Significant shifts will occur in the customer relationship management (CRM) market in the next two years. Gartner predicts mobile CRM apps available for download on app stores will grow to over 1 200 by 2014 from over 200 in 2012.
More than 50% of total CRM software revenue for certain types of applications will be delivered as software as a service (SaaS) during 2016, and Gartner predicts salesforce.com will remain the largest CRM vendor by revenue in 2013.
“CRM continues to be high on the CIO’s agenda,” says Ed Thompson, vice-president and distinguished analyst at Gartner.
“According to Gartner’s Executive Program survey of 2 053 CIOs in 2013, attracting and retaining new customers was ranked the number four business priority for 2013. Customer experience management is emerging as a business discipline for marketing, sales and customer service leaders. Every day, these leaders are incorporating more new technology into their projects to achieve their organisational goals.”
From a vendor perspective, salesforce.com surpassed SAP to become the top CRM vendor by revenue in 2012.
salesforce.com reached $2,5-billion CRM revenue in 2012, a 26% increase from 2011, while SAP grew 0,1% year-on-year and totalled $2,3-billion in CRM revenue.
“As salesforce.com has achieved this milestone it will gain more support from Tier 1 system integrators (such as Accenture, IBM, Deloitte and Capgemini), which already conduct 16% of their CRM project work with salesforce.com. Additionally, salesforce.com will attract more interest from buyers in the many geographies where it does not hold the number one spot,” says Thompson.
Gartner’s latest predictions for the CRM market include:
* By 2014, the number of mobile CRM apps available for download from app stores will have grown by 500%.
“Many organisations want to extend their customer service to the mobile platform market. However, the reality is that not all good applications make a good mobile application,” says Johan Jacobs, research director at Gartner.
To develop a successful mobile application’s strategy IT leaders need to consider four areas, which are demand – what customers want and what the business needs; supply – what staff and skills are needed to manage external partners; control — who owns and manages the strategy, and risks – what could derail the strategy and the other factors that will affect it.
CRM application vendors will be forced to decide which types of mobile CRM to support, as well as assessing their functionality as suitable to be broken up into bite-size chunks and adopted as apps. The shift to apps will create a competitive advantage for some CRM vendors, but, they will need to decide whether to provide apps free of charge, in paid versions or both.
In the short term, if there is a rapid rise in demand for CRM apps, there will be a shortage of development skills.
“IT leaders should weigh the benefits of accessibility with usability – the choice will depend on corporate policies for smartphones and tablets. Besides, they should focus first on getting the performance right, as it’s critical for users and ensure that the page design and the content does not get crowded with rich media that takes a long time to load,” says Jacobs.
* During 2016, more than 50% of total CRM software revenue will be delivered as SaaS.
In 2012, almost 39% of the CRM software market revenue was delivered by SaaS. Gartner forecasts the market to increase 42% by the end of 2013. During 2016, more than 50% of the CRM software revenue will be delivered by SaaS.
The worldwide CRM software market forecast, which includes both SaaS and on-premises, is on pace to grow 9,7% in 2013, while SaaS-delivered CRM will increase almost 18% during the same period.
Depending on the type of CRM application, there is a huge variance in the proportion that is delivered via SaaS. It varies from less than 5% for some types of CRM application to over 98% for others.
While the perceived benefits for CRM SaaS are well accepted by most organisations, SaaS is not suited to all aspects of CRM functionality.
“Almost all large organisations will use a mix of SaaS and non-SaaS CRM applications for the next decade, which will require IT organisations to develop the skills needed to integrate SaaS and non-SaaS deployments,” says Joanne Correia, research vice-president at Gartner.
More than 50% of total CRM software revenue for certain types of applications will be delivered as software as a service (SaaS) during 2016, and Gartner predicts salesforce.com will remain the largest CRM vendor by revenue in 2013.
“CRM continues to be high on the CIO’s agenda,” says Ed Thompson, vice-president and distinguished analyst at Gartner.
“According to Gartner’s Executive Program survey of 2 053 CIOs in 2013, attracting and retaining new customers was ranked the number four business priority for 2013. Customer experience management is emerging as a business discipline for marketing, sales and customer service leaders. Every day, these leaders are incorporating more new technology into their projects to achieve their organisational goals.”
From a vendor perspective, salesforce.com surpassed SAP to become the top CRM vendor by revenue in 2012.
salesforce.com reached $2,5-billion CRM revenue in 2012, a 26% increase from 2011, while SAP grew 0,1% year-on-year and totalled $2,3-billion in CRM revenue.
“As salesforce.com has achieved this milestone it will gain more support from Tier 1 system integrators (such as Accenture, IBM, Deloitte and Capgemini), which already conduct 16% of their CRM project work with salesforce.com. Additionally, salesforce.com will attract more interest from buyers in the many geographies where it does not hold the number one spot,” says Thompson.
Gartner’s latest predictions for the CRM market include:
* By 2014, the number of mobile CRM apps available for download from app stores will have grown by 500%.
“Many organisations want to extend their customer service to the mobile platform market. However, the reality is that not all good applications make a good mobile application,” says Johan Jacobs, research director at Gartner.
To develop a successful mobile application’s strategy IT leaders need to consider four areas, which are demand – what customers want and what the business needs; supply – what staff and skills are needed to manage external partners; control — who owns and manages the strategy, and risks – what could derail the strategy and the other factors that will affect it.
CRM application vendors will be forced to decide which types of mobile CRM to support, as well as assessing their functionality as suitable to be broken up into bite-size chunks and adopted as apps. The shift to apps will create a competitive advantage for some CRM vendors, but, they will need to decide whether to provide apps free of charge, in paid versions or both.
In the short term, if there is a rapid rise in demand for CRM apps, there will be a shortage of development skills.
“IT leaders should weigh the benefits of accessibility with usability – the choice will depend on corporate policies for smartphones and tablets. Besides, they should focus first on getting the performance right, as it’s critical for users and ensure that the page design and the content does not get crowded with rich media that takes a long time to load,” says Jacobs.
* During 2016, more than 50% of total CRM software revenue will be delivered as SaaS.
In 2012, almost 39% of the CRM software market revenue was delivered by SaaS. Gartner forecasts the market to increase 42% by the end of 2013. During 2016, more than 50% of the CRM software revenue will be delivered by SaaS.
The worldwide CRM software market forecast, which includes both SaaS and on-premises, is on pace to grow 9,7% in 2013, while SaaS-delivered CRM will increase almost 18% during the same period.
Depending on the type of CRM application, there is a huge variance in the proportion that is delivered via SaaS. It varies from less than 5% for some types of CRM application to over 98% for others.
While the perceived benefits for CRM SaaS are well accepted by most organisations, SaaS is not suited to all aspects of CRM functionality.
“Almost all large organisations will use a mix of SaaS and non-SaaS CRM applications for the next decade, which will require IT organisations to develop the skills needed to integrate SaaS and non-SaaS deployments,” says Joanne Correia, research vice-president at Gartner.