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/v3-uk/news/2003148/gartner-predicts-silver-lining-cloud-computing
27 Mar 2009, Phil Muncaster , V3
Cloud computing will go from strength to strength over the next few years, according to figures from analyst firm Gartner, which predicts that the market will reach a value of $150bn (£104.8bn) by 2013.
Current worldwide cloud services revenues are on track to pass $56.3bn (£39.3bn) this year, an increase of over 20 per cent on 2008 revenues of $46.4bn (£32.4bn).
Cloud-based business processes - including advertising, e-commerce, human resources and payments processing - is the biggest segment, comprising 83 per cent of the total market last year, said the firm.
This segment is set to grow by around 20 per cent in 2009 to $46.6bn (£32.5bn), up from $38.9bn (£27.2bn) in 2008.
"Cloud computing is a broad and diverse phenomenon," said Ben Pring, research vice president at Gartner. "Much of the growth represents a transfer of traditional IT services to the new cloud model, but there is also scope for the creation of substantial new businesses and revenue streams."
Systems infrastructure services delivered through the cloud accounted for just 5.5 per cent of the overall market in 2008, rising to six per cent this year, but will see strong growth through to 2013, according to Pring.
"While growth for many of these cloud services will be relatively modest through the next two years, we expect it to accelerate as these approaches prove themselves and benefit from increased spending levels as macroeconomic conditions improve," he said.
The stats were welcomed by hosted IT provider ThinkGrid. "Customers are coming to us because they are simply fed up with the cost and pain of purchasing and managing PCs," said the firm's chief executive, Rob Lovell.
"They want more choice and flexibility around IT. As this trend continues, there will no doubt be a massive shift in the way vendors deliver IT."
Do you agree?
Cloud computing adoption within Financial Services
As the pressure to do more with less increases, it's not surprising that organisations are looking to exploit the cost reduction and efficiency benefits that cloud computing promises. If we are to see the dramatic growth Gartner predicts, concerns regarding security and reliability need to be addressed.
In a recent survey of 35 senior IT executives from top financial services firms we found most felt 2010 would be the year that cloud computing would really take off. The biggest reason why cloud was not expected to be a big hit in 2009 for these firms was that it is still in its early stages and there are concerns around security, especially for external clouds, which will make adoption slow until it matures. More likely, we expect these enterprises to embrace "internal clouds" that allow them to make the most of the computing resource they have within their organisation without having to run the risk of hosting data outside the corporate network.
Posted by - David Warm, CTO Financial Services, Platform Computing, 01 Apr 2009