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A Market Primer: How Cloud Computing, the Rise of India and the Consumerization of IT are Changing the IT Services Business
The market for technology services is changing dramatically, driven by macro forces of cloud computing, virtualization, mobility and data growth. In addition there are ten major trends impacting services organizations, including:
ServicesAngle: The market is in transition, with new entrants forcing changes to competitive models on established players. IT buyers will be required to determine if existing suppliers can navigate through the change and will be forced to pick winners and losers.
How Large is the Business Technology Services Market?
The worldwide IT services market is huge, estimated by Gartner at $821B in 2010. This compares with spending on worldwide hardware ($353B) and worldwide software ($232B). Growth is comparable to the technology markets (~5% YoY 2009-10) although historically a bit slower due to its large size.
Importantly, the marginal economics of the services business is challenging. Specifically, as volume increases, marginal costs increase. Unlike software, which is a 90% gross margin business, many services businesses have diseconomies at volume of due to complexity at scale.
ServicesAngle: Growth will follow the hot trends. The key for services players will be to navigate the decline of traditional business while investing adequately in new capabilities.
Taxonomy: How is the Market Segmented?
The services market is highly fragmented with the leader IBM generating approximately $50B in services revenue worldwide, or less than 10% of the overall market. As such, the market is notoriously difficult to segment. Traditionally, the services industry refers to “professional services” (consulting, integration, outsourcing) and “maintenance” (technical support, field service) which comprise the sector.
A basic taxonomy could look like this:
Services Segment | Types of Services |
Consulting | |
Assessment | |
Project Based | Business Process Design |
Network & System Design | |
System Integration | |
Application Development | |
Testing | |
IT Management | |
Application Management | |
Hosting Services | |
Outsourcing | Cloud Computing (PaaS, SaaS, etc) |
Network Management | |
Help Desk | |
Business Process Outsourcing | |
Deployment and Installation | |
Support and Education | Hardware/Software Support |
Training, Education & Certification |
A broader view would include managed services from telecom/networking firms.
Other IT-related services that don’t fit neatly into this taxonomy include:
ServicesAngle: Increasingly, cloud-based services will dominate activities within the sector. Those suppliers that can profitably deliver on the promise of cloud computing will prosper. Users should beware of service level agreements of new entrants and ensure that corporate and compliance edicts are met.
How is the Market Divided?
Unlike technology product markets, the largest player in the worldwide services market holds less than 10% market share (IBM Global Services). The market is highly fragmented and sees revenues divided up between:
Major players in the services market sector include:
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India-based Firms |
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Cloud Consulting Firms |
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Tech Firms with a Services Business |
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Cloud service providers: |
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ServicesAngle: New players are emerging fueled by small and mid-sized businesses transitioning rapidly to cloud computing. The consumerization of IT is setting a new bar for existing services companies.
What are the Key Services Market Trends and Themes in 2011?
The IT services market is being impacted by many of the same forces that are changing the larger IT world – virtualization, consumerization, advent of cloud services, information growth/Big Data, mobility, social media.
Here are some other key trends relevant to the Services market:
ServicesAngle: The services sector has historically been viewed as sl0w-moving. While its sheer size will decelerate change at the macro level, internally, services companies are undergoing massive sea changes as they move to simplify, deal with smaller projects and help companies do more with less. In many ways, IT organizations are mirroring their services suppliers and can learn much from these vendors.
Who Buys IT Services?
Virtually every IT consumer purchases IT services, including:
Corporations, State and Local Governments
Large companies buy consulting & integration services, big outsourcing deals, disaster recovery services, huge technical support agreements (often across geographies), software maintenance, application development, and a lot of training and education. They buy these services from large consultancies, integrators and outsourcers, as well as their product suppliers. If they have reseller relationships, qualified resellers also can provide them with services on the products they resell, but many corporations get serviced directly by technology product companies.
Medium/Small Business
These companies typically have smaller in-house IT staffs so they need services in some ways more than the large corporations. They are less likely to be able to develop applications without help. They may need more hands-on consulting, integration and training when implementing a new set of products, OS upgrade, etc. They more typically get services from the channel firms (resellers) than do the larger corporate buyers.
Small-office/home-office (SOHO)
These businesses have the least available IT support and are highly dependent on a third-party for services, especially if there’s a problem. They are also typically less sophisticated, e.g., able to solve their own IT problems. These firms often have a single local servicer who knows them well and can meet most of their needs.
Consumers
The quality of technology customer service for consumers has historically been rated low. PC companies have been dinged for years over poor telephone support, slow response times, and generally frustrating support delivery. Consumer needs run the gamut and are notoriously hard to predict, making this a very challenging and often expensive segment to service. Services companies and product companies push automation heavily at this segment to try to solve problems before a live support person is needed. Thus many of the cutting-edge services tools are first introduced for consumer support (including Web site content, live chat, social media, etc.).
Federal Governments and Agencies
Government agencies buy services much like large corporations although often purchases are made through large systems integrators that are specifically geared toward selling to the public sector generally and the federal government specifically. These specialized channels are typically set up as divisions of large tech companies (e.g. Unisys Federal Systems) or dedicated entities specializing in servicing the government (e.g. defense contractors).
ServicesAngle: The IT in our homes is now as good if not better than our IT at work. Small and mid-sized businesses now have the opportunity to access the same IT as large corporations and can increase their competitiveness as a result. Large companies must not sit idle.
Where can Someone Find Services-related News & Other Content?
Because the market is so fragmented and challenging to analyze, the leading IT news sources tend to cover it peripherally. Here are some sources for services content:
Check services & product company press releases for:
Check earnings call transcripts for services quarterly results*:
*SeekingAlpha.com has transcripts from almost every earnings call, including Q&A.
Online publication coverage of services industry:
And of course, ServicesAngle.
What are the Top Services-Related Blogs?
Several blogs touch on services but these tend to be more dedicated to the sector
Services Industry Associations
Technology Services Industry Association (TSIA)
What are Some Examples of Key Services Technologies Being Deployed?
What Tips are there for Tracking & Forecasting the Services Market?
This is challenging partly due to the market’s fragmentation. Also, some parts of the market such as Support & Maintenance are counter-cyclical, e.g., services spending has sometimes actually increased when the economy worsened because customers want to extend the life of their technology instead of buying new products—this was not the case in 2009 as many organizations re-negotiated existing contracts and most vendors responded favorably, helping their customers through the downturn and sharing the pain with the hopes of renewed growth down the road.
Outsourcing is also somewhat counter-cyclical; however it is going through a massive change as customers are spending less on large projects and chunking initiatives in to smaller sizes, somewhat reducing demand for outsourced IT services. As well, cloud computing is impacting services in a big way by lowering the cost of entry, making new services available to smaller businesses and generally disrupting the marketplace.
The bottom line ServicesAngle: Services is a huge and vital market segment touching virtually every aspect of IT. Look for those services organizations that can respond to the need for enterprise-class cloud computing, virtualization, big data analytics, security and mobile computing trends to provide strategic guidance and drive business performance over the next 2-3 years.
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