
IBM, Oracle, and SAP - don't be left behind
By Eric Knipp
Published: 1 September 2009 09:00 GMT
The cloud applications space is on the verge of major change. Gartner's Eric Knipp tells you what to expect.
According to my strategy professor Gordon Walker: "The trigger point [for shakeout to begin] is when one or more firms achieve a level of productivity that neither weaker rivals nor potential entrants can match. Thus, the shift in entry and exit rates is ultimately caused by successful and sustainable growth strategies.
"Only the presence of one or more firms whose dynamic capabilities create dominant, defendable market positions can deter entrants and force weak competitors to leave the industry." (From page 137 of Modern Competitive Strategy published by McGraw-Hill/Irwin)
Now I can tell you, to be sure, that there is no shortage of entrants into the cloud application platform industry.
Force.com may have started things off a few years ago but today there are at least 40 companies, and probably more than that, who play in the space.
An upcoming Gartner report profiles many of these companies. I don't think we're in the shakeout period yet; however, I put better-than-even money on the idea that we're in the last stages of expansion before a shakeout gets started.
I submit as evidence the following:
It will be interesting to see how VMWare plans to incorporate the SpringSource and Hyperic assets into its portfolio, and what (if any) other complementary acquisitions they will make. I'm not sure what to expect but if I were a small cloud application platform start-up counting on a neutral VMWare container within which to run my 'shared-hardware' multi-tenant platform, I'd be a little bit more worried than I was a few weeks ago.
The future for application platform as a service (APaaS) and other types of cloud application platforms looks very bright to me. I'm particularly bullish on APaaS because of the productivity benefits available to developers using a combination of development of new code and composition of business-oriented services and components offered by the provider.
I don't think there's a big enough market for all of the companies producing cloud application platform software to wind up as winners, though.
I also think the time is drawing close where the other mega-vendors - IBM, Oracle, and SAP - must either launch their own cloud application platforms or acquire one, or risk being left behind.
Keep your eyes open for acceleration in the demise of cloud application platform companies, and deceleration among new entrants.
Eric Knipp is senior research analyst at Gartner.
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Hey thats enough to pay the US deficit!
VMware....
Raj Panesar
you said:
I also think the time is drawing clos...
Anonymous
Cloudburst is elastic virtualization, not a Cloud ...
Eric Knipp
Good catch. My original blog post had the erroneou...
Eric Knipp
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