Wordwide IT spending to reach US$1.6trn in 2011

3 Dec 2010

With IT spending tipped to grow 5.7pc next year and reach US$1.6trn next year, social networking, cloud computing and mobile computing will mature in 2011 and enter the IT industry mainstream.

“In 2011, we expect to see these transformative technologies make the critical transition from early adopter status to early mainstream adoption,” said Frank Gens, senior vice-president and chief analyst at IDC.

“As a result, we’ll see the IT industry revolving more and more around the build-out and adoption of this next dominant platform, characterised by mobility, cloud-based application and service delivery, and value-generating overlays of social business and pervasive analytics.

“In addition to creating new markets and opportunities, this restructuring will overthrow nearly every assumption about who the industry’s leaders will be and how they establish and maintain leadership,” Gens said.

The platform transition will be fuelled by another solid year of recovery in IT spending. IDC forecasts worldwide IT spending to be US$1.6trn in 2011, an increase of 5.7pc over 2010.

While hardware spending will remain strong (7.8pc year-over-year growth), the industry will depend to a larger extent on improvements in software spending (5.3pc growth) and related project-based services spending (3.5pc growth), as well as gains in outsourcing (4pc growth).

Worldwide IT spending will also benefit from the accelerated recovery in emerging markets, which will generate more than half of all net new IT spending worldwide in 2011.

Cloud computing

Spending on public IT cloud services will grow at more than five times the rate of the IT industry in 2011, up 30pc from 2010, as organisations move a wider range of business applications into the cloud. Small and medium-sized business’ cloud use will surge in 2011, with adoption of some cloud resources topping 33pc among US mid-size firms by year’s end.

Meanwhile, the more nascent private cloud model will continue to evolve as infrastructure, software and service providers collaborate on a range of new offerings and solutions.

Meanwhile, the vendor battle for two cloud “power positions” will be joined to determine on whose cloud platform will solutions be deployed, and who will provide coherent IT management across multiple public clouds, customers’ private clouds and their legacy IT environments.

Mobile computing

Mobile computing – on a variety of devices and through a range of new applications – will continue to explode in 2011, forming another critical plank in the new industry platform.

IDC expects shipments of app-capable, non-PC mobile devices (smartphones, media tablets, etc.) will outnumber PC shipments within the next 18 months – and there will be no looking back. While vendors with a PC heritage will scramble to secure their positions in this rapidly expanding market, another battle will be taking place for dominance in the mobile apps market.

The level of activity in this market will be staggering, with IDC expecting nearly 25 billion mobile apps to be downloaded in 2011, up from just more than 10 billion in 2010.

Over time, the still-emerging apps ecosystems promise to fundamentally restructure the channels for all digital content and services to consumers.

Social business software

Meanwhile, social business software has gained significant momentum in the enterprise over the past 18 months and this trend is expected to continue with IDC forecasting a compound annual growth rate of 38pc through 2014.

In a sure sign that social business has hit the mainstream, IDC expects 2011 to be a year of consolidation as the major software vendors acquire social software providers to jump-start or increase their social business footprint.

Meanwhile, the use of social platforms by small and medium-sized businesses will accelerate, with more than 40pc of SMBs using social networks for promotional purposes by the year’s end.

As the new mainstream IT platform coalesces in the months ahead, IDC expects it to lay a foundation for IT vendors to support, and profit from, a variety of “intelligent industry” transformations.

In retail, mobility and social networking are rapidly changing consumers’ shopping experiences as they bring their smartphones into the store for on-site price comparisons and product recommendations. In financial services, mobility and the cloud are bringing mobile banking and payments closer to reality.

In the healthcare industry, IDC expects 14pc of adult Americans to use a mobile health application in 2011.

“What really distinguishes the year ahead is that these disruptive technologies are finally being integrated with each other – cloud with mobile, mobile with social networking, social networking with ‘big data’ and real-time analytics,” added Gens.

“As a result, these once-emerging technologies can no longer be invested in, or managed, as sandbox efforts around the edges of the market. Instead, they are rapidly becoming the market itself and must be addressed accordingly.”

John Kennedy is a journalist who served as editor of Silicon Republic for 17 years

editorial@siliconrepublic.com