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Home > Editorial

The Only Option
Ibrahim Ahmad
Thursday, August 13, 2009
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At a time when the general trend worldwide seems to be downsizing of IT budgets for 2010 compared to 2009, a new report suggests that enterprise investments in software is likely to go up. The increase may be marginal, but in the midst of this cash crunch enterprises believe that only IT will give them tools for survival and growth, is one interpretation.

The big message from the survey is that technology companies, specially software, should actually enhance focus on building, funding, and investing in software development, and sales and marketing activities. Some experts suggest that it will make better sense for hardware companies if they work closely with software vendors and solution providers for better bundling. The trick will lie in offering solutions and not just boxes. In the prevailing conditions, the thrust will have to be on retaining customers, and generating new revenue streams.

As the market matured, it was observed that vendors who had a partnership approach had an edge over others. The economic situation today once again reinforces that only partnership will succeed. Therefore, those vendors who understand their customers goals and requirements will be able to sell.

Gartner, which has done this specific survey, recommends that vendors must now be able to differentiate with key integration technologies, vertical-market and line-of-business solutions. It talks of offering frontier applications which leverage the Internet for new delivery channels or use web-based technology to improve self-service capabilitiesthat can bring about major changes in their customers business models. Obviously, the importance of relationship management could never have been higher than today.

The partnership approach is beneficial for enterprises too. One hears of so many cases of stalemate between suppliers and buyers because of unacceptable prices and deliverables; this is hurting everybody. With a partnership mindset, a CIO can be more flexible in working out budgets, and negotiating rates.

One heartening thing about this survey is that this feeling about IT is prevelant across the world, including Asia-Pacific, North and Latin America, Europe, the Middle East and Africa. The spread is clearly evenrich countries that will turn the current economic scenario around, and the emerging economies which will sustain it.

In the coming days, the general direction likely to emerge is that instead of cutting hardware dollars, CIOs could redirect them towards software and services. The survey should be a good tool in the hands of technology planners as well as vendors, because there is quite a bit of uncertainty amongst the users too.

Ibrahim Ahmad
ibrahima@cybermedia.co.in

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