enterprise Archive
Remedying IT Overcapacity
On January 14, 2015 In Thought Leadership
Too much. That’s an accurate assessment of IT environments in most, if not all, enterprises. They have more data center space than they need and more servers than they can use at any point in time. They have more software operating systems, middleware, and enterprise licenses than necessary. They also have more of the
Sales Strategy Shift in the Cloud Services Market
On November 13, 2014 In Thought Leadership
The fact that enterprises are making a strategic intent shift to cloud and as-a-service models changes more than the service delivery model. It also changes the value proposition and therefore causes implications for provider’s sales strategies. For starters, the focus turns away from the provider’s capabilities. Sure, those capabilities are still important. But with
Implications for the Application Development Outsourcing Market from Strategic Intent to Cloud
On November 3, 2014 In Thought Leadership
The current enterprise shift in strategic intent toward cloud services has major implications for the outsourcing market. I’ve blogged about the implications for the infrastructure outsourcing market. Clearly the strategic shift will also affect application development outsourcing. We see three major implications for this market. Everest Group is working with large enterprises as they
Implications of the Enterprise Strategic Intent Shift toward Cloud
On October 29, 2014 In Thought Leadership
Since the beginning of 2014 Everest Group has seen a real shift in large enterprise CIO organizations in their strategic intent toward cloud services. What are the implications on the traditional infrastructure outsourcing market from this strategic intent? Timing First, we expect that this shift will not happen overnight. As organizations work on their
Sea Change in Large Enterprises’ Cloud Strategic Intent
On September 8, 2014 In Thought Leadership
For five years we at Everest Group have tracked the cloud space in global services. Until this year, there was a lot of talk about cloud, but much true cloud adoption was driven in business units with large enterprises. CIOs basically sat out the game and watched the cloud’s performance. But since the beginning
The Surprise in Mobile Services
On July 23, 2014 In Thought Leadership
Companies’ end-user compute budgets are flat to down. Yet they’re challenged by much more complexity in terms of many more devices. This is a surprising fact. There is an explosion of devices that need to be secured and managed and that are often paid for by the corporate enterprise. Why has the explosion of
Digital Enterprise Iceberg
On July 9, 2014 In Thought Leadership
We all understand the power of digital — it enables us to change the way we interact with our customers, employees, vendors and governments. Getting interactions right with those stakeholder groups gives us powerful strategic advantages. However, the digital world is like an iceberg, and we tend to see only the tip. Below the
Snowflakes in the Global Services World
On June 24, 2014 In Thought Leadership
There is increasing skepticism and cynicism in the customer ranks in the hyper-competitive environment of the services world. As a customer commented to me, “Providers are like snowflakes. They all think they are unique, but they look just like everybody else. And if you put them under pressure, they all become the same thing.”
Why Hasn’t Cloud Had a Bigger Disruption on the Services Industry?
On June 10, 2014 In Thought Leadership
If you read the technology news in the press and social media sites, it’s apparent that we’re in the midst of a big sea of change in which the as-a-Service and public cloud models are transforming the services industry. HP and IBM’s travails and Oracle’s slowdown are laid at the feet of the SaaS
Let’s Talk About Me
On May 14, 2014 In Thought Leadership
American country music artist Toby Keith’s hit song “I Want to talk about me” reminds me of a phenomenon in today’s services world — too many providers’ conversations with customers are unproductive. Service providers are very eager to grow their revenue in their existing accounts. As the market matures, this is clearly the fastest,