As I was filing our quarterly Form 941 last week, it hit me that we have entered the last quarter of this decade. As I flew into LaGuardia on Monday, it took me back two decades to my time at Gartner. In October 1999, there was nervousness about the damage Y2K could cause, but also euphoria at the phenomenal few years many tech vendors had enjoyed. The introduction of the euro promised another bonanza for the near future. Enterprise vendors, particularly two sectors that I followed - enterprise applications and service providers - had reason to feel very good about themselves.
In New York this week I heard an optimistic Mike Salvino , the new President and CEO of DXC, at a HfS event. I heard similarly optimistic (for different reasons) Cognizant executives at one of their events the day before - they also have a new CEO. I also kept up with the celebratory mood at HR Tech in Vegas virtually.
At Gartner, I had followed SAP, Oracle, PeopleSoft and their SI partners. CSC, EDS and HP Services were players back then. They continue to live on in the form of DXC, founded a couple of years ago. Cognizant had revenues of less than $ 100 million in 1999. It has grown like a rocket with over $16 billion in revenues now. HR Tech was only 2 years old in 1999. But the backwaters of the HR function had led the client/server applications market. This time around, it has similarly led the cloud applications market.
There is lots to appreciate and applaud.
However, the even bigger lesson of the last couple of decades is the many missed opportunities. Outsourcers missed out on the cloud infrastructure market. It was theirs to lose and so far, players from left field like Amazon and Microsoft have benefited. After 20 years of cloud applications (Salesforce was born in 1999), application vendors can barely cover 20% of the country/industry grid. At the HfS event last week, the biggest attention was on robotic process automation (RPA). Hardly any talk of Amazon's Kiva warehouse robots, or UPS's drones or other operational automation. Or automating the labor intensive outsourcing space. CRM vendors completely missed out on the digital advertising market. Google, Facebook, and digital agencies have made out like bandits in the vacuum. SaaS vendors had an amazing business model which bundled multiple contracts - the license, the maintenance, the hosting, the application management - into one. Then they got greedy like their on-premise competitors. I saw Bruce Rogow, my former Gartner colleague in New York and he told me he sees in his travels CIOs struggle with new opex/capex funding paradigms. Instead of delivering a knock out punch, SaaS vendors mostly co-exist with their on-prem competitors. Outsourcers saw every one of their clients develop smart products and let contractor manufacturers like Foxconn and Flex dominate that market. They have let GE, ABB and others generate excitement about the IoT space.
Vendors ask me, what's next? Blockchain, machine learning, quantum computing, sure. But much bigger opportunities will persist from those missed in the last two decades. A new generation of vendors will move in. Vendors will cannibalize each other. And here is the most important nugget. Customers learn from their mistakes - I am seeing that in the new wave of SAP related services. In writing my recent book, I saw much more caution about using SIs as they implement S/4HANA. There is a "fool me twice, shame on me" vibe.
So, forget about doing business as usual. The best thing every vendor can do as we enter a new decade is to be introspective, even if Wall Street is pleased with your performance. Ask the tough questions - how the hell did we miss as many markets as we did? And how do we re-organize to make sure and not miss so many markets again?
Exciting times ahead.
Comments
A tumultuous couple of decades
As I was filing our quarterly Form 941 last week, it hit me that we have entered the last quarter of this decade. As I flew into LaGuardia on Monday, it took me back two decades to my time at Gartner. In October 1999, there was nervousness about the damage Y2K could cause, but also euphoria at the phenomenal few years many tech vendors had enjoyed. The introduction of the euro promised another bonanza for the near future. Enterprise vendors, particularly two sectors that I followed - enterprise applications and service providers - had reason to feel very good about themselves.
In New York this week I heard an optimistic Mike Salvino , the new President and CEO of DXC, at a HfS event. I heard similarly optimistic (for different reasons) Cognizant executives at one of their events the day before - they also have a new CEO. I also kept up with the celebratory mood at HR Tech in Vegas virtually.
At Gartner, I had followed SAP, Oracle, PeopleSoft and their SI partners. CSC, EDS and HP Services were players back then. They continue to live on in the form of DXC, founded a couple of years ago. Cognizant had revenues of less than $ 100 million in 1999. It has grown like a rocket with over $16 billion in revenues now. HR Tech was only 2 years old in 1999. But the backwaters of the HR function had led the client/server applications market. This time around, it has similarly led the cloud applications market.
There is lots to appreciate and applaud.
However, the even bigger lesson of the last couple of decades is the many missed opportunities. Outsourcers missed out on the cloud infrastructure market. It was theirs to lose and so far, players from left field like Amazon and Microsoft have benefited. After 20 years of cloud applications (Salesforce was born in 1999), application vendors can barely cover 20% of the country/industry grid. At the HfS event last week, the biggest attention was on robotic process automation (RPA). Hardly any talk of Amazon's Kiva warehouse robots, or UPS's drones or other operational automation. Or automating the labor intensive outsourcing space. CRM vendors completely missed out on the digital advertising market. Google, Facebook, and digital agencies have made out like bandits in the vacuum. SaaS vendors had an amazing business model which bundled multiple contracts - the license, the maintenance, the hosting, the application management - into one. Then they got greedy like their on-premise competitors. I saw Bruce Rogow, my former Gartner colleague in New York and he told me he sees in his travels CIOs struggle with new opex/capex funding paradigms. Instead of delivering a knock out punch, SaaS vendors mostly co-exist with their on-prem competitors. Outsourcers saw every one of their clients develop smart products and let contractor manufacturers like Foxconn and Flex dominate that market. They have let GE, ABB and others generate excitement about the IoT space.
Vendors ask me, what's next? Blockchain, machine learning, quantum computing, sure. But much bigger opportunities will persist from those missed in the last two decades. A new generation of vendors will move in. Vendors will cannibalize each other. And here is the most important nugget. Customers learn from their mistakes - I am seeing that in the new wave of SAP related services. In writing my recent book, I saw much more caution about using SIs as they implement S/4HANA. There is a "fool me twice, shame on me" vibe.
So, forget about doing business as usual. The best thing every vendor can do as we enter a new decade is to be introspective, even if Wall Street is pleased with your performance. Ask the tough questions - how the hell did we miss as many markets as we did? And how do we re-organize to make sure and not miss so many markets again?
A tumultuous couple of decades
As I was filing our quarterly Form 941 last week, it hit me that we have entered the last quarter of this decade. As I flew into LaGuardia on Monday, it took me back two decades to my time at Gartner. In October 1999, there was nervousness about the damage Y2K could cause, but also euphoria at the phenomenal few years many tech vendors had enjoyed. The introduction of the euro promised another bonanza for the near future. Enterprise vendors, particularly two sectors that I followed - enterprise applications and service providers - had reason to feel very good about themselves.
In New York this week I heard an optimistic Mike Salvino , the new President and CEO of DXC, at a HfS event. I heard similarly optimistic (for different reasons) Cognizant executives at one of their events the day before - they also have a new CEO. I also kept up with the celebratory mood at HR Tech in Vegas virtually.
At Gartner, I had followed SAP, Oracle, PeopleSoft and their SI partners. CSC, EDS and HP Services were players back then. They continue to live on in the form of DXC, founded a couple of years ago. Cognizant had revenues of less than $ 100 million in 1999. It has grown like a rocket with over $16 billion in revenues now. HR Tech was only 2 years old in 1999. But the backwaters of the HR function had led the client/server applications market. This time around, it has similarly led the cloud applications market.
There is lots to appreciate and applaud.
However, the even bigger lesson of the last couple of decades is the many missed opportunities. Outsourcers missed out on the cloud infrastructure market. It was theirs to lose and so far, players from left field like Amazon and Microsoft have benefited. After 20 years of cloud applications (Salesforce was born in 1999), application vendors can barely cover 20% of the country/industry grid. At the HfS event last week, the biggest attention was on robotic process automation (RPA). Hardly any talk of Amazon's Kiva warehouse robots, or UPS's drones or other operational automation. Or automating the labor intensive outsourcing space. CRM vendors completely missed out on the digital advertising market. Google, Facebook, and digital agencies have made out like bandits in the vacuum. SaaS vendors had an amazing business model which bundled multiple contracts - the license, the maintenance, the hosting, the application management - into one. Then they got greedy like their on-premise competitors. I saw Bruce Rogow, my former Gartner colleague in New York and he told me he sees in his travels CIOs struggle with new opex/capex funding paradigms. Instead of delivering a knock out punch, SaaS vendors mostly co-exist with their on-prem competitors. Outsourcers saw every one of their clients develop smart products and let contractor manufacturers like Foxconn and Flex dominate that market. They have let GE, ABB and others generate excitement about the IoT space.
Vendors ask me, what's next? Blockchain, machine learning, quantum computing, sure. But much bigger opportunities will persist from those missed in the last two decades. A new generation of vendors will move in. Vendors will cannibalize each other. And here is the most important nugget. Customers learn from their mistakes - I am seeing that in the new wave of SAP related services. In writing my recent book, I saw much more caution about using SIs as they implement S/4HANA. There is a "fool me twice, shame on me" vibe.
So, forget about doing business as usual. The best thing every vendor can do as we enter a new decade is to be introspective, even if Wall Street is pleased with your performance. Ask the tough questions - how the hell did we miss as many markets as we did? And how do we re-organize to make sure and not miss so many markets again?
Exciting times ahead.
October 04, 2019 in Cloud Computing, SaaS, Industry Commentary, Outsourcing (IBM, Accenture, EDS) | Permalink