Lend your voice to the State of the Database Landscape survey

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There’s no shortage of opinions about where the database industry is headed. Vendors, analysts, and bloggers are quick to describe an increasingly AI-driven future, but those views don’t always match what’s happening inside real teams.

You’re the one untangling strange permission errors, or firefighting a failed deployment, or nervously contemplating compliance issues, on systems that have grown far more complex than anyone ever planned.

That’s why your voice matters. You see the trade-offs that come with moving fast. You know where careful design often gives way to expediency, and how the ‘compliance rules’ might say one thing, but the system in front of you says another.

Those insights deserve to be heard because they reveal the true state of our profession. The State of the Database Landscape survey exists to capture exactly that: the reality of working with databases today. It builds a picture of the challenges teams really face, the practices that are proving most effective, and the trends that are shaping our profession.

It takes about 15-20 minutes to complete, but it’s time well spent to ensure the conversation about our industry reflects your real experiences rather than marketing headlines. And yes, there’s also a prize draw to win one of five $250 Amazon vouchers.

So, if you’ve ever read a shiny new whitepaper or analyst’s predictions and thought “that’s not how it works here”, now’s your chance to set the record straight. Take the survey.

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About the author

Tony Davis

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Tony Davis is an Editor with Red Gate Software, based in Cambridge (UK), specializing in databases, and especially SQL Server. He edits articles and writes editorials for both the Simple-talk.com and SQLServerCentral.com websites and newsletters, with a combined audience of over 1.5 million subscribers. You can sample his short-form writing at either his Simple-Talk.com blog or his SQLServerCentral.com author page.

As the editor behind most of the SQL Server books published by Red Gate, he spends much of his time helping others express what they know about SQL Server. He is also the lead author of the book, SQL Server Transaction Log Management.

In his spare time, he enjoys running, football, contemporary fiction and real ale.