IDC Publishes Its Top 10 Predictions for the Global IT Industry
January 3, 2002
IDC
IDC, the foremost global IT market intelligence and advisory firm,
today released its top 10 predictions for the global IT market in
2002.
IDC predicts that the IT market rebound will begin by mid-2002,
perhaps sooner. "Prior to September 11 we were expecting the rebound
to begin in 2001," says John Gantz, IDC's chief research officer,
"but terrorism's impact on the global economy took a commensurate
toll on the IT market." IDC forecasts that in 2002 IT spending will
increase 4-6% in the United States, 6-7% in Western Europe and 10-12%
in Asia/Pacific. "The good news," says Gantz, "is
that the economic assumptions behind our IT forecast are holding
up. In fact they may be conservative. If that's the case, the IT
recovery could come sooner and be stronger than we currently predicted."
The other IDC Top 10 predictions for 2002:
- China's entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO) will
help ensure its 25% IT spending growth continues for years. By
2010 it will be the third largest IT market in the world;
- Businesses will feel a crunch in 2002 as users and workers with
wireless and mobile Internet access create demand for enterprise
support that's not yet in place;
- The "Bin Laden Effect," as Gantz calls it, will drive enterprises
to rethink their specs for business continuity - creating a need
to reset IT security plans in 2002;
- With Microsoft pushing Passport to XP users and competitors
reacting, digital identity services will become real - even if
single-sign-on to the Web will remain a consumer's pipe dream;
- Streaming media will be hot as new standards come online and
new services and market needs - some in reaction to September
11 - come into play;
- The concept of "web services" will hit its hype peak in 2002
- long before any critical mass of products or services in the
market is reached;
- Linux will have a "breakout year." Last year there were a number
of ways the market could have gone - including into the tank.
Now it seems clear that Linux has become a viable alternative
for enterprise use;
- Although the market for server blades won't be a big money maker
in 2002, the new architecture will disrupt the entry server and
appliance server markets -yet another disturbance in a server
market already undergoing multiple transitions;
- 75 million WinXP licenses will ship in 2002, but XP won't have
the clout that Windows 95 did in driving hardware sales or generating
first-time users.
These predictions were presented via an executive client telebriefing
hosted by chief research officer, Gantz. The telebriefing Predictions
2002: Will the Fog of War Lift?, presented the scorecard on IDC's
2001 predictions, as well as key IT thresholds that will be crossed
this year. For more information or to obtain a copy of the presentation,
please contact Amie White at 508-935-4653 or awhite@idc.com.
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