Tag: IT spend

Gartner’s chickens predict high IT spending

alectoromaney-roosterSoothsayers in the analyst outfit Gartner have been looking at the way the chickens have been running around and come to the conclusion that we are about to enter a period of high IT spending.

Big G claims that worldwide spending will hit $3.7 trillion this year thanks to an unusually overweight bantam hen running back to the chicken coup and refusing to come out, according to Gartner.

The analyst outfit is expecting spending in 2018 to jump 6.2 percent outpacing last year’s $3.5 trillion, with enterprise software set to be the fastest growing of Gartner’s five spending categories, at 11 percent.

All five categories are expected to see growth, but the rate of data centre spending is expected to decline to 3.7 percent, compared with 6.3 percent last year. All of the other four categories are expected to see stronger growth than last year.

Gartner John-David Lovelock, vice auger said the overall increase in spending to currency fluctuations and political uncertainty.

“Although global IT spending is forecast to grow 6.2 percent this year, the declining US dollar has caused currency tailwinds, which are the main reason for this strong growth,” he said. “This is the highest annual growth rate that Gartner has forecast since 2007 and would be a sign of a new cycle of IT growth.

“However, spending on IT around the world is growing at expected levels and is in line with expected global economic growth.

“Through 2018 and 2019, the US dollar is expected to trend stronger while enduring tremendous volatility due to the uncertain political environment, the North American Free Trade Agreement renegotiation and the potential for trade wars.”

Gartner said that data centre sales would continue to face challenges, particularly in storage, and the brief renaissance at the end of 2017 was actually a component shortage which inflated prices.

The devices segment will, however, continue to flourish, even if fewer users are buying new devices.

You couldn’t make this stuff up. Well, we at Channel Eye couldn’t, anyway.

 

EMEA companies put IT budgets to good use

poundsResearch from CA Technologies has revealed that companies in EMEA are increasingly switching their IT budgets from dull, routine maintenance towards designing projects that enable revenue-generating services. The CA Technologies Channel Index 2013 found that EMEA partners spend 34 percent of their time helping consumers with such projects rather than maintenance. However, only 18 percent of the IT spend in Britain was devoted to new revenue-generating services.

“IT projects are being driven by the need for businesses to innovate for growth, while creating new ways to serve customers. And today’s IT director is expected to be the driver of these efforts,” said Sean McCarry, Senior Director, CA Technologies. “Our solutions and partner programmes equip partners with the tools they need to help their customers fuel innovation and drive growth. The Channel Index 2013 shows just how far IT departments and channel partners have come on this journey.”

Chris Gabriel, VP of Solutions Management at Logicalis Group, pointed out that the shift results in less operational waste, allowing IT departments to increase their participation in productive, revenue-generating fields.

“CIOs now see their role as Chief Innovation Officer, and they have recognised that their business value isn’t in managing IT infrastructure, but delivering new IT enabled business experiences,” he said.

The index revealed that 83 percent of surveyed partners in EMEA expect to see increased spending on enterprise mobility over the next year and almost all recognise that the rapid adoption of mobility creates opportunities to help grow their business. Among UK partners, this figure rose to 95 percent.

Cloud computing was identified by CA Technologies partners as the second priority for their customers’ IT investments. Nearly two thirds of the partners surveyed predicted an increase in cloud computing spending over the next year. In the UK, a significant 81 percent of partners expected increases.