R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

On-demand CRM market enjoys rapid growth

SaaS will increase by $1bn a year in the next five years, says Gartner

Rosalie Marshall, IT Week 11 Sep 2007
ADVERTISEMENT

An "explosive growth" in the software-as-a-service (SaaS) CRM market will play a large factor in global CRM software revenues increasing by about $1bn every year from 2007 to 2011, according to a recent Gartner report.

Chris Pang, an analyst at the research firm, said that while there was a downturn in companies adopting CRM systems in 2000, because of the tendency to “overcomplicate requirements” and go over budget, now there is a renewal of interest as those memories fade.

He added that with so many companies competing in terms of the products they offer, these are becoming commoditised and firms are instead looking to differentiate themselves on enhancing customer experience and CRM.

The SaaS option is attractive because companies can deploy CRM systems on a trial, pay-per-month basis without spending a large sum of money upfront in licence fees, Pang said.

Total CRM software revenues are forecast to exceed $7.4bn in 2007, up from $6.5bn last year. However, traditional on-premises models will face constraints in market growth due to the expansion of on-demand solutions, according to Gartner. "[By the end of 2007] SaaS is forecast to represent more than $1bn in CRM software revenue, growing at more than double the rate of the total CRM software market," the report advises.

The leading on-demand solution provider is Salesforce.com, whose success is down to "its continued expansion of AppExchange, new regional initiatives, and functional application engagements," Gartner said. However, Salesforce is likely to have its market dominance challenged by competitors such as SAP and Microsoft, which will increase their market share by adopting SaaS alternatives.

SaaS is not always the best option, however. Pang explained that on-premises software can be configured to fit exact business requirements and might be better for large companies that have complex integration needs. The best cost model also depends on the usage factor of the company, as large companies with considerable CRM requirements might find on-premises options cheaper, he added.

See also:

Software-as-a-service vendors need to allow customers to carry out penetration testing  15 Aug 2007
IBM logoIBM uses labs event to showcase Web 2.0, service-oriented architectures, and software as a service  07 Aug 2007
SaaS firm updates suite with wizards and multi-currency support  21 Jun 2007
SAP building logoERP giant reveals more detail on A1S and Duet plans  26 Apr 2007

All Applications

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
| Aston Carter
Java, J2EE, Developer, Spring, Hibernate, London, city, Graduate. This is an amazing opportunity to join a successful city based team working at the cutting edge of development. My client is looking for strong Java/J2EE developers ... more >
| Aston Carter
E-Commerce, Greenfield, Agile, Java, J2EE, , JavaScript, SQL, London, City Graduate This is an exceptional opportunity for a talented Java, J2EE developer keen to work in a successful development team within arguable the best agile ... more >
| Rullion Computer Personnel Ltd
2nd Line Support Analyst London £35, 000 to £40, 500 My client is a global market leader in the Internet Applications Industry. The company is continually progressing and looking for areas of growth and this ... more >
| Rullion Computer Personnel Ltd
Security Architect / Information Security Specialist – St Albans - Global Leader - Shine At The Highest Level Security Solution Architect / Information Security Architect required by renowned blue-chip organisation offering the finest security projects ... more >
More job opportunities