Organisations are increasing their spending with third party
companies to help deal with their enterprise software, according to
a new study from market research firm IDC.
Enterprise software, used by companies to automate their business
operations, has always been complicated to implement and maintain,
which in turn has fuelled a demand for related IT services.
Therefore, spending has remained strong, according to IDC. Between
2001 and 2006, worldwide spending on IT services related to
enterprise software and related functions will grow at a compound
annual rate of 13.5%, hitting $187bn (£128bn) in 2006, said
Stephanie Torto, an IDC analyst.
IDC calls this the "solution services market" and breaks it down
into six areas of services spending:
- Supply chain management (SCM) software services
- Enterprise resource management, better known as enterprise
resource planning (ERP), software services
- Customer relationship management (CRM) software services
- Knowledge management software services
- E-commerce services for implementing enterprise software whose
main purpose is to create a system for doing business online
- Globalisation and localisation services for adapting enterprise
software to the laws, culture and regulations of specific
countries.
Driving the market's forecasted growth will be services tied to SCM
software, followed by ERP and CRM, Torto said.
Companies are turning to SCM, ERP and CRM software to gain systems
that will address their business operations in a "holistic" manner,
Torto said.
Consequently, knowledge management and e-commerce initiatives
increasingly are being included as part of the more encompassing
SCM, ERP and CRM projects, she added.
In the future, clients will increasingly demand that IT services
firms be able to provide - by themselves or via partnerships - a
broad variety of enterprise-software services, including
consulting, systems integration, outsourcing, support and training,
Torto said.
This "solution services market" is part of the overall worldwide IT
services market, which will grow at a compound annual rate of 12.4%
between 2001 and 2006, reaching $626bn (£427bn) in 2006, according
to an IDC forecast.