Cambridge, Mass., August 6,
2002 . . . Firms will spend 2.3 percent more
on IT in 2002 than in 2001, and 82 percent of these firms will at
least retain their current budgets over the second half of the year,
according to Forrester Research (Nasdaq: FORR). Forrester's semiannual
Business Technographics North America Benchmark Study examines the
state of North American companies' IT budgets, purchase plans, and
control of IT processes.
"Although IT budgets have stopped
bleeding, it's still a harsh buyer's market for tech vendors," said
Tom Pohlmann, senior analyst at Forrester. "In areas like IT
outsourcing and enterprise apps, a vendor's best hope is to squeeze
incremental business out of its installed base of customers."
In Forrester's previous Business
Technographics Benchmark Study -- the Business Technographics February
2002 North America Benchmark Study -- Forrester found that IT and
business execs were risk-averse and shifted their IT strategies toward
infrastructure and do-it-yourself development and integration work.
Key findings from the August 2002 report reveal new trends and a
cautiously optimistic outlook on IT spending during the second half of
the year.
- On average, IT spending
in 2002 is 2.3 percent higher than 2001.
IT spending in consumer services and retail will grow by more than 7
percent, while high-tech firms and utilities lead the decliners.
- Nineteen percent of the
companies surveyed will raise IT budgets over the second half of
2002 -- only 12 percent will cut them. Of
those raising budgets, 37 percent will raise them by more than 10
percent.
- C-level sentiments are on
the mend. Fifty-five percent of
respondents describe their executives as willing to "spend what it
takes" on IT. As a point of reference, only 36 percent felt that way
at the beginning of the year.
- More companies have
centralized IT management. Fifty-eight
percent of Global 3,500 companies (firms with annual revenues of $1
billion or more) characterize their IT organizations as heavily
centralized, compared with only 17 percent of Global 3,500 companies
at the beginning of 2001.
- The midmarket isn't a
growth opportunity for vendors. While
midmarket firms (firms with annual revenues less than $1 billion)
are more likely to increase budgets, they're also less likely to buy
any of the technologies covered in the report, with the exception of
ERP software.