must remain under control. Delays cannot simply be pushed into the next quarter.

This is where the ERP connection becomes clear. SAP supports Mercedes-AMG Petronas Formula 1 operations. Oracle works closely with Red Bull Racing, where analytics and simulation play a significant role in race strategy and decision making. IFS is helping establish the operational foundation of the Cadillac Formula 1 Team, while Acumatica provides ERP capabilities for organizations operating across both manufacturing and motorsports environments.

The lesson is not that race teams use ERP. The lesson is that ERP, supply chain, financial and operational planning systems are expected to support execution, not just record keeping. Organizations want systems that identify exceptions, coordinate workflows, surface risks and support decisions before operational issues affect customers, production, service levels or financial performance.

The vocabulary may differ between a factory floor and a Formula 1 garage, but many of the operational principles are the same. These challenges are being addressed by manufacturers running SAP, Oracle, IFS, Acumatica, QAD, Epicor, Infor, Microsoft, Sage and other ERP platforms.

Supply Chain Execution Becomes Visible In Sports Every major sporting event depends on supply chain execution. Equipment must arrive on time, workforce resources must be available, vendors must coordinate activities and contingency plans must be ready before disruptions occur.

Supply chain leaders face similar challenges every day. When a race team misses a shipment, the impact is immediate. When a manufacturer experiences a similar disruption, the consequences may not appear until production schedules slip, customer commitments are missed or financial performance is affected.

Sports compresses planning, decision making and response into a highly visible operating environment, which is what makes it worth studying.

Organizations recognize that planning alone is not enough. Competitive advantage comes from the ability to detect changes, evaluate options and adapt before disruptions escalate. That principle applies equally to race teams, manufacturers, distributors, healthcare providers and government agencies.

What LA28 Reveals About Enterprise Coordination The upcoming LA28 Olympic and Paralympic Games provide a great example of enterprise coordination at scale. The 2026 FIFA World Cup arrives even sooner at similar scale, with 48 teams playing 104 matches across 16 host cities in the United States, Canada and Mexico. Lenovo, its official technology partner, is deploying more than 17,000 devices and edge computing at the Dallas broadcast center to meet low-latency requirements that cloud-only systems could not meet, while Hawk-Eye handles video review, a reminder that a global event runs on the same coordination and infrastructure problems that an enterprise faces across regions.

The challenge extends far beyond athletics. Organizers must coordinate venues, workforce planning, logistics, transportation, security, sponsors, governing bodies, technology providers, media organizations and public agencies, many of which operate independently and do not share common systems or processes.

That challenge should sound familiar to enterprise leaders. Manufacturers coordinate suppliers and logistics partners. Healthcare organizations coordinate providers, payers and regulators. Government agencies coordinate across departments and jurisdictions. In many cases, the challenge is less about technology and more about coordination.

That is one reason Snowflake’s role as the official data collaboration provider for LA28 is worth watching. The objective is not to share data. It is enabling organizations to share trusted information while maintaining governance, security, ownership and accountability.

LA28 will provide a large-scale example of what happens when data, operations and execution must work together across a complex ecosystem of organizations.

Technology Is Not The Constraint One lesson consistently emerges across enterprise modernization efforts. Technology is rarely the primary constraint. Organizations often struggle less with technology selection and more with process standardization, data quality, governance, change management and operational accountability.

The most advanced AI platform cannot compensate for poor data. The most sophisticated analytics environment cannot solve inconsistent business processes. The most capable ERP platform cannot overcome weak operational discipline. Sports does not eliminate these challenges. It exposes them faster.

As organizations move toward more connected and event-driven operations, resilience becomes equally important. Recovery, continuity, security and data protection become operational requirements rather than compliance exercises. This is why companies such as Commvault, Cohesity, Rubrik and Veeam belong in the same conversation as ERP, supply chain and data platforms. Execution depends on far more than software.

What Comes Next This article focuses on execution because that is where transformation becomes visible. ERP coordinates processes. Supply chains coordinate movement. Neither works without trusted data, resilient infrastructure, strong security and effective decision support.

Those capabilities do not operate independently. ERP, data, AI, security and infrastructure are becoming more interconnected, and organizations are learning that weaknesses in any one area can affect the entire operation. Understanding how those layers work together is becoming just as important as understanding the technologies themselves.

Future articles in this series will explore the operational foundations behind execution, including the evolving role of ERP and supply chain systems, the growing importance of data and AI, and why security, resilience and connectivity have become essential components of modern enterprise operations.

The common thread is not sports. The common thread is execution.

Sports offers a visible example of a broader shift occurring across every industry. Organizations that combine technology with trusted data, strong processes and operational discipline will achieve the greatest value from their investments. The rest will implement many of the same technologies and still struggle to turn investment into measurable operational outcomes.