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2009 was a tough year for the IT industry, largely as a result of the global economic downturn, which had a direct impact on enterprise IT spending. Like others, the IT industry faced lower sales, cost cutting and job losses. Thankfully, the global economy appears to be heading out of recession, which is good news for the IT industry, as history has shown that the economy and enterprise IT spending are closely tied. But what does 2010 hold for technology vendors? Are enterprise IT budgets going to increase? Which areas of the IT industry will be most attractive to enterprises? The Enterprise Technology Trends report addresses these questions through primary and secondary research into the enterprise IT market. Exclusive research from Business Insights gives insight into enterprise IT budgetary changes in 2010 and the broader business trends underpinning enterprise IT decisions next year. The remainder of the report examines 10 key industry trends to watch next year. 2010 may not mark a return to the freewheel spending of three to five years ago, but it still promises to be an interesting year for the IT industry.
Key features of this report
Scope of this report
Key Market Issues
Key findings from this report
Key questions answered
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1 Introduction
What is this report about?
Who is this report for?
Methodology
Chapter 2 Enterprise IT investment in 2010
Summary
Introduction
IT spending in 2010
The bigger picture
Enterprise spending patterns in 2010
Factors affecting IT purchasing decisions
The vertical outlook for IT investment in 2010
The outlook for IT investment in 2010, by geography
The outlook for IT investment in 2010, by sizeband
The underlying trends driving technology investment in 2010
Cutting costs
Doing more with less
Working smarter
Outsourcing core processes
Chapter 3 Do It Yourself IT
Summary
Introduction
The rise of DIY IT
Defining mashups
The wider trends underpinning growth in DIY IT
Increasing efficiency
Cost Saving
Simplification
Mobility / ubiquitous access
Collaboration
Looking outside the enterprise
Consumer-led innovation
Green IT / sustainability
Market development
Market drivers
Market opportunity
Impact on vendors
Barriers to future growth
Chapter 4 Virtualization moves towards mainstream adoption
Summary
Introduction
Emerging areas of virtualization
The bigger picture
The wider trends underpinning global growth in virtualization
Increasing efficiency
Cost saving
Simplification
Convergence
Mobility / ubiquitous access
Looking outside the enterprise
Consumer-led innovation
Green IT / sustainability
Market development
Desktop virtualization set for rapid growth in 2010
Application virtualization will also see widespread adoption in 2010
Impact on vendors
Competition heats up in the desktop virtualization space
Microsoft and VMware square up for battle in application virtualization
Virtualization management: a future growth area?
Barriers to growth
VDI isn’t necessarily suited to large-scale deployments
Lack of standards interoperability could limit growth
Virtualizing the desktop and application delivery has different challenges to server and storage virtualization
Chapter 5 Collaboration is big business in 2010
Summary
Introduction
Enterprise collaboration: the story so far
The bigger picture
Collaboration trends in 2010
Cloud computing and SaaS provide a low-cost way of trying out collaboration services
Could the collaboration platform become irrelevant?
Impact on vendors
Google poses a disruptive threat to the status quo
Incumbents embrace enterprise collaboration 2.0
There’s all to play for in 2010
Vendor recommendations
Chapter 6 Securing the cloud
Summary
Introduction
Cloud computing
The bigger picture
Enterprise concerns
Security and shared resources
Lack of security in the cloud
Impact on vendors
Vendor actions
Recommendation 1: publish security audits
Recommendation 2: go beyond SLAs
Recommendation 3: guarantee security
New market opportunities
The consequences of doing nothing
Chapter 7 The smartphone battle for the enterprise heats up
Summary
Introduction
The past, present and future of smartphones
The bigger picture
The market for smartphones is dividing
Prosumers influence enterprise smartphone buying decisions
Further convergence between smartphones and netbooks
The market for business-focused applications takes off
Impact on vendors
RIM’s market share under threat
Apple iPhone breaks into the enterprise
The rise of Android-based devices
What about Nokia?
Where next for Windows?
Chapter 8 Technology for free
Summary
Introduction
The history of ‘free’
The bigger picture
Market outlook
The growth of ‘free’ software
Microsoft Office 2010
Open source continues to build momentum
Impact on vendors
Vendors compete on price for productivity apps
Enterprises embrace hybrid buying strategies
The cost of ‘free’
The downward spiral to commoditization
Enterprise concerns
Chapter 9 Customer service 3.0
Summary
Introduction
The bigger picture
Market development
Listening to customers
User testing and focus groups
Online problem resolution
Impact on vendors
Expansion of product portfolios into customer service suites
There is everything to play for in a diverse vendor landscape
Competition comes from several quarters:
Challenges to market take-up in 2010
People and processes
Technological issues
Vendor recommendations
Chapter 10 Videoconferencing market ripe for a shake-up
Summary
Introduction
The ‘next big thing’ technology
The bigger picture
Market opportunities
Asia
Healthcare
Developments in the videoconferencing market in 2010
Enterprise videoconferencing systems move into the mainstream
3D videoconferencing around the corner?
Impact on vendors
Market consolidation
Skype: a threat to videoconferencing vendors?
Chapter 11 Security remains high on the corporate agenda
Summary
Introduction
The enterprise security outlook in 2010
The bigger picture
Trends within enterprise security in 2010
Security vendors capitalizing on a security gap in the SMB market
Securing the extended enterprise
Managing the security infrastructure more efficiently
Continuation of the security-as-a-service trend
Web 2.0 still causes security headaches
Chapter 12 New computing interfaces
Summary
Introduction
The rise of alternatives to the desktop
The bigger picture
Impact on vendors
Competition in the desktop space drives market innovation
Diversification in the touchscreen market
Desktop virtualization drives demand for innovation in thin clients
Netbook growth threatens desktop market hegemony
The ones to watch
The ones causing market excitement
Barriers to adoption
Index
List of Figures
Figure 2.1: Changes to enterprise IT budgets in 2010
Figure 2.2: Top business priorities for IT investment in 2010
Figure 2.3: External forces have a high impact on enterprise IT spending
Figure 2.4: Enterprise IT buying priorities
Figure 2.5: The business priorities driving IT investment in 2010
Figure 3.6: Enterprise mashup market development phases
Figure 3.7: What end-users want from an enterprise mashup vendor
Figure 4.8: The application virtualization stac
Figure 4.9: Virtualization adoption
Figure 5.10: Enterprises expect collaboration technologies to have the biggest impact on their business in 2010
Figure 5.11: The global enterprise collaboration applications market growth, 2007-2013
Figure 6.12: Cloud computing market forecast, 2008-2012 ($bn)
Figure 6.13: Enterprise security concerns from cloud computing
Figure 7.14: Smartphone shipments by OS, 2008-2014
Figure 8.15: Open source software market size and forecast, 2006-2011 (analyst consensus)
Figure 10.16: Videoconferencing is high on most enterprises’ agendas
Figure 10.17: Transformations in communications have driven the most change within organizations
Figure 11.18: Global enterprise security market size, 2006-2010
Figure 12.19: Microsoft Surface in action at AT&T
List of Tables
Table 2.1: IT spending forecast for 2010, by region (% respondents to Business Insights survey)
Table 2.2: IT spending forecast for 2010, by sizeband (% respondents to Business Insights survey)
Table 4.3: The potential savings from desktop virtualization
Table 6.4: Cloud computing taps into many business goals
Table 7.5: Top business apps on iTunes (US)
Table 7.6: Smartphone shipments by OS, 2008-2014 (000’s)
Table 8.7: Cost saving is the primary motivating factor behind IT spending decisions in 2010 (1 = Low impact – 4 = High impact)
Table 10.8: The potential CO2 savings from using videoconferencing are not as great as those generated by other energy-saving initiatives
Table 10.9: Videoconferencing vendor landscape (worldwide unit shipments for H1, 2009)
Table 11.10: Global enterprise security market size, 2006-2010
Table 12.11: Touchscreens have yet to break into the enterprise (impact on organization indicated by 1 = Low impact – 4 = High impact)
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