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IT spending to exceed US$3 trillion next year

IT spending to exceed US$3 trillion next year

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 18 Aug 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

In the latest Gartner/Dataquest report, analysts are predicting a surge in software spending due to the latest refresh cycle. Find out what Canada’s growth areas will be

“As of yet we don’t know what those big growth areas in cloud are going to be,” Tulley said. “We would expect that categories such as servers would be hit from the point of view of ownership inside the enterprises in favour of significant growth by big service providers.”

The move towards software as a service, Web 2.0 technologies, open source and service oriented architecture is “causing huge changes” in the software market, Gartner says.

“Instead of me buying licenses that I can use it into perpetuity, I just pay for the software as I use it or I renew it every year,” Correia said. “It gives the user a lot more flexibility if the software is not doing what it’s supposed to do.”

But she added spending on “perpetual licenses” still constitutes a “majority of the market.”

Another research firm, Toronto-based IDC Canada, has similar figures.

Vinay Nair, IDC Canada’s research manager for Canadian enterprise applications, said software as a service is “still in the early adoption stage,” with fewer than 10 per cent of firms looking at SaaS as a delivery model.

As for the effect of Web 2.0 technologies, Correia said this is changing the way programmers are developing software.

“The search market is gone, basically,” she said. “Instead of building their own search engine or their own mapping system, or their own geo whatever system, they use the web 2.0 technology to build in that functionality instead of building it in themselves.”

Gartner broke software down into 18 macro markets, all of which are projected to grow this year in Canada.

The largest areas of growth in Canada are in data integration, which is projected to grow 19 per cent to $66.5 million this year, from $55.9 million in 2007. Spending on supply chain management, which was &193.8 million this year, and customer relationship management, which was $358.1 million this year, are both projected to grow 11 per cent, to $215.8 million and $398.2 million respectively. All figures for the Canadian market were reported in U.S. funds.

And speaking of the exchange rate, Tulley said the real growth world wide was closer to four per cent because of the depreciation in the U.S. dollar.

The market in services is projected to grow 10 per cent this year, while telecom is expected to grow eight per cent. Much of that growth is driven by third-generation and data services in the developed world, Tulley said.










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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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