As Software Industry Consolidates, Service-Oriented Architectures Emerge as New Strategic Reality, Says Capgemini Survey
SOA Number One Priority for IT Infrastructure Investment
23 September 2005
San Francisco (September 21, 2005) --- While the software industry continues to consolidate, corporate technology departments increasingly believe service-oriented architectures (SOA) will be necessary to strategically leverage their organization’s infrastructure to reduce costs and improve service levels, according to the results of a survey of almost 200 participants attending the Oracle OpenWorld conference in San Francisco this week. According to the pulse survey conducted by Capgemini U.S. LLC, a global leader in consulting, technology and outsourcing, while only one-third (35%) of enterprises currently use SOA, more than eight in ten (82%) plan on utilizing these architectures in the near future. Respondents indicated that the top three IT benefits from SOA were cost reductions on integration projects (40%), a greater flexibility to handle future change (37%) and an increased return on existing assets (18%).
While three-quarters of those surveyed at Oracle Open World hailed from North America (75%), a significant number came from Europe (22%), and some came from Asia (4%). More than six in ten (61%) of the organizations surveyed suggested software integration would be the greatest benefit from a consolidating software industry. Respondents gave a bullish outlook on the information technology industry, as a majority of organizations (65%) forecasted an IT budget for 2006 that either increases or at least stays the same.
“This survey demonstrates that the interest in
SOA is high, and as enterprises seek to use information technology
innovatively, SOA is viewed as the prime vehicle to integrate existing systems,
introduce new capabilities, and continue to reduce infrastructure costs,”
said Andy Mulholland, Global Chief Technology Officer for Capgemini. “With
increasing consolidation of the software industry likely to continue both
technology vendors and users see SOA as underpinning the
ability to bring together disparate software functionality into meaningful
business processes.”
Other key findings from the Capgemini pulse survey at Oracle OpenWorld:
- Four in ten (41%) came from companies with more than $1 billion in annual revenue;
- Nearly half of respondents (48%) identified themselves as IT architects, while 22% were CIO/CTOs and another 22% were in sales and marketing;
- SOA will be the number one priority for half of the responding organization’s IT infrastructure (50%), compared to only four in ten (41%) who point to outsourcing and labor arbitrage as the biggest driver;
- The two industry sectors affected most by the consolidating software industry will be Manufacturing, Retail, & Distribution (33%), and Financial Services (30%);
- A narrow majority (56%) currently uses Oracle Fusion Middleware, and almost the same number (58%) believes the greatest benefit from Fusion Middleware is its ability to provide cost effective integration;
- A narrow majority (56%) still believe IT is viewed as a cost center inside the organization, compared to only four in ten (38%) who think their company views IT as “strategic”;
View Full Oracle OpenWorld Pulse Survey Results
About
the Capgemini Group
Capgemini, one of the world’s foremost providers of
Consulting, Technology, and Outsourcing services, has a unique way of working
with its clients, which it calls the Collaborative Business Experience. Through
commitment of mutual success and the achievement of tangible value, the company
helps businesses implement growth strategies, leverage technology and thrive
through the power of collaboration.
Capgemini employs approximately 60,000 worldwide and reported 2004
global revenues of 6.3 billion euros. More information about individual service
lines, offices and research is available at www.capgemini.com.
CONTACT:
Jonathan
Blank
Capgemini
+1 917-934-8842
jonathan.blank@capgemini.com
