On CNET: 15 online photo editors compared
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

January 30th, 2009

SaaS is surging in the downturn, says IDC

Posted by Phil Wainewright @ 1:51 am

Categories: Companies, Market research, Xactly

Tags: Software, Software-as-a-service, International Data Corp., Software As A Service (SaaS), Managed Hosting, Cloud Computing, Tools & Techniques, Emerging Technologies, Management, Phil Wainewright

Market researcher IDC has published an upward revision to its market size projections for SaaS in 2009. At a time when most industries and economies around the world are slashing their growth forecasts into single digits or even negative territory, IDC now expects SaaS growth to surge by more than 40 percent in the current year. That’s a significant move up from its previous forecast of 36% growth, published back in July when most economists were still trying to deny the onset of recession.

SaaS’s counter-cyclical boom is entirely due to the enhanced attractions of the model when times are bad, says IDC:

“… the harsh economic climate will actually accelerate the growth prospects for the software as a service (SaaS) model as vendors position offerings as right-sized, zero-CAPEX alternatives to on-premise applications. Buyers will opt for easy-to-use subscription services which meter current use, not future capacity, and vendors and partners will look for new products and recurring revenue streams.”

Don’t you just love that definition of SaaS? “Right-sized, zero-CAPEX alternatives to on-premise.” The report’s author, director of on-demand and SaaS research Robert Mahowald, adds an interesting observation that bears out the uprating:

“… several key vendors finished the year very strong, reporting stable financials and inroads into new customer-sets.”

From my own conversations with privately held SaaS players, I can certainly confirm that business seems to be expanding with continued momentum. Yesterday I was on a call with Phil Fernandez, CEO of marketing automation vendor Marketo, when I heard a bell ring and some cheering in the background. “We ring that bell whenever someone closes a deal in the sales team,” he explained. “Someone’s had a good start to their day,” I commented, noting it was 10am in his timezone. “That’s the third time so far this morning,” he replied. Marketo, which launched its offering just ten months ago, has already signed up its first hundred customers, at subscription levels that start from $1,500 per company per month.

Yesterday, collaboration vendor Central Desktop reported that in 2008 it had seen a 150% increase in user count and revenue over 2007, bringing its user base to the quarter-million mark. Growth continued througout Q4 and the company signed ten new customers in December alone, including urban planning consulting firm IBI Group and on-demand ERP vendor Workday. In a counterpoint to this week’s bleak employment news, Central Desktop says it tripled its workforce last year.

Chris Cabrera, CEO of sales performance management vendor Xactly, which last week acquired its largest rival, blogged about the IDC finding yesterday and picked up on Mahowald’s contention that many of these SaaS purchases are seen as “tactical fixes which allow for relatively easy expansion during hard times.” Cabrera counters:

“I will be surprised, very surprised, if an appreciable number of SaaS customers dump their on-demand applications in favor of on-premise solutions when the economy eventually rights itself. The excellent renewal rates enjoyed by SaaS leaders show that, once bitten by the SaaS bug, there’s little impetus to go back to on-premise solutions.”

I side with that analysis, and it’s interesting that a mainstream market researcher like IDC, even when it can’t deny the success that SaaS is experiencing, still feels it has to qualify it as some kind of blip in the normal scheme of things. I think Cabrera is spot on when he concludes that IDC’s findings show that the tipping-point from conventional software to SaaS “is now a lot closer than anticipated. And once tipped, no matter what brought you to that point, it will be counter-intuitive to go back.”

Phil Wainewright is a commentator and strategist on emerging software industry trends. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

18 Trackbacks

The URI to TrackBack this entry is:
http://blogs.zdnet.com/SAAS/wp-trackback.php?p=644

  • Recession: SaaS and AEC
    Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) expert Phil Wainewright has been looking at a couple of reports from Forrester Research analysts reinforcing the view that "SaaS thrives in a cost-conscious, capex-constrained economic environment". ...

    Trackback by Extranet Evolution — January 26, 2009 @ 4:47 pm

  • Central Desktop Continues To Rise
    "We are 100 percent SaaS, so even when our customers want to work with us on an on-premise platform, we ask that they collaborate with us via...

    Trackback by Anonymous — January 31, 2009 @ 3:03 am


  • Resurgence (ClinPage) Octagon Research Solutions would seem like one potential acquisition target for Oracle in the area, but there are other possibilities as well. Ametek 4Q profit falls on restructuring charges (Associated Press via Forbes) SaaS is surging in the downturn, says IDC (ZDNet Blogs) SAP Spoke to Politicians on Job Cuts, Cooperates With Probe (Bloomberg) Losses could affect SAP’s Newtown home (Delco TImes) Comcast Engaged in Free Wi-Fi Trial Working with Cablevision on Wi-Fi trial in New Jersey (Broadband Reports)

    Trackback by Anonymous — January 31, 2009 @ 3:03 am

  • Cloud confusion
    My ZDNet colleague and fellow Phil ... Software plus Services (blogs.msdn.com) ... Integrated service providers moving to SaaS (vnunet.com)

    Trackback by Anonymous — February 2, 2009 @ 3:04 am

  • Software-as-a-Service is Surging in the Downturn
    by Tamir Scheinok Monday, February 2nd, 2009 With all the bad financial news in the press, its nice to read an article about IDC analysts revising upward its projects for SAAS growth in 2009. “SaaS’s counter-cyclical boom is entirely due to the enhanced attractions of the model when times are bad, says IDC:… the harsh economic climate will actually accelerate the growth

    Trackback by Anonymous — February 3, 2009 @ 3:04 am

  • Software and services: life in an old dog
    Despite all the saas/on-demand hand waving on this and other websites there is no denying that the incumbent vendors continue to do OK. Sure, the on-demand snowball is rolling downhill and gathering pace but that doesn’t mean the world and his dog will suddenly have a flash of vendor driven insight and switch.

    Trackback by Anonymous — February 3, 2009 @ 3:04 am

  • IDC Predicts Strong Growth in SaaS for 2009
    Research firm IDC recently reissued its projections for SaaS in 2009 and the story is a good one. Contrary to most economic and development forecasts these days, IDC expects the SaaS market to increase dramatically in 2009. ...

    Trackback by Scheduling Chronicles — February 3, 2009 @ 7:05 pm

  • SaaS is surging in downturn, says IDC -
    SaaS is surging in downturn, says IDC - http://blogs.zdnet.com/SAAS/?p=644...

    Trackback by Anonymous — February 6, 2009 @ 3:05 am

  • Cloud confusion
    My ZDNet colleague and fellow Phil ... Software plus Services (blogs.msdn.com) ... Integrated service providers moving to SaaS (vnunet.com)

    Trackback by Anonymous — February 6, 2009 @ 3:05 am

  • SaaS: Just a Better Way to Work
    IDC report revised its market size projections, as stated in ZDNet's Phil Wainwright's January 30th, 2009 blog post: "SaaS is surging in the...

    Trackback by Anonymous — February 8, 2009 @ 3:03 am

  • Software and services: life in an old dog
    Despite all the saas/on-demand hand waving on this and other websites there is no denying ... Salesforce.com outage provokes angry response...

    Trackback by Anonymous — February 8, 2009 @ 3:03 am

  • Focus on ‘right-sized, zero-CAPEX alternatives’
    Phil Wainewright recently wrote an article in ZDNet that referenced IDC’s forecast that SaaS growth will surge by more than 40 percent in the current year. He highlighted one particularly interesting statement: ...

    Trackback by Cloudcast - Cloud Computing and Virtual Lab Management — February 10, 2009 @ 11:39 pm

  • My tech market predictions for 2009
    who are not already at the inflection point of positive cash-flow and controlled churn will go bust, unless their investors have very deep pockets indeed.  It will be hard to sell your way out of this slump. The economic environment plays to SaaS, but most of the business models ain't there yet. On the other hand, outsourcing will come back into favour once the market settles a bit.  And it will be cheaper & better than ever, thanks to SaaS-style delivery of business apps built on VoiP

    Trackback by Anonymous — February 11, 2009 @ 3:03 am

  • 3 ways to spot Startup opportunites
    Our story thus far.. I left employment back in 07 to do an MBA in Entrepreneurship with the UK’s Top Entrepreneurial University. I loved every MBA minute. When I finished I convinced one of my best friends, Simon Oxley, ...

    Trackback by Nickpoint — February 20, 2009 @ 11:22 am

  • My tech market predictions for 2009
    SaaS vendors who are not already at the inflection point of positive ... a massive shake-out -– few generic newsletters or blogs will survive on

    Trackback by Anonymous — February 21, 2009 @ 3:05 am

  • On demand message queuing providers vs. SaaS Integrators
    Other articles of possible interest: Value proposition of SaaS integration ... A list of on demand (SaaS) Message Queuing (MQ) providers

    Trackback by Anonymous — February 21, 2009 @ 3:05 am

  • Healthcare on the internet
    IDC has identified Software as a Service (SaaS) as a 40% growth sector

    Trackback by Anonymous — February 21, 2009 @ 3:05 am

  • Cloud confusion
    My ZDNet colleague and fellow Phil ... Software plus Services (blogs.msdn.com) ... Integrated service providers moving to SaaS (vnunet.com)

    Trackback by Anonymous — February 23, 2009 @ 3:05 am

advertisement

Recent Entries

advertisement

Archives

ZDNet Blogs

CIO Sessions

advertisement
Click Here