ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Industry watch Toolkit

IT spending: What the analysts think

Jim Zimmermann

Published: 06 Oct 2003 15:00 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

One of the favourite activities of leading IT analyst firms is to research and prognosticate on IT spending. Lately, the topic has been, "Has the industry bottomed out, or are more dark days ahead?"
 
Let's take a look at what they've been saying.

Aberdeen: Recovery in IT spending
Aberdeen Group tracks the financial performance of the 20 largest publicly traded IT vendors. In its Q2 2003 analysis, it found that:

  • Sequential quarterly revenues increased 3.6 percent over Q1 2002.
  • Year-over-year quarterly revenues increased a nominal 6.1 percent.
  • According to Aberdeen, "The market has not seen such a positive revenue performance since Q1 2001. Year-over-year revenues have steadily gained ground since Q3 2001." It also provided a glimpse of the revenue leaders and losers:

  • IBM: up 10.1 percent
  • Dell: up 15.6 percent
  • Microsoft: up 11.2 percent
  • Sun Microsystems: down 12.8 percent
  • Siebel Systems: down 17.8 percent
  • As a group however, it reported that profits rose an impressive 36.5 percent.

    Aberdeen also speculates that "long-term IT spending will increase at an annual rate of between 4 and 6 percent."

    Aberdeen identifies the application software market as the poorest-performing segment, with a Q2 2003 revenue increase of 1 percent. (This growth compares with a 1.1 percent growth in the previous quarter, so the hard times are not over for these vendors.) Its research also found a 4.8 percent increase in service revenues from these vendors coupled with an 8.3 percent drop in application licence revenues. As a group, software licences accounted for only 23.7 percent of total revenues. According to Aberdeen, this decline is due in part to three major factors:

  • Businesses have reduced spending on application packages during the recent IT contraction. Software suppliers "plugged the revenue gap" by pushing professional services.
  • There has been a shift toward purchasing hosted applications on a subscription basis. This subscription-based revenue is usually counted as service revenue rather than licence revenue.
  • The total installed base of application software is still increasing (albeit slowly) and the installed base continues to purchase maintenance contracts and services.
  • All in all, Aberdeen sees the recovery continuing at a modest pace, but doesn't expect a return to the double-digit growth that the industry enjoyed in happier times.

    Next

    Previous

    1 2 3


    • Email
    • Trackback
    • Clip Link
    • Print friendly Print with Dell

    Did you find this article useful?
    184 out of 374 people found this useful


    Full Talkback thread

    0 comments


    Company/Topic Alerts

    Create a new alert from the list below:





    Related Jobs

    Clinical Operations Manager - Global Pharma *LINE MANAGEMENT*

    The organisation views an employee leaving and progressing to another level as a reward to their investment and is proud that success has been bred. ...

    Market Data BA (Vendor, Neogotiations, Costs) BANKING FX/EQUITES

    Prestigious 1st Tier Investment Bank is hiring 2 Market Data BAs (1 in Fixed Income & Commodities & the other in Equities/FX areas). This is an ideal ...

    Product Manager - Equity Derivatives / Fixed Income - trading/risk

    This very demanding role will require a very strong background in financial mathematics with considerable, demonstrable experience in the field ...

    Discussions

    David Long David Long

    Defragging: Merits?

    Thursday 24 July 2008, 10:30 AM

    12 posts

    Featured Talkback

    When all is said, if Microsoft produce the best product people will buy it and thats a good thing. If people have to buy their product because no one else can produce an alternative, only because interoperability protocols are kept secret, then thats a bad thing.

    By: pround

    Read full story:
    EU court crushes Microsoft's antitrust appeal