Many organisations are failing to exploit falling prices in products and
services that should accompany the commoditisation of IT, according to analysts.
This week, research house
Gartner revealed that in
2007, 25 per cent of IT spending was on unnecessary and redundant customisation
and although this will decline, it will remain at least at 10 per cent
overspending through 2010.
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The analyst said the need to move ever faster and at a lower cost is driving
a shift from 'integration' activities toward greater interoperability and
interchangeability, with the direct result that many IT product and services
markets are becoming commoditised. Gartner likened this 'industrialisation of
IT' to the two earlier industrial revolutions of mechanisation and
electrification, calling it the third industrial revolution: that of digital
business in the clouds.
"No IT product or service is fully commoditised today – as there is still
some cost to you in switching suppliers, but many are commoditising and some are
at a relatively advanced state such as desktop PCs," said Brian Gammage, vice
president and Gartner Fellow.
"As products and services do commoditise, prices should usually fall, but
conversely, for most enterprises, one of the biggest impacts of commoditisation
is overspending."
According to the analyst, without some fundamental change in the approach to
managing devices and data, IT budgets will rise, even for static systems.
"There is no way to solve the cost of IT management by evolving costs
downward," Gammage said.
"Instead, organisations need to find new and different ways of being able to
scale infrastructure without scaling labour costs if they are to take advantage
of this metamorphosis of IT."
For most organisations, the shift from buying and building IT to accessing IT
as a service is not new, but the trend is set to accelerate as traditional
delivery models are augmented by a range of new, alternative delivery models
that rely on a combination of technology and business advances to delineate and
define the extent of the service.
Gartner said that increasingly, these are being used both internally and
externally to deliver scalable IT software and hardware functions and
alternative delivery models often make irrelevant the governing principles that
worked with the traditional models.
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