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With great power, comes great responsibility, Uncle Ben warned Spiderman. In
the enterprise world, there is a similar analogy: With great growth, comes great
responsibility-to manage cost, risks, and innovate to survive-in short, to
manage growth profitably.
They were some of the key drivers that fuelled the packaged software
applecart in FY 2005-06. Phenomenal growth in the automotive, manufacturing,
services, and the construction industry had enterprises looking for 'total
applications' or end–to-end solutions in certain cases, as they became more
and more demand driven. They refused to take the complexity of buying their own
components and then integrating it, thus tilting towards the solution providers.
Many packaged software players, thus moved towards a solution approach. As
customers continued to demand more value for money and looked for less
complexity by not talking to multiple vendors, there was some interesting news
from the point of consolidation. Veritas merged with Symantec. Oracle picked up
51% stake in i-flex.
The year saw increased demand for back-end system support, because many
enterprises started to differentiate, both from a service and product
perspective, in their attempt to retain and win newer customers now used to a
lot of choice. Add to that the fact that many of these firms are getting
integrated into the global supply chain and there are compliance issues such as
Clause 49 and Sarbanes-Oxley to contend with. This was what fuelled the demand
for applications and most of the biggies in this space had growth in excess of
30%.
Packaged software tools from HP, IBM, and CA saw traction because of the IT
Service Management (ITSM) best practices framework. And even though initially
confined to companies offering infrastructure and service management, it has
gradually begun to see adoption within non-IT companies as well. This, because
of technology shifts like processes and content being transformed from physical
and static to digital, mobile and virtual. Two, the demand for simplicity,
manageability, and adaptability are changing how customers work and organize as
well as how they buy and use technology. Finally, because the move is towards a
horizontal, heterogeneous, and networked world-ITSM helps manage business
horizontally, which is why it has become critical to anyone who has an IT
infrastructure.
Top of the Charts
So where did the growth come from? On the face of it, the top end of the
Indian enterprise pyramid looks saturated, particularly from the enterprise
application point of view. But companies such as Oracle and SAP had discovered
greener pastures.
Functions such as finance, HR, payroll, and purchasing are largely done.
Value-added applications such as supply chain management or planning are the
areas where the current move is. People had implemented a manufacturing
solution, but not necessarily a supply chain planning solution, a supply chain
management solution or a solution that integrates their customer relationships
along with the supply chain, as the two get closely linked with each passing
day. A lot of companies investing in big projects and capacity expansion needed
to manage projects effectively-and the application growth came exactly here.
In FY 2005-06, Oracle for example, implemented full-blown solutions in Maruti
and LG.
SAP added 250 new customers in FY 2005-06 as compared to 120 new wins in FY
2004-05 across all the segments and around 65 of this came from the large
enterprise space; from banking (SBI is the latest), consumer product companies (Dabur),
retail, the government, professional services, telecommunications, and
utilities.
SAS, with its biggest customer win of the year in ICICI Bank, saw a triple
digit growth on its number of licenses (had grown 38% in FY 2004-05) and added
about 45 installed sites. Both SAP and Oracle saw CRM adoption increase with the
latter got into the automotive space seriously with wins such as Tata Motors and
Daimler Chrysler. HP's two buckets of products–OpenView and OpenCall-also
showed remarkable growth. There is a lot of interest in OpenView because a lot
of IT companies in India are setting up remote NOCs to manage the infrastructure
of their clients' abroad. Wipro and TCS for example, are big implementation
partners for OpenView. The suite, which is basically the company's network
management service tool, today, encompasses a much broader scheme of things such
as configuration, change, and performance management amongst others.
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Packaged
SW: The Top Players
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Rank
|
Company
|
2005-06 Revenue
(Rs crore) |
|
1
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Microsoft
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1,507
|
|
2
|
SAP
|
956
|
|
3
|
Oracle
|
751
|
|
4
|
IBM
|
685
|
|
5
|
HP
|
573
|
|
6
|
CA
|
347
|
|
7
|
Autodesk
|
236
|
|
8
|
Symantec
|
202
|
|
9
|
Infosys
|
138
|
|
10
|
Tally
|
133
|
|
Source: DQ estimates
Cybermedia Research
As many Indian companies started integrating into global supply chains
and there were compliance issues, the medium and small ones also started
buying packaged software besides the large enterprises. |
Besides talking about products around compliance, a huge
number of enterprises also looked at outsourcing requirements for back up,
automation, and disaster recovery. As they demanded one way of negotiating
license fees as opposed to many and fewer vendors rather than multiple ones,
Symantec's range of anti-virus, anti-spam, coupled with the back up products
from Veritas, did well, some products showing twice the growth from the previous
year. In the consumer marketplace, the Norton brand exceeded expectations and
saw near monopoly.
Infosys, which leverages India more from a resource perspective rather than
as a market, has an extensive domestic focus for its core banking product, which
did Rs 138 cr in FY 2005-06. To do products, it needed to be in a repeatable
space, as products have multiple buyers for the same product. India has a big
banking sector, a client base to fine tune and hone the product.
A bifurcation in the consumer business was noticed during the year-one was
going up market, like Microsoft's Windows XP Media Center, which far outpaced
any estimation the company had from the sales perspective. It sold more than
80,000 during the year, hinting at the trajectory in the Indian consumer's
sophistication levels. The company says it had to continuously revise India
estimates throughout the year because it kept selling more and more and now, it
is the fourth largest Media Center country in the world!
Mid-Market Dreams
The middle is also what most other packaged software players are focused on
because of the presumption that 50-60% of market opportunity in IT today, exists
in the SME segment. The traditional Indian small market, which till sometime
back had probably not felt the need for applications such as ERP, is now
undergoing a change. Companies, mostly in the Rs 5-50 crore range had automated
their accounting practices, but had not automated anything beyond that. In cases
where this had been done, the solutions came mostly from local unorganized
vendors who implemented 'home-grown ERP'. With many companies in this
segment competing internationally, the need for having better processes in place
has been felt.
Tally delayed its ERP launch for the bottom of the pyramid companies and the
immediate beneficiary seemed to be Microsoft, whose suite grew more than 50%.
The company made sure it is priced appropriately-just above Tally. Two, it
works well with SAP, so that when SAP is in the middle, it is at the spoke.
That's very attractive from a cost perspective for the small to mid-size
enterprise because many companies don't want to deploy SAP everywhere. Asian
Paints is an example.
Rival Oracle also has almost 40% of its business coming from the mid market
space. There are automotive industries, or even suppliers to the industrial
manufacturing companies or small construction companies (like in SAP's case),
which aggressively adopted its solutions. In the big enterprise space, some
needed to have systems in place to be part of the global supply chain.
| Piracy, The Pest |
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Anywhere between 600 mn
to a billion dollars of software product revenues are being lost through
piracy every year in India. In FY 2005-06, Autodesk lost Rs 465 crore in
revenue, mainly because of piracy in AutoCAD and 3D Studio Max software
(about 70% of commercially used Autodesk products are pirated). Adobe,
which did Rs 122 crore in India last year, similarly, faces a high
percentage of piracy in the country.
For Microsoft, piracy
has come down a bit though, and is at the 70% range. Its piracy rate in
the consumer space is around 95%; in the small business, around 75-85%.
So, the company essentially gets paid between a quarter to one-third of
its software that gets deployed and is losing two thirds of the potential
revenue it can earn. If it is able to stem piracy, there is a multi
billion-dollar opportunity right here and it wants the levels down to
under 50% in the next two to three years.
A program called the
'Genuine Software Initiative' has thus been kicked off with the three
vectors of education, enforcement, and engineering and with a foundation
of availability. Microsoft estimates that 50% of Indians who have pirated
software on their machines don't know it. So, there is a need to educate
the consumers. Second is education of the channel.
On the enforcement
side, Microsoft is working with local authorities to go hard at channel
players that look at piracy as a way of doing business. Autodesk
reportedly has also been conducting raids on studios in particular, and
under an amnesty scheme, is allowing legal software to be used if the
offender paid at least 30% of the pirated software value upfront.
Engineering is another
place where Microsoft has made significant investments. It is also the
place where one can change the consumer experience. If one buys a pirated
copy, it may crash, because it doesn't have the latest patches, but the
experience is not dramatically different today. Microsoft is therefore,
launching a Notification Service–if you are connected to the Internet
and are using the automatic update service from Microsoft to get security
patches, and if you have a pirated version of Windows, a pop up box will
come up to say you may be the victim of piracy and direct you to a link to
avail the legal version of Windows. One can also be redirected to a local
partner. One may choose to ignore this message, but it will keep coming
back.
The notification
service doesn't do anything more than that–it doesn't lock in the PC
or gather any personal information about the user for example. There is no
transmission of information from the PC to the MS servers.
In addition, the
company plans to provide value-added services to people who have genuine
software, for example, Windows Defender. With Vista, MS says it will
become very hard to pirate because of the engineering part in the OS,
which it got an opportunity to completely rearchitect.
From the affordability
perspective, plans of software on a subscription basis are on the anvil.
There will be pre-paid cards, like the ones used in cell phones, which can
be bought and used for a certain period of time. India is one of the first
large countries where it will be made available. |
The mid-market, therefore, saw surprising growth in servers. Microsoft's
small business servers grew 80%. MS also took a share away from Linux on the
desktop side. Of the Linux that ships on desktop PCs, only 2% actually stays as
Linux–the rest of it is mostly pirated to Windows within 24 hours. On the
server side, Linux maintained its share in two areas-high performance
computing and Web applications. On the Web, it has mostly been a cost issue. In
areas such as messaging and security, MS is maintaining share.
As buying shifted from large enterprises to the small ones, IBM witnessed a
growth of 20% from the SME segment over the previous year. But it was still the
large enterprises, who were driving standardization. A vendor to a major
automotive company for instance, will demand data in SAP from a smaller player.
IBM also made solutions affordable by introducing a reasonably priced Express
offering, especially for the segment. Second, it made sure that SMEs could buy
applications built for them.
CA too focused on the SMB segment with a modular suite of products. Its
network management product is now stronger than ever before.
Autodesk, which has a big SME focus worldwide, announced the formation of a
new geo - the APac Emerging Geo - encompassing India and Greater China (China,
Hong Kong and Taiwan) during the year. This reflected the company's growing
focus on India.
India's accounting success story Tally remained committed to the low end of
the enterprise pyramid, where it grew its customer base significantly but
registered negative growth in terms of revenue because the company almost halved
its prices to combat piracy, make its product more affordable.
Vertical Thrust
From the vertical perspective, IBM's market share from the government
sector was traditionally very low. The company's focus on this area for the
last couple of years finally paid dividends in FY 2005-06, as it grew in triple
digits, starting from a small base. The Government of India chose 12 mission
mode projects (e-governance), which were more of
citizen services. Some states also went in for agricultural portals,
where commodity prices can be monitored and shared among farmers. The
computerization of district courts was a big growth leap last year.
IBM also focused on the ITeS vertical. The sector was experiencing a huge
growth in terms of the number of people hired and as a result of that its
infrastructure needs–mailing requirement, collaboration, security, network–spiralled.
Big Blue grew over and above the market growth rate here.
For Oracle manufacturing, retail, distribution, travel and transportation, IT
and ITeS, were the other segments that showed phenomenal growth along with the
traditional strong grounds of telecom and BFSI.
For BI vendor SAS, BFSI contributed the maximum, about 52%, pharma stood at
18% and ITeS at 15%. The financial
sector was the cash cow for Microsoft, but the growth for the company was more
greenfield, because of branch automation. Two opposing trends have been noticed
in the sector. One is branch automation, where people are going out hub and
spoke. Second, consolidation–banks are taking IT away from the branches and
putting it into an integrated data center. Microsoft had a good story to tell
when one looks at its server side products where it reportedly took away some
market share from Oracle and witnessed good wins. Moving on from a small base,
the BizTalk server saw 80% growth and the ISA, about 50%. OS Database grew in
the mid twenties and the overall server growth for Microsoft stood at 33%.
On the government side, the growth has been below expectation (20%).
Education grew at 34% and the IT and the ITeS verticals remained promising as
ever. As these sectors add more developers, good times promise to stretch longer
for MS. Not to forget manufacturing, where it is looking at making some
investments in clusters. It is going to the National Manufacturing Cluster
Council to help them make IT literate. That's a sizeable opportunity, to be
cashed on in the long-term.
PS: A punch on the industry's face was this year's new taxation: 8% duty
was imposed on packaged software sold over the counter. This will have its toll
in FY 2006-07 as price increases and greater piracy further discourage India's
software product buying behavior. Projected earning to the government's coffer
in case FY 2005-06's growth rate is maintained this year: Rs 635 crore.
Goutam Das
goutamd@cybermedia.co.in
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