Both enterprise and smaller businesses are adopting cloud computing apps and services at a higher levels, a couple of new studies suggest. The number of enterprises turning to cloud computing to revamp existing business models will more than double in the next three years, a new study by IBM predicts.
Also, nearly half of the respondents in a recent CIO Economic Impact survey indicated they evaluate cloud options first, over traditional IT approaches, before making any new IT investments.
The survey revealed that while a higher percentage of large organizations (those with revenues
more than $20 billion) are experimenting with cloud, 67 percent of companies with revenues less than $1 billion and 76 percent of those with revenues between $1billiion and 20 billion have adopted cloud at some level.
Those sorts of developments are why some believe the global cloud computing market will
grow 22 percent annually to $241 billion by 2020. That’s a market big enough to be interesting to lots of firms.
The Economist Intelligence Unit surveyed more than 500 business and technology executives worldwide as part of the study.
While 16 percent of the executives surveyed indicate they are already using cloud capabilities, by 2015 35 percent intend to use it to transform their business models. And operating efficiencies will not be driving the move.
While a little more than half of the respondents indicated "improving organizational efficiency" as a top business challenge today, only 31 percent anticipate it will be a top challenge in three years.
Instead the study indicates that their focus is shifting to growth and competitive initiatives. Some 62 percent of survey respondents said increased collaboration with external partners is a key objective for adopting cloud, while
57 percent cited competitive cost advantages through vertical integration as a major motivation.
About 56 percent said the ability to create new delivery channels and markets was an important objective for their cloud initiatives.
Also, small and medium businesses that currently use cloud applications plan to add an average of three new cloud business applications in 2012, according to a survey sponsored by Dell Cloud Business Applications and conducted by Techaisle.
About 70 percent of cloud services as “software as a service” apps and usage of those apps has doubled over the last two years, from an average of two apps to four, with an expectation that a typical user will be running seven apps by the end of 2012.
Customer relationship management has the highest penetration of any cloud application at up to 55 percent, an increase of up to 34 percent from 2010. That is up from 34 percent usage in 2010.
But several other applications were not far behind. Some 54 percent of respondents use cloud-based project management apps. About 49 percent reported using business analytics on a cloud basis.
Some 48 percent use a sales automation tool, the same percentage reporting use of a cloud-based payroll app. Some 43 percent
Dell notes that cloud delivery has lowered costs enough that many smaller organizations now can afford to use CRM apps. Of respondents using CRM, about 25 percent report they are likely to add business intelligence and marketing automation apps within the next 12 months.
Perhaps 50 percent of respondents noted significant challenges in keeping track of different service level agreements, while up to 48 percent complained that explaining their business to each vendor was tedious and time consuming.
As many as 74 percent of respondents use in-house information technology staff to integrate new cloud applications with on-premise technology.
On average, respondents believe they have experienced up to a 38 percent improvement in operational efficiency due to reduced manual processes and up to a 39 percent improvement in employee productivity due to automation of tasks and information.
The survey was conducted with 400 SMBs in the United States that are using at least one cloud-based business application. The survey was conducted online in December 2011 and included both IT and business decision makers.
Saturday, March 10, 2012
Cloud Computing Gaining Traction in Both Enterprise and Small Business
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
Is There A Return for Bankers on Mobile Commerce Investments?
Technology and business disruptions are harsh. Sometimes, there simply is no way a set of industry leaders in one era can survive in the era that comes next. You can see this, as a historical matter, in the canal industry, the railroad industry, the steel industry, the auto industry, mainframe computing, mini-computer and now even the PC business.
The point is that there was virtually no amount of investment or creativity that would have allowed industry leaders in one era to prosper in the succeeding era. The only conceivable survival strategy would have been to abandon the original business, entirely or substantially.
Telecom service providers face precisely that problem with voice services, which historically have provided 70 percent of all revenue. The existential problem is that it might not be possible, under any circumstances, to sustain or revive a business model under intense pressure from a variety of forces.
Some might notice that international long distance calling, among the first segments of the business to feel the gale winds, saw pricing drop from $60 a unit to 10 cents a unit over a few decades. Over time, a wider range of voice products have seen that pressure start to erode revenue and profit margin, ranging from domestic calling to local access to enhanced features.
"Forget about return on investment" is the advice some would give to banks struggling to find a return on mobile payments or mobile commerce investments. At one level, the advice makes sense. Pilot programs, even though it might be hard to figure out how many different types of pilots should be conducted, make sense as a defensive move.
At another level, "forget about ROI" is the key question. Sometimes such questions are existential.
Telcos face other existential problems as well. In many cases, there is no solid business case for building a new fiber-to-home access network, as the incremental revenue simply is insufficient to justify the investment.
The voice function doesn't benefit at all. New broadband access services might bring in more money, as will video entertainment services. But the issue has been that the new revenue really doesn't justify the investment. Some might even question whether the return even meets the cost of capital.
Banks might face the same issue with mobile banking, commerce and payment. It might turn out that the struggles over "return" on investment will never be answered. In other words, there might simply be no real way to earn a return from mobile projects, as such investments only represent incremental channels.
That means more cost, and identical revenue. There is, in other words, no business case to be made. Still, some have tried to quantify the benefits.
Forrester analysts Brad Strothkamp, Alexander Hesse, and Peter Wannemacher have pegged ROI for mobile banking of 15.7 percent, for a hypothetical bank with 500,000 customers.
But note that most of the return comes from the estimated value of reduced costs, retained customers and cross-selling of new products, though that admittedly is minimal.
The Forrester consumer survey relies heavily on reduced service costs to drive the return. When U.S. users of mobile banking were asked how mobile has changed their use of other banking channels, 43 percent said they had made fewer phone calls to their bank’s call center since adopting mobile banking and more than one-third (35%) said they visited branches less often than they did before adopting mobile banking.
The bank with 500,000 retail customers in Forrester’s model could achieve a savings of more than $150,000 by the reduced traffic in branches and call centers. The return, one might argue, would have been better if the hypothetical bank could have closed call centers and branches.
The alternative was simply to harvest the legacy business as long as possible, before cannibalizing the remainder of the business. That is what AT&T essentially did with its long distance business.
There might, in the final analysis, be no way banks actually can win the mobile commerce and mobile banking game. The costs of implementing might never produce any significant new revenue. There could be some cost savings, but supporting more channels will be necessary. It isn't possible to replace any existing channels.
In that sense there also is an analogy to the telecom business adopting voice over Internet Protocol services that cannibalize legacy voice. The only contenders that actually win are the attackers.
They have zero market share and revenue to begin with. If they can create lower-cost business models, the incremental revenue, even when at vastly-lower gross amounts, still is a net win.
Mobile commerce and banking might be that sort of issue for banks. Perhaps the best case scenario is that banks invest capital only to protect what they already have. In the worse case, they invest to no avail. Attackers begin to take market share despite everything banks do to protect themselves.
When business eras change, the impact on industry leaders can be catastrophic. One simply wonders if that is about to happen in the banking business, driven by new payments methods.
Sometimes, there is almost nothing former leaders really can do to save their businesses.
The point is that there was virtually no amount of investment or creativity that would have allowed industry leaders in one era to prosper in the succeeding era. The only conceivable survival strategy would have been to abandon the original business, entirely or substantially.
Telecom service providers face precisely that problem with voice services, which historically have provided 70 percent of all revenue. The existential problem is that it might not be possible, under any circumstances, to sustain or revive a business model under intense pressure from a variety of forces.
Some might notice that international long distance calling, among the first segments of the business to feel the gale winds, saw pricing drop from $60 a unit to 10 cents a unit over a few decades. Over time, a wider range of voice products have seen that pressure start to erode revenue and profit margin, ranging from domestic calling to local access to enhanced features.
"Forget about return on investment" is the advice some would give to banks struggling to find a return on mobile payments or mobile commerce investments. At one level, the advice makes sense. Pilot programs, even though it might be hard to figure out how many different types of pilots should be conducted, make sense as a defensive move.
At another level, "forget about ROI" is the key question. Sometimes such questions are existential.
Telcos face other existential problems as well. In many cases, there is no solid business case for building a new fiber-to-home access network, as the incremental revenue simply is insufficient to justify the investment.
The voice function doesn't benefit at all. New broadband access services might bring in more money, as will video entertainment services. But the issue has been that the new revenue really doesn't justify the investment. Some might even question whether the return even meets the cost of capital.
Banks might face the same issue with mobile banking, commerce and payment. It might turn out that the struggles over "return" on investment will never be answered. In other words, there might simply be no real way to earn a return from mobile projects, as such investments only represent incremental channels.
That means more cost, and identical revenue. There is, in other words, no business case to be made. Still, some have tried to quantify the benefits.
Forrester analysts Brad Strothkamp, Alexander Hesse, and Peter Wannemacher have pegged ROI for mobile banking of 15.7 percent, for a hypothetical bank with 500,000 customers.
But note that most of the return comes from the estimated value of reduced costs, retained customers and cross-selling of new products, though that admittedly is minimal.
The Forrester consumer survey relies heavily on reduced service costs to drive the return. When U.S. users of mobile banking were asked how mobile has changed their use of other banking channels, 43 percent said they had made fewer phone calls to their bank’s call center since adopting mobile banking and more than one-third (35%) said they visited branches less often than they did before adopting mobile banking.
The bank with 500,000 retail customers in Forrester’s model could achieve a savings of more than $150,000 by the reduced traffic in branches and call centers. The return, one might argue, would have been better if the hypothetical bank could have closed call centers and branches.
Some 30 percent of U.S. mobile banking users say mobile banking has made them more likely to stay with the bank from which they receive the service. Forrester analysts project that a bank with 500,000 retail customers could save more than $450,000 in annual revenues from reduced attrition, for this reason.
The case for mobile banking increasing cross-sales for a bank is weaker and represents only three percent of the benefits. Forrester’s survey found that 18 percent of mobile banking users say they are more likely to buy more products from the banks they use for mobile banking.
This could bring a bank additional revenue of $20,000 from cross-selling products like credit cards to mobile banking users, the analysts estimate.
Of course, the argument about operating cost savings was made by Verizon when it sought to justify its FiOS fiber to the home network as well. Verizon could not make the business case work based strictly on revenue enhancement, so sought to add in operating cost savings. Many would argue Verizon simply hasn't gained as much as it thought on the opex front.
That, many argue, is why Verizon has halted further FiOS builds and is selling off assets where the business case is even worse than in the big metro areas.
Telecom executives already have had to confront such choices, is the point. Telcos could have fully embraced new technologies that had the practical effect of destroying gross revenue and profit margin in their single most important business. In the international long distance example, providers could have willingly and immediately slashed their own prices, literally destroying most of the existing business. This could bring a bank additional revenue of $20,000 from cross-selling products like credit cards to mobile banking users, the analysts estimate.
Of course, the argument about operating cost savings was made by Verizon when it sought to justify its FiOS fiber to the home network as well. Verizon could not make the business case work based strictly on revenue enhancement, so sought to add in operating cost savings. Many would argue Verizon simply hasn't gained as much as it thought on the opex front.
That, many argue, is why Verizon has halted further FiOS builds and is selling off assets where the business case is even worse than in the big metro areas.
The alternative was simply to harvest the legacy business as long as possible, before cannibalizing the remainder of the business. That is what AT&T essentially did with its long distance business.
There might, in the final analysis, be no way banks actually can win the mobile commerce and mobile banking game. The costs of implementing might never produce any significant new revenue. There could be some cost savings, but supporting more channels will be necessary. It isn't possible to replace any existing channels.
In that sense there also is an analogy to the telecom business adopting voice over Internet Protocol services that cannibalize legacy voice. The only contenders that actually win are the attackers.
They have zero market share and revenue to begin with. If they can create lower-cost business models, the incremental revenue, even when at vastly-lower gross amounts, still is a net win.
Mobile commerce and banking might be that sort of issue for banks. Perhaps the best case scenario is that banks invest capital only to protect what they already have. In the worse case, they invest to no avail. Attackers begin to take market share despite everything banks do to protect themselves.
When business eras change, the impact on industry leaders can be catastrophic. One simply wonders if that is about to happen in the banking business, driven by new payments methods.
Sometimes, there is almost nothing former leaders really can do to save their businesses.
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
American Banker Audience Not Sure How Well Banks Will Fare in Mobile Payments
It's just a shapshot, but a recent non-scientific poll conducted by American Banker shows uneasiness on the part of American Banker readers about how well banks are positioned in the developing mobile payments and mobile commerce businesses.
Some 36 percent think others in the ecosystem are gaining the upper hand. Only 15 percent believe banks say "banks still are necessary."
Some 36 percent think others in the ecosystem are gaining the upper hand. Only 15 percent believe banks say "banks still are necessary."
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
PayPal Could Threaten Visa, MasterCard
There's a reason PayPal now represents a potentially significant threat to Visa and MasterCard in the transaction clearing business. For starters, PayPal is the only big name contestant that, at least for the moment, has a business model that challenges firms such as Visa and MasterCard.
Whatever else Google, Isis (AT&T, Verizon Wireless, T-Mobile USA), Apple and Amazon might wish to do, for the moment they are focusing on parts of the mobile commerce ecosystem that actually are complementary to the clearing networks.
But PayPal, in principle, can displace the clearing networks. PayPal almost certainly can operate at lower cost than Visa and MasterCard, and in a competitive business, the low-cost provider tends to win, long term.
Also, recent surveys suggest there is a level of trust in the PayPal brand, in terms of end user trust, that concedes nothing to Visa, American Express or MasterCard.
Whatever else Google, Isis (AT&T, Verizon Wireless, T-Mobile USA), Apple and Amazon might wish to do, for the moment they are focusing on parts of the mobile commerce ecosystem that actually are complementary to the clearing networks.
But PayPal, in principle, can displace the clearing networks. PayPal almost certainly can operate at lower cost than Visa and MasterCard, and in a competitive business, the low-cost provider tends to win, long term.
Also, recent surveys suggest there is a level of trust in the PayPal brand, in terms of end user trust, that concedes nothing to Visa, American Express or MasterCard.
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
Mobile Shopping Shifts
A recent survey of end users shows a significant shift of mobile device commerce types. In the past, it mostly has been virtual and digital goods that people have bought directly from their mobile devices.
Games, ring tones, songs and other content are prime examples. Over the last couple of years, though, the amount of physical goods purchased directly from a mobile has shifted.
More users are buying physical goods than ever before. Also, in terms of change, the biggest growth is physical goods and the biggest decline is purchasing of ring tones.
There are many potential repercussions. The volume growth could suggest the emergence of a "mobile commerce" behavior and therefore a business opportunity that is distinct both from online commerce and "brick and mortar store" retailing.
Also, since most digital goods are small transactions, while physical goods will range widely in price, the methods of payment are likely to change. In the past, it probably has made most sense, for most people, to use simple billing direct to a mobile service bill for such small purchases.
That won't make sense for the wider range of physical goods people now are buying. But the big trend is the emergence of a distinct mobile commerce business.
Games, ring tones, songs and other content are prime examples. Over the last couple of years, though, the amount of physical goods purchased directly from a mobile has shifted.
More users are buying physical goods than ever before. Also, in terms of change, the biggest growth is physical goods and the biggest decline is purchasing of ring tones.
There are many potential repercussions. The volume growth could suggest the emergence of a "mobile commerce" behavior and therefore a business opportunity that is distinct both from online commerce and "brick and mortar store" retailing.
Also, since most digital goods are small transactions, while physical goods will range widely in price, the methods of payment are likely to change. In the past, it probably has made most sense, for most people, to use simple billing direct to a mobile service bill for such small purchases.
That won't make sense for the wider range of physical goods people now are buying. But the big trend is the emergence of a distinct mobile commerce business.
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
Friday, March 9, 2012
How Far Could PayPal Go in Virtual Payments?
You might draw a couple of conclusions from PayPal's heightened profile in the retail payments space. You might argue that PayPal, of all the present major contenders, is the only company that has a reasonable chance of disintermediating the Visa and MasterCard payment information networks and brands.
You might also conclude that the walls between e-commerce and "commerce" are starting to blur. In the future, the difference between an "online" and a brick and mortar shopping experience might be less clear.
You might further conclude that the "currency tendered" in a transaction increasingly could take on new forms. Today, no matter what form the transaction takes, the payment is in, in the U.S. market, U.S. currency. In the future, other forms of value might be exchanged.
There are lots of legal and regulatory issues to be settled, to be sure. But some transactions might occur in equivalent virtual stores of value such as points, credits, tokens and other forms of stored value. Not that it will happen soon, or at all, but someday the currencies could extend far beyond "U.S. dollars and cents."
In one sense, that is a linear extrapolation from what PayPal now is doing. Rather than tell consumers which payment method is best for them, PayPal is working to accept all types of payments: plastic card, NFC, the new “empty hands” mode or barcode scanning.
Right now, PayPal is simply trying to let consumers decide how to pay, so long as PayPal is part of the transaction clearing, and so long as the currency, no matter what physical "channel," is U.S. currency. In principle, though, markets could develop that allow other virtual currencies to be used, as well.
You might also conclude that the walls between e-commerce and "commerce" are starting to blur. In the future, the difference between an "online" and a brick and mortar shopping experience might be less clear.
You might further conclude that the "currency tendered" in a transaction increasingly could take on new forms. Today, no matter what form the transaction takes, the payment is in, in the U.S. market, U.S. currency. In the future, other forms of value might be exchanged.
There are lots of legal and regulatory issues to be settled, to be sure. But some transactions might occur in equivalent virtual stores of value such as points, credits, tokens and other forms of stored value. Not that it will happen soon, or at all, but someday the currencies could extend far beyond "U.S. dollars and cents."
In one sense, that is a linear extrapolation from what PayPal now is doing. Rather than tell consumers which payment method is best for them, PayPal is working to accept all types of payments: plastic card, NFC, the new “empty hands” mode or barcode scanning.
Right now, PayPal is simply trying to let consumers decide how to pay, so long as PayPal is part of the transaction clearing, and so long as the currency, no matter what physical "channel," is U.S. currency. In principle, though, markets could develop that allow other virtual currencies to be used, as well.
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
E-Reader Use Has Double\d Every Year since 2010
Nearly a third of adults in the United States now read books on a tablet or e-book readers.
Only 13 per cent of respondents who currently don't read books electronically said they are "very likely" or "somewhat likely" to start doing so in the next six months.
Some 77 per cent said they are not likely to do so, with half of the group saying they almost certainly won't.
The Harris Poll results, though, might not be reflective of actual user behavior. Many respondents have in the past suggested they would not use e-readers, but their behavior is not congruent with those sentiments.
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Will Generative AI Follow Development Path of the Internet?
In many ways, the development of the internet provides a model for understanding how artificial intelligence will develop and create value. ...
-
We have all repeatedly seen comparisons of equity value of hyperscale app providers compared to the value of connectivity providers, which s...
-
It really is surprising how often a Pareto distribution--the “80/20 rule--appears in business life, or in life, generally. Basically, the...
-
One recurring issue with forecasts of multi-access edge computing is that it is easier to make predictions about cost than revenue and infra...