Big data, analytics and cloud computing are underpinning growth in the enterprise software market, even as the sector braces itself for slower growth going forward.
This is one of the findings from International Data Corporation (IDC), which yesterday released the latest results from its Worldwide Semi-annual Software Tracker.
For 2012, the worldwide software market grew 3,6% year over year reaching a total market size of $342-billion, which was in line with IDC’s previous forecast of 3,4% and less than half the growth rate experienced in 2010 and 2011. In that sense, 2012 confirms the beginning of a more conservative growth period.
In the middle of this scenario, there are faster growing market segments, such as data access, analysis and delivery, collaborative applications, CRM applications, security software, and system and network management software. Every one of these markets grew in the 6% to 7% range, about double the rate for enterprise software as a whole.
“The global software market, comprised of a multi-layered collection of technologies and solutions, is growing more slowly in this period of economic uncertainty. Yet there is strong growth in selective areas. The management and leveraging of information for competitive advantage is driving growth in markets associated with big data and analytics.
“Similarly, rapid growth in cloud deployments is fuelling growth in application areas associated with social business and customer experience. Both these initiatives require a reliable and secure infrastructure, driving investments in security and system/network management.
“The combination of these forces is advancing the growth to what IDC has termed the third platform,” says Henry Morris, senior vice-president: worldwide software, services and executive advisory research at IDC.
Three primary segments comprise the total software market in IDC’s software taxonomy: applications; application development and deployment (AD&D); and systems infrastructure software.
Among the three primary segments, the AD&D segment, which comprised nearly 24% of total software revenues in 2012, was the fastest growing market with a 4,6% year-over-year growth rate. Growth in the AD&D segment was largely driven by the performance of the data access, analysis, and delivery and the structured data management secondary markets with 6% and 5,9% growth rates, respectively.
Business intelligence and relational database management systems (RDBMS) solutions are pushing the growing trend for these markets because of widening big data and analytics adoption.
Big data and analytics are also closely tied to the fast growth social business software markets, where the combination of contextual data and the “right” expertise is becoming critical for supporting enterprise decision making and data driven customer experience solutions.
Oracle continued to lead the AD&D segment with steady market share of 21,6%, followed by IBM, Microsoft, SAP, and SAS. Among these vendors, Microsoft and SAP stood out by each gaining almost a half point of market share year over year.
In the applications primary market segment, which comprised 49% of total software revenue, year-over-year growth for 2012 was 3,3%, which is slightly lower than for software overall.
Within this market segment, CRM and collaborative applications stood out with year-over-year growth rates near 7%.
While the former is driven by the cloud migration trend and the large investments by businesses to deliver a better customer experience to the “social customer”, the latter is largely driven by the enterprise social software market, which grew at 24,8% year over year and gained more than five points of market share over three years.
Mobile, while not a direct enterprise applications driver, is however a contributing factor and driver for businesses moving to newer and more mobile device agnostic enterprise software.
From a vendor perspective, Microsoft led the applications primary market in 2012 with 13,7% of market share followed by SAP, Oracle, IBM, and Adobe; IBM showed the highest growth rate as it is expanding its portfolio coverage in the middleware, infrastructure and information-related markets to the applications markets.
The third primary segment of the software market is system infrastructure software, which comprised 27% of total software revenue and grew 3,3% year over year in 2012.
The security software and system/network management software secondary segments both grew more than 6% year over year as these solutions provide the infrastructure – whether in the cloud or on-premise – to support the Third Platform.
Although the other two system infrastructure software secondary segments (storage software and system software) had flat growth in 2012, the virtualisation sub-segments had double-digit growth rates.
Microsoft remains the clear leader in system infrastructure software overall with 28% of market share, followed by IBM, Symantec, EMC and VMware.
On a regional basis, the overall software market was heavily influenced by the downward trend in Western Europe, which represented 26.5% of the worldwide market and was the only region to experience negative growth in 2012.
The US market, which represents more than 45% of the overall market, grew 6% year over year while the emerging markets in Latin America, Asia/Pacific (excluding Japan), and Central Europe, Middle East, and Africa (CEMA) also experienced solid growth in 2012. The countries with the greatest growth in 2012 were Saudi Arabia, Peru, Colombia, China, and Turkey.
This is one of the findings from International Data Corporation (IDC), which yesterday released the latest results from its Worldwide Semi-annual Software Tracker.
For 2012, the worldwide software market grew 3,6% year over year reaching a total market size of $342-billion, which was in line with IDC’s previous forecast of 3,4% and less than half the growth rate experienced in 2010 and 2011. In that sense, 2012 confirms the beginning of a more conservative growth period.
In the middle of this scenario, there are faster growing market segments, such as data access, analysis and delivery, collaborative applications, CRM applications, security software, and system and network management software. Every one of these markets grew in the 6% to 7% range, about double the rate for enterprise software as a whole.
“The global software market, comprised of a multi-layered collection of technologies and solutions, is growing more slowly in this period of economic uncertainty. Yet there is strong growth in selective areas. The management and leveraging of information for competitive advantage is driving growth in markets associated with big data and analytics.
“Similarly, rapid growth in cloud deployments is fuelling growth in application areas associated with social business and customer experience. Both these initiatives require a reliable and secure infrastructure, driving investments in security and system/network management.
“The combination of these forces is advancing the growth to what IDC has termed the third platform,” says Henry Morris, senior vice-president: worldwide software, services and executive advisory research at IDC.
Three primary segments comprise the total software market in IDC’s software taxonomy: applications; application development and deployment (AD&D); and systems infrastructure software.
Among the three primary segments, the AD&D segment, which comprised nearly 24% of total software revenues in 2012, was the fastest growing market with a 4,6% year-over-year growth rate. Growth in the AD&D segment was largely driven by the performance of the data access, analysis, and delivery and the structured data management secondary markets with 6% and 5,9% growth rates, respectively.
Business intelligence and relational database management systems (RDBMS) solutions are pushing the growing trend for these markets because of widening big data and analytics adoption.
Big data and analytics are also closely tied to the fast growth social business software markets, where the combination of contextual data and the “right” expertise is becoming critical for supporting enterprise decision making and data driven customer experience solutions.
Oracle continued to lead the AD&D segment with steady market share of 21,6%, followed by IBM, Microsoft, SAP, and SAS. Among these vendors, Microsoft and SAP stood out by each gaining almost a half point of market share year over year.
In the applications primary market segment, which comprised 49% of total software revenue, year-over-year growth for 2012 was 3,3%, which is slightly lower than for software overall.
Within this market segment, CRM and collaborative applications stood out with year-over-year growth rates near 7%.
While the former is driven by the cloud migration trend and the large investments by businesses to deliver a better customer experience to the “social customer”, the latter is largely driven by the enterprise social software market, which grew at 24,8% year over year and gained more than five points of market share over three years.
Mobile, while not a direct enterprise applications driver, is however a contributing factor and driver for businesses moving to newer and more mobile device agnostic enterprise software.
From a vendor perspective, Microsoft led the applications primary market in 2012 with 13,7% of market share followed by SAP, Oracle, IBM, and Adobe; IBM showed the highest growth rate as it is expanding its portfolio coverage in the middleware, infrastructure and information-related markets to the applications markets.
The third primary segment of the software market is system infrastructure software, which comprised 27% of total software revenue and grew 3,3% year over year in 2012.
The security software and system/network management software secondary segments both grew more than 6% year over year as these solutions provide the infrastructure – whether in the cloud or on-premise – to support the Third Platform.
Although the other two system infrastructure software secondary segments (storage software and system software) had flat growth in 2012, the virtualisation sub-segments had double-digit growth rates.
Microsoft remains the clear leader in system infrastructure software overall with 28% of market share, followed by IBM, Symantec, EMC and VMware.
On a regional basis, the overall software market was heavily influenced by the downward trend in Western Europe, which represented 26.5% of the worldwide market and was the only region to experience negative growth in 2012.
The US market, which represents more than 45% of the overall market, grew 6% year over year while the emerging markets in Latin America, Asia/Pacific (excluding Japan), and Central Europe, Middle East, and Africa (CEMA) also experienced solid growth in 2012. The countries with the greatest growth in 2012 were Saudi Arabia, Peru, Colombia, China, and Turkey.