
Reaching Vertical Markets in Australia
by: Melissa Martin
A new vertical markets report shows a transforming marketplace in 2010, driven by a growing impact of the cloud services model, an explosion of mobile devices and applications and the continuing rollout of higher-speed networks.
According to the report titled Australia Vertical Markets 2010-2013 Forecast and Analysis: Update 1H10, this year will be one of modest recovery for the IT and telecommunications industries.
In times of global economic uncertainty, understanding and anticipating shifts in technology markets by vertical industries is critical for maintaining your competitive advantage. Suppliers must understand the strategic business issues and pain points of an organisation and the industry in which it operates, in order to demonstrate competence and value.
Imagine that you have a business problem and are evaluating companies to help you solve it. You can choose a generalist that claims to do everything for every scenario, or an expert that focuses on solving exactly the kind of problem you have, for companies just like yours, with a track record of success. Naturally, the expert, which demonstrates the advantage of vertical market knowledge wins the deal.
Based on IDC's updated forecasts, the business ICT market (hardware, services, software, and telecommunications) in Australia will grow from $45,195 million in 2010 to $51,829 million in 2013. Telecommunications will account for approximately a third (32.6%) of all ICT spending in 2010. This is closely followed by services at 31.1%, then hardware at 22.5%, and software at 13.8%.
Each year, IDC researches and reports on the 12 vertical markets that make up Australia's enterprise ICT market. From a vertical markets perspective, the top 3 positions in terms of ICT spending in 2010 remain unchanged and are held by banking, finance and insurance; government, and communications and media. The interesting point to note is that the manufacturing and business services has swapped places once again - with business services moving upwards in the ranking. Manufacturing was in 5th position in January 2009, moving to 4th position in June 2009 forecast and now back to 5th position in January 2010.
The top 3 positions in terms of ICT spending in 2010 remain unchanged. Banking, Financial Services and Insurance (BFSI) will spend $9,763 million; Government $6,214 million; and Communications and Media $5,608 million.
However, it is the Business Services, Construction and Manufacturing markets that are forecast to experience the fastest increase in ICT investment in the next few years - with respective compound annual growth rates (CAGRs) of 5.1%, 5.1%, and 4.7% in the forecast period of 2009 - 2013.
For more information on IDC's vertical market update including key predictions and Vertical Markets forecasts, please view Doc # AU8036602S, Australia Vertical Markets 2010-2013 Forecast and Analysis: Update 1H10, visit, http://www.idc.com/getdoc.jsp?containerId=AU8036602S
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