A survey of 467 Chief Information Officers (CIOs) conducted by IDC India
revealed that they expect the economic slowdown to end by Oct-Dec 2009 and that
their focus is shifting to better management of existing IT infrastructure by
consoliÂdating, optimizing and leveraging resources, from building new
capacities.
The economic slowdown is accelerating enterprise transÂformation, which is
manifested in cost savings, productivity enhancement, customer retention, and
new IT engagement/delivery models, according to a study by IDC India
'Identifying Opportunities in the Current Economic Scenario'. The study was
conducted across 467 CIOs from mid-sized and large enterprises across 18
industry verticals in Feb-March 2009.
“The IDC CIO survey provides pointers to IT vendors for strategizing their
business agenda in the mid-term to effectively ride out the economic slowdown
and stay focused on their priorities,” said Kapil Dev Singh, Country Manager,
IDC India, while presenting the results of the survey.
About 66 percent of the CIOs contacted felt that the slowdown would end by
the fourth quarter (October-December) of 2009. However, in view of the larger
macro-economic picture and the lag in terms of IT buying by enterprises, IDC
India expects the slowdown to extend and IT spending to revive after the second
quarter (April-June) of 2010.
The study found that enterprises are cutting back on new projects and
focusing on the maintenance of existing IT setups. Of the total planned IT
expenditure for 2009, enterprises plan to spend
20 percent on new purchases and reserve the balance for managing the existing
setup.
The surveyed CIOs said that green technologies like virtualization, unified
communiÂcations (UC), and others like business intelligence (BI) and data
warehousing (DW), software-as-a-service (SaaS), and open source are the emerging
investment priorities in 2009.
The study covered product lines ranging from access devices, networking
infrastructure, software, storage, servers and technology solutions that the
domestic market procures.
The study also concluded that the investments in PCs, servers and computer
peripherals are expected to decrease by 20 to 40 percent as compared to 2008.
This is likely to directly impact hardware vendors and off-the-shelf software
vendors.
IT services vendors are likely to be the least impacted, if they focus on
providing services like infrastructure management, business transformation and
business continuity.
DQC NEWS BUREAU