November 19, 2008   Sign In |  About ebizQ |  Contact Us |  Join ebizQ Gold Club
Print this article    Email this article    Talk Back!    Write to Editor

Gartner: SaaS Market Heats Up

09/28/2006

Software as a service (SaaS) represented approximately 5 percent of business software revenue in 2005 and, by 2011, 25 percent of new business software will be delivered as SaaS, according to Gartner, Inc.

ADVERTISEMENT
Our Popular Webinars
Insurance: Discovering the Missing Link of Business Architecture
SOA Infrastructure for any economic climate
Adapt with Agility - Web 2.0 in your Application Infrastructure
Open Source SOA and the Management Challenge: The ROI and Reliability of Open Source Composite Applications
Guaranteeing Agility in SOA and BPM with Process-Driven Data Integration
More Webinars

Gartner released the following material:

SaaS is hosted software based on a single set of common code and data definitions that are consumed in a one-to-many model by all contracted customers, at any time, on a pay-for-use basis, or as a subscription based on usage metrics.

"As SaaS became a viable delivery model from 2000 to 2003, most providers supplied ‘good enough’ functionality with core configuration capabilities. SaaS and solving business complexity were two phrases not associated with each other," Robert DeSisto, research vice president for Gartner. "The trend has clearly begun to change. For example, SaaS providers are enhancing their software functionality and improving the ease with which companies can customize and more uniquely configure SaaS software to meet business requirements."

The adoption of the SaaS software delivery model has varied significantly by market segment. SaaS accounted for approximately 8 percent of CRM total software revenue in 2005 (Gartner estimates 2006 SaaS revenue to reach 12 percent of total CRM software revenue) and integration as a service had 10 percent adoption in its market. But, other markets, such as the ERP and supply chain management segments, had less than 4 percent adoption.

"The majority of SaaS deployments continued to be focused in individual departmental initiatives, such as sales force automation, except in small and medium size businesses (SMBs). In SMBs, we are beginning to see vendors provide capabilities to support more end-to-end processes, such as opportunity to order and in integration as a service where companies are already using SaaS for large projects," Mr. DeSisto said. "However, no provider offers the functionality capability or process management capabilities on par with on premise software to support end-to-end cross departmental business flows."

As SaaS solutions become more mainstream, and more enterprises adopt them, the dynamic of how they are bought and sold is changing. During the past few years, the primary acquirer of SaaS has been a line of business leader, such as the vice president of sales or the head of human resources, without much involvement of central IT.

"The limited central IT involvement is changing as the IT organization realizes that SaaS solutions are here to stay and that they must look to leverage the upside potential of these approaches, rather than see them as a threat to their existing modus operandi," Mr. DeSisto said. "Line of business leaders and central IT should be involved in the selection process and then in the ongoing management of a SaaS contract. Having both parties represented leads to better initial decisions being made and to more efficient, effective ongoing management."


More Top Stories
BI SaaS is Hot (and Fiercely Competitive) Gold Club Protected
The Next Steps for SaaS Gold Club Protected
OSS: Talking to Amanda McPherson, Linux Foundation Gold Club Protected
What's Happening in BI in 2008? (I of II) Gold Club Protected
What Microsoft Gains (and Faces) With Yahoo! Gold Club Protected
Lombardi Emerges as BPM Success Story Gold Club Protected
More Top Stories
Related News
Web Malware Jumps 21% In October
Active Operations Management International (AOMi) Embeds Cordys to Enhance SaaS Business Model
Symantec Completes Acquisition of MessageLabs
More News
Print this article    Email this article    Talk Back!    Write to Editor
Subscribe to our Newsletters
ebizQ Weekly Gold Club Update
Live Webinar Updates
Updates from ebizQ Partners
ebizQ SOA Update
ebizQ BPM Update
ebizQ Security Update
ebizQ BI Update
ebizQ Open Source Software Update
Virtual Show Newsletter
ebizQ Web 2.0 and the Enterprise
Your E-mail Address:


Yefim Natis Gartner Keynote: Yeffim Natis

Playing LIVE in 14 minutes
Attend Now!
Visit Conference Home Page
Create a Center of Excellence in SOA Governance
Date: Dec 02, 2008
Time: 12:00 PM ET
(17:00 GMT)

REGISTER TODAY!
Next-Generation BI
Date: Dec 03, 2008
Time: 12:00 PM ET
(17:00 GMT)

REGISTER TODAY!
Archived Webinars | Upcoming Webinars
  SOA Research: Financial Justification
Find out what early adopters are thinking about SOA financial justification! Where do they see the costs and benefits? The most significant...Learn More
ebizQ also recommends
 Formalizing Operational Governance: Ensuring the well-managed enterprise
 15-Minute Guide to Transactional Content Management
 EMC Forges Ahead In Document-Centric BPMS, The Forrester Wave Vendor Summary
 The Forrester Wave: Business Process Management for Document Processes
 From Vision to Reality: Bridging The HR And Benefits Universe With The Employee Communications Platform
More White Papers

Marketing Solutions | Feedback | About ebizQ | Unsubscribe | Privacy Policy | Site Map

Live Chat