Enterprise Blog

Provides a global picture of mobile enterprise and business cloud adoption, market trends, and vendor and service provider activities.

July 22, 2012 23:17 David Kerr

In an ever-flattening world, small and midsize businesses (SMBs) have more opportunities to expand and accelerate growth and increase profitability. Just like their large enterprise counterparts, SMBs (with 1 to 250 employees) seek growth and new opportunities through their mobile workforces. The smartphone and tablet market specifically and the mobility market generally in Western Europe is dynamic.

The playing field for smartphones and tablets is crowded and competitive and the SMB segment is a serious user of mobile applications. In this published report, we provide survey findings concerning trends and developments in the SMB segment. It also presents a view of mobile cloud developments created as part of key Mobile Operators? (Vodafone, Orange, T-Mobile/TSystems and Telef?nica) core services and their strategies to meet SMB IT needs in Western Europe.

? In Western Europe, there are approximately 139 million workers in the SMB workforce and 40% are mobile

? 65.6% of surveyed SMBs have increased mobile devices spending in the last 12 months, while 33.2% kept spending constant.

? According to Strategy Analytics? 2012 enterprise survey, cloud computing offers SMBs better visibility, scalability and reliability

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Other key questions answered in our Western Europe Enterprise Survey -Mobile Operators as a Channel for SMBs include.

What benefits can enterprises derive from wireless solutions?

What does the SMB workforce want and need?

What can organizations do to more effectively manage technology rollout?

Clients can access the full presentation report here. or contact the report author Gina Luk gluk@strategyanalytics.com

 

March 9, 2012 21:51 David Kerr

View the presentation slides from Strategy Analytics Breakfast Presentation at MWC 2012.

What are the opportunities and obstacles for the mobile industry as it expands to a world of connected devices and applications which provide new levels of convenience and automation?

What are the prospects for NFC and what role might carriers take?

Will M Health live up to current exponential growth forecasts, and which parties will benefit most in the value chain?

How will wireless enabled processes be captured in connected homes and vehicles of the future?

Client Reading


March 6, 2012 18:28 David Kerr

Strategy Analytics projects the global UC software and services market will surpass the $7 billion revenue mark in 2011 and achieve an annual growth rate of 9%

With one out of every three workers in the global workforce being mobile, any UC or fixed-mobile converged solution that does not have mobile at its core is not addressing the needs of businesses.

Mobile UC solutions are designed to streamline and improve the mobile worker's ability to communicate and share information with colleagues, customers, and partners. The market for such solutions is still emerging and consists of a disparate group of vendors driven by the rise in personal-liable purchasing, the need for cost cutting, and the availability of mobile device management (MDM) solutions to manage such devices

The market for such solutions is still emerging and consists of a disparate group of vendors including enterprise networking/telecom customer premises equipment (CPE) providers (e.g. Alcatel-Lucent, Avaya, Cisco, Siemens), mobile platform and software providers (e.g. IBM, Microsoft, Nokia, RIM), and pure-play mobile UC vendors (e.g. Aastra, DiVitas, ShoreTel - Agito Networks). Several other players exist in this market, and more are sure to emerge, but those included in this report comprise the most visible in the market today.

Client reading


April 27, 2011 15:22 David Kerr

Today at the 8th annual Huawei Analyst event in Shanghai, we witnessed the start of a new journey which will see the Chinese infrastructure and solutions giant place large bets in the ICT space.

Reinventing itself as an end to end provider in the Cloud, Pipe and Devices markets is a bold move which was hinted at last year but is now front and center of the company’s strategy. Chief Marketing Officer, Richard Yu set the scene well with a view that we will see a doubling in Mobile Broadband over the next five years and 70% of SME adopting cloud services while network traffic surges several hundred percent. Huawei will continue to bring an engineering and r&d focus to the market with more than 20,000 new staff added in these areas in 2011!

Most significantly though is the ambitious goal of making enterprise ICT a core part of Huawei business alongside Infrastructure and Devices.

Having gone from unknown to market leader in mobile broadband and from niche player to a major global force with its SingleRan approach to mobile networks, Huawei now has set its sights on the enterprise market. Can Huawei compete and challenge the industry’s 800lb gorilla in the enterprise space? Huawei has shown it has the aptitude to solve technical problems and the business prowess to take advantage of disruptive technologies to forge an entry path in new industries. While enterprise ICT has one giant player, there does appear to be discontent in the value chain and there are certainly significant new challenges as consumer side innovation leaks into the business world (iPhone, cloud services, personalization).

The impact of Huawei on the infrastructure market and its leadership in mobile broadband devices (USB modems etc) are well known but did you know Huawei has a significant presence in enterprise solutions? Prior to today, I certainly didn’t.  A couple of stats jumped out from the hundreds of PowerPoint slides that we saw today. Huawei Enterprise group has already achieved $2Bn in revenue, employs over 10,000 and boasts over 6,000 r&d staff dedicated to solving enterprise problems in the ICT space. 

Huawei has expanded in dramatic fashion with revenues more than tripling since 2007 on the strength of its infrastructure business and growing international presence. Infrastructure represents approximately 2/3 of the company revenue while the fledgling device business accounts for about 17% today. Perhaps most impressively, international sales have reached 65% of total as Huawei has become a truly global player with operations in over 140 countries. 

Looking to the future, Huawei has already resourced and positioned strongly in the cloud space with over 2,500 engineers working on the topic and has a vision to leverage its vertically integrated supply chain to help business in select verticals master the transition from IT to ICT.

A $2Bn, 10,000 employee start up in the enterprise space is not a bad starting point. Huawei has the luxury of cherry picking which verticals to go after first while in the long term planning to be a horizontal player.

With presence in 140 countries, established service, repair and customer centers etc, Huawei could become a significant challenger as businesses look to address opportunities in communications, collaboration, video, telepresence and cloud based services and platforms.  Huawei is already eating its own dog food with a strong commitment to cloud services in its Shanghai operations which operates approx. 6,000 virtual machines at any given point and has moved many key business processes to the cloud.

Huawei has achieved leadership in the Pipe, has a fledgling position in Devices (more on this tomorrow) and has set out its stall to be a major player in Enterprise as well as the machine of things segment. While there are many challenges ahead in establishing its enterprise division as a global leader, it would be a very brave analyst who would dismiss their chances. Existing enterprise solutions leaders should take note that there is another well funded, well resourced vendor coming to play.