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Worldwide ERP Applications 2009-2013 Forecast and 2008 Vendor SharesPublished by: IDC Published: Oct. 4, 2009 - 25 Pages Table of ContentsTable of Contents IDC Opinion In This Study MethodologySituation Overview SAP as ERP Market LeaderFuture Outlook Oracle Widens Its Net with New AgendaWhere Growth and Competition Will Come FromVerticals That Vault Past OthersForecast and AssumptionsMarket ContextEssential Guidance Customers Embrace Two-Tier ERPVirtualization Reduces Cost of OwnershipLearn More Related ResearchMethodologyHistorical Market Values and Exchange RatesERP Applications Market DefinitionSynopsisTable: Worldwide ERP Applications License, Maintenance, and Subscription Revenue by Vendor, 2006–2008 ($M) Table: Worldwide ERP Applications License, Maintenance, and Subscription Revenue by Customer Segment, 2008–2013 ($M) Table: Worldwide ERP Applications License, Maintenance, and Subscription Revenue by Region, 2008–2013 ($M) Table: Worldwide ERP Applications License, Maintenance, and Subscription Revenue by Operating Environment, 2008–2013 ($M) Table: Key Forecast Assumptions for the Worldwide ERP Applications Market, 2009–2013 Table: Worldwide ERP Applications License, Maintenance, and Subscription Revenue, 2006–2013: Comparison of September 2008 and October 2009 Forecasts ($M) Table: Exchange Rates, 2003–2008 (%) Figure: Top Factors Determining Future Enterprise Application Investments, 1Q06, 4Q06, 4Q07, 1Q08, and 2Q09 Figure: Respondents Who Have Access to Spreadsheets as Primary Business Intelligence Tools Figure: Worldwide ERP Applications License, Maintenance, and Subscription Revenue by Region, 2008 and 2013 Figure: Worldwide ERP Applications License, Maintenance, and Subscription Revenue by Operating Environment, 2008 and 2013 Figure: Worldwide ERP Applications License, Maintenance, and Subscription Revenue, 2006–2013: Comparison of September 2008 and October 2009 Forecasts Figure: Worldwide ERP Applications License, Maintenance, and Subscription Revenue Growth, 2006–2013: Comparison of September 2008 and October 2009 Forecasts AbstractThis IDC study demonstrates that new and existing buyers had little conviction as the 2008 worldwide enterprise resource planning (ERP) applications market hit a plateau in the face of the deepening recession that dragged the performance of a large swath of software vendors. Albert Pang, IDC research director of Enterprise Applications, said, "The market is not expected to turn up anytime soon when excess capacity within asset-intensive industries, one of the biggest buyers of ERP applications, will force companies to reduce their software spending. However, small to medium-sized enterprises, particularly those in services sectors, along with organizations in fast-growing markets like China and India, will serve as the catalyst for the eventual rebound of the market through the forecast period.'' Get Full Details About This Report >> |
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