Service Providers Account for Growing Share of ICT Spending, Led by Surge of Cloud Infrastructure Spending: IDC
Information and communications technology (ICT) spending by service providers will reach $426 billion by 2022, representing average growth of 6 percent per year, as the ongoing shift from on-premise IT management to the "as-a-service" model continues to gather pace in many regions around the world, IDC finds.
Cloud and digital service providers will represent the strongest market opportunities for ICT vendors with overall growth of 9 percent over the forecast period ($105 billion in annual spend by 2022), but communications service providers will still represent the largest share of service provider spending ($254 billion in 2022).
Co-location and managed services providers will increase spending by an average of 7 percent per year, reaching $67 billion in annual ICT spend by 2022. The ICT spending forecast was published in the first Worldwide Black Book Service Provider Edition from International Data Corporation (IDC).
Service providers already account for 44 percent of worldwide spending on core infrastructure technologies (server and storage hardware, enterprise network equipment, and storage/network software). The pace of investments by cloud infrastructure providers is expected to slow in the next few years as supply/demand and supply chains normalize, but service providers will continue to account for a growing share of overall spending as the ICT market shifts to the "as-a-service" model and new digital ecosystems emerge in which digital service providers will play a key role.
"The shift from end-users to service providers in core infrastructure technology markets is a profound shift with deep implications for tech vendors," said Stephen Minton, vice president in IDC's Customer Insights & Analysis group.
Last year saw a major spending cycle by cloud and digital providers, who increased their share of worldwide spending on core infrastructure technologies from 24 percent to 28 percent (from $39 billion to $51 billion). Spending on core infrastructure by cloud and digital service providers will increase at an average rate of 10 percent per year over the next five years, compared to growth of 3 percent by commercial end-users.
"Cloud infrastructure providers, in particular, have led a surge of spending on servers, storage, and system infrastructure software in the past few years,” Minton said. “While this will slow over the long term, we expect new digital service providers to pick up the slack in terms of overall ICT spending as new digital ecosystems are created to serve an increasingly digital global economy. For IT vendors, this has major implications in terms of a major shift of spending from end-users to middlemen."
This shift has been particularly rapid in the United States, where cloud and digital providers already account for 43 percent of core infrastructure spending and will make up 47 percent by 2022, with an average growth rate of 8.5 percent compared to meager growth of 1 percent by commercial end-users.
Cloud and digital providers account for a smaller share in China (around 25 percent in 2018) but will increase spending on core infrastructure by 22 percent over the forecast period. In Western Europe, cloud and digital providers make up only 12 percent of core infrastructure spend and this will barely change over the forecast period despite growth of around 6 percent per year on average. This is largely because a major capital spending cycle in 2018 will be followed by much weaker increases over the next few years as service providers in Western Europe take stock and balance their capital spending needs with end-user demand for services in a more scalable manner amidst a cautious economic outlook.
"The implications for ICT vendors are profound," said Minton. "Not only are their traditional customers moving away to a new model for ICT resource procurement, but they are faced with an increasing share of revenue concentrated in a relatively small number of customers.”
(For more information visit https://www.idc.com).