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The findings show an increasing opportunity for hosting service
providers to profit in the cloud from offering services such as
collaboration, data storage and backup, or business-class email. Some
key findings include the following:
- Those SMBs paying for cloud services will be using 3.3 services, up from fewer than two services today.
- Past experience with support from a service provider is a key driver
of service provider selection among SMBs. Eighty-two percent of SMBs
say buying cloud services from a provider with local presence is
critical or important.
- The larger the business, the more likely it is to pay for cloud
services. For example, 56 percent of companies with 51?250 employees
will pay for an average of 3.7 services within three years.
- Within three years, 43 percent of workloads will become paid cloud
services, but 28 percent will remain on-premises, and 29 percent will be
free or bundled with other services.
"Cloud adoption will be gradual, and SMBs will continue to operate in
a hybrid model with an increasing blend between off-premises and
traditional on-premises infrastructure, for the foreseeable future,"
said Marco Limena, vice president, Business Channels, Worldwide
Communications Sector at Microsoft. "As cloud computing becomes more
ubiquitous and SMBs' existing IT becomes outdated, adoption will grow
rapidly. Hosting service providers should consider the appropriate
sales, delivery and support models to target larger SMB customers that
are more likely to pay for cloud services."
Recognizing that SMBs consume software in a variety of ways,
Microsoft offers a range of options for hosting providers to go to
market with new services targeting the SMB market.
"As SMBs continue to transition to cloud services, hosting service
providers, VARs(1) and SIs(2) will have a major role to play as advisors
and providers of IT services in hybrid environments," said Andy Burton,
CEO, Fasthosts Internet Ltd. "Hosting providers have expertise in
selling cloud services while VARs and SIs have experience selling to
SMBs. Fasthosts is helping to bridge this gap by helping VARs and SIs
white-label cloud services and deliver them as if they were their own."
Adoption of Paid Services Fueled by Profitability and Growth
The 2011 study indicates that in most countries, cloud service
adoption is not limited to SMBs that see themselves as fast growers. The
study showed little difference in adoption rates between SMBs that
expect to grow in the next three years (42 percent) and those solely
focused on profitability (40 percent).
Growth companies want a scalable environment that can meet their
expanding needs, with an affordable, pay-as-you-go pricing model that
eliminates the need for over-investment in IT. SMBs that want to
maintain their size, but want to become more profitable, seek
cost-effective, efficient solutions that match their needs for
predictability and low overhead cost. Cloud services can serve both sets
of criteria.
The Opportunity SaaS and IaaS Represent
The study also looked at adoption of software as a service (SaaS) and
infrastructure as a service (IaaS) and found that SMBs that are
adopting both SaaS and IaaS services are larger, more growth-oriented
and more interested in additional services, such as unified
communications and remote desktop support. This provides an opportunity
for hosting service providers to offer both SaaS and IaaS in order to
acquire and retain high-value customers and maximize revenue per
customer.(3)
For More Information
In the coming weeks Microsoft will publish additional findings of its "SMB Cloud Adoption Study 2011" on the Microsoft Communications Sector Newsroom.
About the Research
The "Microsoft SMB Cloud Adoption Study 2011" research report was
designed and conducted in conjunction with Edge Strategies Inc. (http://www.edgestrategies.com) in December 2010. The research questioned 3,258 SMBs that employ up to 250 employees across 16 countries worldwide: Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Japan, the Netherlands, Norway, Russia, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, the U.K. and the U.S. A copy of the full research report is available through mscsus@webershandwick.com.
Founded in 1975, Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) is the worldwide leader in
software, services and solutions that help people and businesses realize
their full potential.
(1) VARs refers to Value Added Resellers.
(2) SIs refers to Systems Integrators.
(3) SaaS services were defined as business-class email, accounting
services, customer relationship management, file sharing, Web
conferencing, project management and specialized business applications.
IaaS services include file and data storage and backup, and data
archiving and recovery.
SOURCE Microsoft Corp.