Worldwide software as a service (SaaS) revenue is forecast to reach $14.5 billion (£9.1bn) in 2012, a 17.9 percent increase from 2011 revenue of $12.3 billion (£7.7bn), according to a report from IT analytics firm Gartner. The projected SaaS-based delivery would experience healthy growth through 2015, when worldwide revenue is projected to reach $22.1 billion (£13.9bn).
Researchers noted although growing interest has been observed in vertical-specific software, the most widespread use is still characterised by horizontal applications with common processes, among distributed virtual workforces and within Web 2.0 activities.
North America, specifically the United States, currently represents the largest opportunity for SaaS, and it is the most mature of the regional markets. SaaS software revenue is forecast to total $9.1 billion (£5.7bn) in 2012, almost three times Western Europe’s market value and up from $7.8 billion (£7.9bn) in 2011.
“After more than a decade of use, adoption of SaaS continues to grow and evolve regionally within the enterprise application markets,” Mertz said. “Increasing familiarity with the SaaS model, continued oversight on IT budgets, the growth of platform as a service [PaaS] developer communities and interest in cloud computing are now driving adoption forward.”
Gartner analysts said SaaS adoption in Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) is currently running at two speeds. In Western Europe, SaaS revenue is forecast to surpass $3.2 billion (£2bn) in 2012, up from $2.7 billion (£1.7bn) in 2011, while SaaS revenue in Eastern Europe is projected to reach $169.4 million (£106m), up from $135.5 million (£84.8m) last year.
In Western Europe, the most developed sub-region, SaaS offerings and adoption rates are rapidly increasing as North America-based SaaS vendors further penetrate the region and the number of local European SaaS vendors increases.
In Eastern Europe and the Middle East and Africa, which are small and emerging markets overall, the potential opportunity for SaaS is more in the medium to long term due to on-going infrastructure challenges that vendors need to overcome if they are to be successful in these regions, the report said.
“The top issues encountered when deploying SaaS vary by region,” Mertz said. “Limited flexibility of customisation and limited integration to existing systems are the primary reasons in North America. In EMEA, network instability is the issue most frequently encountered, whereas longer-than-expected deployments are the top issue in Asia-Pacific. Vendors are more aggressively pursuing SaaS buyers outside traditional markets by offering local-language availability, forming alliances and constructing data centres to accommodate local requirements.”
SaaS revenue in the Asia-Pacific region is on pace to reach $934.1 million (£584.4m) in 2012, up from $730.9 million (£457.3m) in 2011. Overall, SaaS adoption in the Asia-Pacific has been fragmented. The Asia-Pacific (excluding Japan) is a combination of mature markets, such as Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan, and emerging markets, including China, India, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam and the Philippines.
SaaS financial (accounting) applications are most popular, particularly in China and India. The next-highest SaaS usage is for ERP functions – such as expense management and employee performance management – followed by office suites, email and the CRM sales function.
While the Japanese economy is still struggling due to last year’s earthquake and resulting tsunami, thus limiting IT budgets, demand for SaaS services is increasing due to their lower implementation costs and faster deployment times. SaaS revenue in Japan is forecast to reach $495.2 million (£309.8m) in 2012, up from $427 million (£267m) in 2011. Gartner forecasts that the growth of the SaaS market in Japan through 2015 will be led by CRM and email/groupware, which are already seeing actual demand.
Gartner said users have found that SaaS reduces the burden of application management, increases the ease and agility of deployment, and reduces initial costs of implementation. In addition, since the 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Japan, users have looked to SaaS adoption as a defence against future power outages and disasters. However, many companies are still concerned about SaaS-related issues, such as data security risk, true cost effectiveness and the difficulty of linking with other systems.
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