Slightly over half of all PC purchases globally will not be carried out as planned in 2009, but the majority are expected to be delayed or scaled down rather than axed, a new global study released Monday has revealed.
Conducted by research analyst Gartner between February and March, the study covered 475 IT decision makers from Australia, Brazil, China, France, Germany, India, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States. Most of the respondents hailed from companies with 1,000 or more employees.
Respondents from Asia were more optimistic--85 percent from China and 64 percent from India were confident their projects would be deployed as planned this year. Globally, only 48 percent indicated so, while United States and French companies gave more conservative estimates of 29 percent, and 18 percent, respectively.
"Enterprise belt-tightening has had a tremendous impact on the client computing technology segment with 43 percent of respondents expecting a decrease in spending on client computing hardware in 2009 compared with 2008," said Andrew Johnson, managing vice president at Gartner, in a statement.
The survey also found that the insurance, media and consumer business services sectors are more likely to implement their original PC purchase plans; the discrete manufacturing sector displayed greater likelihood of project cancellations. Companies in telecommunications, wholesale, agriculture, mining and construction are on track to reduce spending on such projects, while postponements appear to be the choice of businesses in industries such as retail and utilities.
Over in the financial services, only one in 45 respondents said PC purchase plans were axed, said Gartner. The sector exhibited average inclination toward implementation, postponement or scale-downs.
Overall, more PC implementation will be postponed or reduced in 2009 than eliminated, noted Johnson.
IT spending, Gartner added, will decline 3.7 percent in 2009, with IT hardware bearing the brunt of the contraction. The analyst forecasts spending on PCs, servers, storage and printing systems to drop by 14.9 percent this year and grow only 0.8 percent in 2010. Overall IT spend will rebound to 2.4 percent next year.














Gartner: Slump delays, but not axes PC buys
There need not be an IT spending slump for a majority of enterprises. Instead, why not implement an intelligent IT asset management initiative to reduce the costs of IT while improving the ROI on every dollar spent? In fact, would it be beneficial for your company to reduce IT spending by as much as 25%?
Nearly any enterprise can optimize tech spending through simple business process improvements such as identifying, pursuing, and ensuring specific value for all IT investments. The problem appears to be that we've all become indentured to the ideas that we need to a.) spend money to save money, and b.) use only highly complex potential solutions to all technology problems.
Technology asset management (TAM) can be as simple as establishing your own unique purchase criteria—then following up by measuring product functionality. Utilizing TAM, you purchase only products or services you actually need to meet your business requirements. Then you establish, and maintain, procedures for ensuring your needs remain covered across the entire life cycle of the product or service.
Instead of jumping on the costly band wagon of generic standards and/or supplier-generated best practices, why not simply use basic common sense to balance spending with requirements? Doing so will minimize your exposure to these periodic budget slumps. I'm Al Plastow and I can guarantee that an effectively managed technology portfolio will deliver serious value for your tech spending dollars--no matter how small or large your enterprise.
Posted by Alan Plastow on Tuesday, May 26 2009 06:30 AM