Posts Tagged ‘Market’

‘Small’ IT Market Attracts Big Companies

January 26th, 2012

The small-business help desk is going corporate, with initiatives from companies like Apple Inc. bringing new competition to independent consultants who typically handle the IT needs of U.S. start-ups and small companies.

The move comes as the use of external IT support among small businesses is exploding. Information-technology services can include setting up new computers, upgrading software, protecting against malware and troubleshooting.

U.S. businesses with less than 500 employees spent roughly $23.5 billion on IT services last year, and are projected to spend $27.2 billion on IT services by 2015, according to estimates by research firm IDC.

Best Buy Co. sees “significant, untapped potential” in small business IT, a company spokeswoman said. The national retail chain in December bought Mindshift Technologies Inc., a Waltham, Mass., provider of IT services to more than 5,400 small and midsize businesses nationwide.

Apple in June formed a partnership with OnForce Services Inc., an eight-year-old IT services network based in Lexington, Mass., to provide small businesses with IT help on their own premises.

“Everyone’s talking small business right now. There’s a huge opportunity,” says Peter Cannone, chief executive of OnForce.

Apple stores already feature a “Genius Bar,” where customers have their products serviced. A year ago Apple introduced “JointVenture,” a program providing small businesses with limited tech support offered by Apple employees in Apple stores and over the phone. That program starts at $499 a year for those who buy a new Mac.

But in-store support isn’t ideal for many business owners who may need to carry multiple computers or devices from their office into an Apple store.

While many small businesses and start-ups are still reluctant to hire new employees, spending on technology and IT services is seen generally as smart if it can help a company operate more efficiently, or make it possible for an owner who travels to manage his or her business from a remote location.

“I don’t have an IT department,” says Kevin Kay, owner of an Easley, S.C., health-care company with just 53 employees. “It’s not a luxury I can afford.”

Mr. Kay, who says he has been cautious in his overall spending in recent years due to the economy, sought Apple’s help in updating and transferring accounting software to three new iMac computers from older personal computers earlier this month.

Apple referred him to OnForce, which then dispatched a technician from its roster of more than 100,000 partners—independent IT-service providers nationwide who pay OnForce a referral fee of 10% of sales—to Mr. Kay’s business. Mr. Kay paid the technician $1,050, or $150 an hour, for seven hours of labor, an amount he describes as “costly but necessary.” That’s on top of the $5,600 he shelled out for computers, iPads, software and data backup.

Thanks to the advent of cloud computing, the options now available to small businesses go well beyond what was typical for a help desk just a few years ago. They include analytics, software customization, disaster recovery and video conferencing, for instance. Such options and others only recently became feasible to dispense on a widespread scale—and at prices the average small business can afford.

Spending on IT services by U.S. companies of all sizes has been growing at a rate of about 3.2% annually over the past five years, and reached $304 billion last year. That total is about 55% more than their spending on computer hardware and software sales combined, according to research firm Gartner Inc.

About 71% of small and midsize U.S. companies said they planned to increase their IT budgets by an average of 5.2% over the next 12 months, according to a July survey of 602 companies with less than 500 employees by the Computing Technology Industry Association, a trade group.

The small-business IT market is alluring to many in part because no single player dominates it, even though some large corporations have been in the space for longer than Apple and Best Buy, including International Business Machines Corp., Staples Inc. and AT&T Inc.

PlumChoice Inc., a midsize IT-services firm in Billerica, Mass., has signed partnerships with five large corporations in recent years to provide help-desk support to those outfits’ small-business customers. “When things don’t work, you can’t even run your business in many cases,” says Ted Werth, its founder.

There are roughly 300,000 independent IT consultants, and another 114,000 small IT companies, according to the trade group. Some independent consultants believe they can thrive despite potentially increased competition for mom-and-pop shops and other small-business clients.

“A college kid offers better pricing than I do but I’m able to give my clients the answers they need in ways they can understand,” says Allan Sabo, an IT consultant in Flushing, N.Y., who charges $100 an hour, or $500 a month, for service for clients who have one server and as many as five workstations.

Small-business owners “want to work with local people,” says Jason Comstock, an independent consultant in Marysville, Ohio, who says he visits his clients on site at least once a month even though he can assist them remotely with many IT issues. “They want to know who you are, where you go to church, are you a member of the local chamber of commerce, all those things. They’re really about the relationship.”

Best Buy so far isn’t planning to carve out dedicated space in its stores for Mindshift, as it currently does for Geek Squad, its tech-support service for consumers.

Rather, Mindshift will serve the businesses in most cases via remote access to a customer’s computer or over the phone.

“We can do 99% of the work remotely,” says Paul Chisholm, Mindshift CEO. “More and more customers want to go to the cloud, and the independents and small regional providers don’t have the financial capital and expertise to develop scalable cloud offerings.”

Keeping a team of IT professionals can be too costly for a start-up.

“The minute you bring them in, unless you spend a tremendous amount on training and keeping them up to date, their skills deteriorate,” says Rick Rodgers, co-founder of Tesaro Inc.

The two-year-old biopharmaceutical company, based in Waltham, Mass., paid Mindshift about $40,000 for all of its 2011 IT needs.

Source:http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203806504577183052169000964.html

Kindle Fire Will Grab Half of the Android Tablet Market, Analyst Predicts

December 7th, 2011

Amazon’s Kindle Fire will grab 50 percent of Android tablet sales in 2012, building on its success from this year, according to an investment analyst.

Kindle Fire is the only tablet in the market to mount a credible challenge to Apple’s iPad, but it has had to do so by selling at cost, Evercore Partners analyst Robert Cihra wrote in an investment note reported by CNNMoney.

As noteworthy as that challenge is, it still won’t make much of a dent in Apple’s market lead, he said. Moreover, he asserted, it could make that lead starker by driving from the market Android tablet players who can’t compete with Amazon’s “razor blade” strategy. That strategy, hatched by King Gillette at the beginning of the 20th century, was to sell his hardware — the safety razor — at or below cost so he could land long-term customers for his content — razor blades.

While Kindle Fire could capture 50 percent of the Android tablet market next year, selling tablets isn’t the issue for Amazon, according to Stephen Baker, an analyst with the NPD Group, a market research company.

“They’re selling lots of tablets at $199, but they’re not making any money at $199,” Baker told PCWorld. “Their goal is to create a long-term value proposition in terms of selling music and movies. What matters to them is creating that ecosystem around their content services.”

As soon as Kindle Fire hit the market, stories began to appear that mainstream personal computer makers were preparing to concede the tablet market to Amazon and Apple. A report in DigiTimes, a publication that pays close attention to what’s happening at the manufacturing end of the supply chain, said upstream sources believed players such as HP, Acer, Asustek and Dell “will gradually phase out” of the market.

Baker discounted that notion, saying that “most of the PC and phone OEMs realize they need a play in the tablet business. I don’t think they’re going to give up.”

Hardware makers will also be drawn to the tablet market next year by more powerful processors and the entry of Microsoft into the fray. Tablets sporting Nvidia’s Tegra 3 chip will tempt slate shoppers with muscular performance. Meanwhile, Microsoft has begun hammering out deals with chip makers in preparation for making tablets based on its upcoming Windows 8 operating system.

Despite all that activity, Evercore analyst Robert Cihra expects Apple’s tablet domination to continue. Fourth-quarter shipments of iPads are less than he originally predicted — 14 million rather than 15 million — but he attributes that to inventory reductions in anticipation of an iPad 3 launch in March.

Source:http://www.pcworld.com/article/245569/kindle_fire_will_grab_half_of_the_android_tablet_market_analyst_predicts.html

Windows XP market share dips below 50 percent

August 3rd, 2011

After a healthy 10-year run, Windows XP may finally be losing its overwhelming grip on computer users.

Though it’s still the most heavily used version of the Windows operating system, XP’s market share among all operating systems finally dipped just below the 50 percent mark last month, according to stats out today from Net Applications.

The aging OS has gradually been shedding market share a bit each month over the past few years, touching 62 percent a year ago and 51 percent in June before its latest dip in July, according to Net Applications.

At the same time, Windows 7–the current version of the OS–has just under 28 percent share among all operating systems, including Apple’s Mac OS X and iOS. But Windows 7 has steadily grabbed more customers since its official release in October 2009. Meanwhile, Vista’s grip on the market has steadily fallen each month and now rests at just over 9 percent for July.

Altogether, Windows controls about 87 percent of the overall OS market.

With Microsoft due to cut off extended support for Windows XP in another three years, the company has been pushing both individuals and businesses to make the leap to Windows 7. To further motivate customers, Microsoft has released studies that bolster Windows 7, such as one from May that highlighted Windows 7 as five times more secure than XP.

However, Redmond offers no direct migration path from Windows XP to Windows 7, so moving to the latest OS typically requires either a total reinstall or an upgrade to a new PC. Tools such as Microsoft’s Windows Easy Transfer may help ease the pain, but the migration is still time-consuming, especially for larger companies.

A survey of IT professionals last November found that half of them were planning to continue to use XP even after the support tap is turned off in 2014.

Source:http://news.cnet.com/8301-10805_3-20086776-75/windows-xp-market-share-dips-below-50-percent/

Nvidia Riding High on Increased Market Share

August 2nd, 2011

Computer hardware maker Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) +3.25% stock is shrugging off a downtrodden tech sector (NYSE:XLK) in trading so far, making it the top gainer on the S&P 500 (NYSE:SPY) at last check. Driving the gains behind the surge in ticker price are reports that the company has upped its market share in both PC and Notebook sectors. “Nvidia gained 8.9 points of notebook discrete [graphics-chip] share to 50.6%. Overall, Nvidia gained 3.8 points of share to 54.6%,” writes UBS (NYSE:UBS) analyst Uche Orji. The news is welcome to Nvidia shareholders that have watched the stock drop 7.27% in 2011. The company likely stole market share from competitor AMD, who did not make any gains in the same period, say analysts, due to a change in business strategy since its acquisition of ATI Technologies.

Another analyst, Jefferies’ Mark Lipacis, argues that long-term trends, especially the push toward more power-efficient PCs, may work against the graphics chips (NYSE:SMH) specialist.

“We expect Intel Corp. (NASDAQ:INTC) and Advanced Micro Devices (NYSE:AMD) to increasingly focus on notebooks with longer battery lives, lowering power consumption by about 50% over the next two years,” Lipacis wrote in a note. “We believe that lower notebook power limits would make it increasingly difficult for [manufacturers] to fit power-hungry discrete [graphics chips] in their notebook designs, representing a secular headwind for Nvidia and AMD’s notebook discrete [graphics chip].”

Source:http://wallstcheatsheet.com/stocks/nvidia-riding-high-on-increased-market-share.html/

The iPhone turns four: Early predictions rewound

June 29th, 2011

Four years ago, Apple’s first iPhone went on sale, a benchmark that comes at a time when all eyes are on the company to announce a fifth-generation of the device.
It’s easy to look back at the iPhone’s rise and success and see how it’s managed to work out so well: Apple took aim at a product category with the same approach it used with the iPod, creating its own hardware and software, then eventually bundling it with extra services and features. Proof enough of that is the App Store, something that began with Apple’s mobile devices, and has since jumped across to the company’s computers with the Mac App Store.
But when the original iPhone was announced, many wrote it off before it even hit store shelves. There were issues like the price, the hardware, the feature set, and what carrier Apple was going with. But more than anything it was just the doubt that the company could venture into new territory with all these variables and find success.
The iPhone has gone on to become a company-defining product, transforming Apple’s image of a computer maker with a hit portable music player and booming music service into a major player in an industry it merely dabbled in as an unsuccessful partner with Motorola just years before. In Apple’s most recent fiscal quarter, the iPhone made up around half of the company’s monster revenue. It’s also had an impact on other Apple products, spilling out design ideologies to Apple’s Mac OS X operating system, and the company’s notebook computers.
Below are a smattering of predictions from pundits (including us), along with Apple competitors, all placing bets on where the product would land with consumers and the market ahead of its announcement and eventual release.

Source:http://news.cnet.com/8301-27076_3-20075254-248/the-iphone-turns-four-early-predictions-rewound/

PCMACNERDS Increases the PC and Mac support and service for the residential market

May 23rd, 2011

Although The Information Technology Field has always been a hot topic and sometimes a controversial one, the fundamentals for computer PC and Mac services have increased substantially. PCMACNERDS has also expanded its service area and has more plans of expanding.

“These demands in the residential consumer service market prompted immediate expansion,” Greg Pantirmas, Founder & CEO of PCMACNERDS states, which is a consulting computer web and application developing company, states. This dramatic change has in fact shifted focus from the conventional web developing, data mining and virtualization for Retail customers whom also want e-commerce websites, or web-based systems to manage documents and content, as well as security applications.

Similar results were reported by HP, a California Company with $40 billion in services, and Dell a Texas Company, as well as Apple Inc, which is also a California company, and all have been creating many of today’s most pervasive IT technology hardware solutions.

Technology IT Computer, PC and Mac Support Services have been a main focus of PCMACNERDS, a privately-held Bergen County, New Jersey Company and because of this, demand has changed its operating hours and days in specific markets. For a complete and wide list of services provided by pcmacnerds from critical computer solutions for Residential, Commercial and Government clients, including but not limited to hardware and software sales, maintenance of and Application Development.

Source:http://www.pr.com/press-release/326194

Tablet market to be worth $1.3bn in 2011

November 29th, 2010

The tablet market is expected to grow from $292m in 2010 to $1.35bn in 2014, according to new research from Telsyte.

Over one million media tablet devices will be sold in Australia in 2011, which includes Apple’s iPad, Amazon’s Kindle and a range of upcoming devices from computer giants Android and HP.

The huge upshift in the market is being driven by a push from print media organisations to grow readership through media tablet apps.

Rapid cannibalisation of other markets such as netbooks, eBook readers and portable video devices is also forging growth in the market as is a reduction in price and mobile broadband charges.

Foad Fadaghi, research director at Telsyte, said: “The Australian media tablet market is poised to explode. Media tablets are an industry transforming device with implications for hardware vendors, media organisations, software companies and telecom carriers.”

In 2011, the market leader is expected to remain Apple with 60% market share, down from over 90% in 2010. Android devices are expected to have 35% market share in 2010 with Blackberry tablet OS and other platforms making up the rest of the market.

Around 400,000 Australian consumers will be using a media tablet by the end of 2010, with approximately a quarter sharing a device, according to the research.

More than 20,000 Australian businesses have purchased at least one media tablet for their organisation

Source:http://www.bandt.com.au/news/tablet-market-to-be-worth-1-3bn-in-2011

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