Gartner also listed the top 10 tech IT leaders to watch for 2009 - 2011. Watch for the list on Wednesday, Oct 29th. Marlene
This post was appeared previously on October 15th, 2008
Author: Larry Dignan
http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/hiner/?p=867
Gartner has
revised its 2009 IT budget prognostications, a move that isn’t surprising, but
the firm’s projections could be a lot worse.
Peter Sondergaard,
senior vice president of research at Gartner, outlined the research group’s new
projections in his opening keynote at the Gartner Symposium
ITxpo in Orlando
The meat of the
talk, however, was the downturn. The upshot:
- Gartner had expected budgets to grow 3.3
percent in 2009.
- Now the most likely case is IT budget growth
of 2.3 percent to 0 percent;
- The worst case is that IT budgets will be down
2.5 percent.
While Sondergaard
noted all of the gloom and doom, he said information technology execs are most
suited for this upheaval. Why? IT folks have already been through this–has
anyone really forgotten 2001 to 2003?
His overall
message is that IT has options. Sure, it would be silly to think that budgets
written two weeks ago are going to stick. As for overall technology spending,
financial services customers, the public sector, retail and manufacturing are
all likely to curb spending.
However,
Sondergaard said budgets aren’t likely to totally collapse. “IT is embedded in
your business now. You can’t invoice somebody without IT,” he said. Sondergaard
also noted that Western Europe
Overall,
Sondergaard said technology execs need to do two things. Focus on disruptive
technologies that can cut costs and think like your CFO. Here are Gartner’s top
10 disruptive technologies:
- Multicore and hybrid systems
- Virtualization and fabric computing
- Social networking
- Cloud computing
- Web mashups
- User interface
- Ubiquitous computing
- Semantics
- Augmented reality
- Contextual computing
Of those
technologies the first four will fit best with the budget you have. The latter
ones are projects to ponder in the future.
And here are
Gartner’s top 10 recommendations for managing through an economic crisis.
- Reduce headcount or freeze hiring
- Renegotiate with technology and service
providers
- Curtail data center expansion, virtualize
assets and lease them back
- Consolidate systems
- Outsource commodity
- Offshore outsource
- Investment shutdown
- Prioritize projects
- Mothball businesses and projects
- Change leadership and restructure IT teams
This is a guest post from Larry
Dignan. You can read the original article on Larry’s blog Between the Lines on
TechRepublic’s sister site ZDNet.

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