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ENTERPRISE APPLICATIONS
Gartner reveals
top predictions for 2012 and beyond
ConvergenceAsia staff
06/12/2011
Information technology
research and advisory company Gartner has revealed its top predictions for
IT organisations and users for 2012 and beyond. Analysts said that the
predictions herald changes in control for IT organisations as budgets,
technologies and costs become more fluid and distributed.
"The continued trends toward consumerisation and cloud computing highlight
the movement of certain former IT responsibilities into the hands of
others," said Daryl Plummer, managing vice president and Gartner fellow. "As
users take more control of the devices they will use, business managers are
taking more control of the budgets IT organisations have watched shift over
the last few years. As the world of IT moves forward, CIOs are finding that
they must coordinate their activities in a much wider scope than they once
controlled. While this might be a difficult prospect for IT departments,
they must now adapt or be swept aside."
Gartner analysts said that going into 2012 there is an increase in the
amount of information available to organisations, but it's a challenge for
them to understand it. Given the shifts in control of systems that IT
organisations are facing, the loss of ability to guarantee consistency and
effectiveness of data will leave many struggling to prevent their
organisations from missing key opportunities or from using questionable
information for strategic decisions. No regulatory help is on the near
horizon, leaving each business to decide for itself how to handle the
introduction of big data.
"Any organisation which wishes to accelerate in 2012 must establish in
itself a significant discipline of coordinating distributed activities,"
Plummer said. "They must establish relationship management as a key skill
and train their people accordingly. The reason for this is that the lack of
control can only be combated through coordinative activities. The IT
organisation of the future must coordinate those who have the money, those
who deliver the services, those who secure the data, and those consumers who
demand to set their own pace for use of IT."
Gartner's top predictions for 2012 include:
By 2015, low-cost cloud services will cannibalise up to 15 per cent of top
outsourcing players' revenue.
Industrialised low-cost IT services (ILCS) is an emerging market force that
will alter the common perceptions of pricing and value of IT services. In
the next three to five years, this new model will reset the value
proposition of IT. Low-cost cloud services will cause the cannibalisation of
current and potential outsourcing revenue. Similar to what happened with the
adoption of offshore delivery, it will be incumbent upon vendors to invest
in and adopt a new cloud-based, industrialised services strategy either
directly or indirectly, internally or externally. The projected US$1
trillion IT services market is at the beginning of a phase of further
disruption, similar to the one the low-cost airlines have brought in the
transportation industry.
In 2013, the investment bubble will burst for consumer social networks, and
for enterprise social software companies in 2014.
Vendors in the consumer social network space are competing with each other
at a rate and pace that are unusually aggressive, even in the technology
market. The net result is a large crop of vendors with overlapping features
competing for a finite audience. In the enterprise market, many small
independent social networking vendors are struggling to reach critical mass
at a time when market consolidation is starting, and megavendors, such as
Microsoft, IBM, Oracle, Google and VMware, have made substantial efforts to
penetrate the enterprise social networking market. While substantial
excitement will be raised by private firms going public, valuations of
smaller independent vendors will diminish as recognition sets in that the
opportunities for market differentiation and fast growth has eroded.
By 2016, at least 50 per cent of enterprise email users will rely primarily
on a browser, tablet or mobile client instead of a desktop client.
While the rise in popularity of mobile devices and the growing comfort with
browser use for enterprise applications preordains a richer mix of email
clients and access mechanisms, the pace of change over the next four years
will be breathtaking. Email system vendors are also likely to build mobile
clients for a diverse set of devices for the same reason. Market
opportunities for mobile device management platform vendors will soar.
Increased pressure will be on those suppliers to accommodate an increasing
portfolio of collaboration services, including instant messaging, Web
conferencing, social networking and shared workspaces.
By 2015, mobile application development projects targeting smartphones and
tablets will outnumber native PC projects by a ratio of 4-to-1.
Smartphones and tablets represent more than 90 per cent of the new net
growth in device adoption for the coming four years, and increasing
application platform capability across all classes of mobile phones is
spurring a new frontier of innovation, particularly where mobile
capabilities can be integrated with location, presence and social
information to enhance the usefulness. Innovation is moving to the edge for
mobile devices; whereas, in 2011, Gartner estimates that app development
projects targeting PCs to be on par with mobile development. Future adoption
will triple from 4Q10 to 1Q14, and will result in the vast majority of
client-side applications being mobile only or mobile first for these
devices.
By 2016, 40 per cent of enterprises will make proof of independent security
testing a precondition for using any type of cloud service.
While enterprises are evaluating the potential cloud benefits in terms of
management simplicity, economies of scale and workforce optimisation, it is
equally critical that they carefully evaluate cloud services for their
ability to resist security threats and attacks. Inspectors' certifications
will eventually become a viable alternative or complement to third-party
testing. This means that instead of requesting that a third-party security
vendor conduct testing on the enterprise's behalf, the enterprise will be
satisfied by a cloud provider's certificate stating that a reputable
third-party security vendor has already tested its applications.
At year-end 2016, more than 50 per cent of Global 1000 companies will have
stored customer-sensitive data in the public cloud.
With the current global economy facing financial pressure, organisations are
compelled to reduce operational costs and streamline their efficiency.
Responding to this imperative, it is estimated that more than 20 per cent of
organisations have already begun to selectively store their
customer-sensitive data in a hybrid architecture that is a combined
deployment of their on-premises solution with a private and/or public cloud
provider in 2011.
By 2015, 35 per cent of enterprise IT expenditures for most organisations
will be managed outside the IT department's budget.
Next generation digital enterprises are being driven by a new wave of
business managers and individual employees who no longer need technology to
be contextualised for them by an IT department. These people are demanding
control over the IT expenditure required to evolve the organisation within
the confines of their roles and responsibilities. CIOs will see some of
their current budget simply reallocated to other areas of the business. In
other cases, IT projects will be redefined as business projects with
line-of-business managers in control.
By 2014, 20 per cent of Asia-sourced finished goods and assemblies consumed
in the US will shift to the Americas. Political, environmental, economic and
supply chain risks are causing many companies serving the US market to shift
sources of supply from Asia to the Americas, including Latin America, Canada
and the US. Except in cases where there is a unique manufacturing process or
product intellectual property, most products are candidates to be relocated.
Escalating oil prices globally and rising wages in many offshore markets,
plus the hidden costs associated with offshore outsourcing, erode the cost
savings that didn't account for critical supply chain factors, such as
inventory carrying costs, lead times, demand variability and product
quality.
Through 2016, the financial impact of cybercrime will grow 10 per cent per
year, due to the continuing discovery of new vulnerabilities.
As IT delivery methods meet the demand for the use of cloud services and
employee-owned devices, new software vulnerabilities will be introduced, and
innovative attack paths will be developed by financially motivated
attackers. The combination of new vulnerabilities and more targeted attacks
will lead to continued growth in bottom-line financial impact because of
successful cyber attacks.
By 2015, the prices for 80 per cent of cloud services will include a global
energy surcharge.
While cloud operators can make strategic decisions about locations, tax
subsidies are no long-term answer to managing costs, and investments in
renewable-energy sources remain costly. Some cloud data centre operators
already include an energy surcharge in their pricing package, and Gartner
analysts believe this trend will rapidly escalate to include the majority of
operators — driven by competitive pressures and a "me too" approach.
Business and IT leaders and procurement specialists must expect to see
energy costs isolated and included as a variable element in future cloud
service contracts.
Through 2015, more than 85 per cent of Fortune 500 organisations will fail
to effectively exploit big data for competitive advantage.
Current trends in smart devices and growing Internet connectivity are
creating significant increases in the volume of data available, but the
complexity, variety and velocity with which it is delivered combine to
amplify the problem substantially beyond the simple issues of volume implied
by the popular term "big data." Collecting and analysing the data is not
enough — it must be presented in a timely fashion so that decisions are made
as a direct consequence that have a material impact on the productivity,
profitability or efficiency of the organisation. Most organisations are ill
prepared to address both the technical and management challenges posed by
big data; as a direct result, few will be able to effectively exploit this
trend for competitive advantage.
Additional details are in the Gartner report, "Gartner's Top Predictions for
IT Organisations and Users, 2012 and Beyond: Control Slips Away," which is
available on Gartner's website at www.gartner.com/predicts.
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