SMBs in
the Philippines to Spend US$3B on ICT This Year
Thursday, March 27, 2008
SINGAPORE--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Small and medium businesses (SMBs, or
companies with up to 999 employees) in the Philippines are set to spend
more than US$3 billion on info-communications technology (ICT) this
year, up 12% over 2007, due to a boom in the overall economy and a rise
in the number of SBs (small businesses, or companies with up to 99
staff). This comes from the latest study by New York-based Access
Markets International (AMI) Partners, Inc.
“Spending on telecommunications will take the largest piece
of
the pie, while spending on IT computing – comprising PCs,
servers, and printers – will contribute to more than 25% of
the
total ICT spend,” says Ruth Garin, Singapore-based Research
Analyst at AMI Partners. “SMBs comprise up to 99% of all
businesses in the Philippines and are a significant contributor to
technology spend.”
SMB spending on computing is set to cross US$800 million by the end of
2008, the bulk of it on desktops. “As the first priority,
SMBs’ computing investment will go to desktops,”
Ms. Garin
says. “Small businesses will extend this investment by adding
more notebooks to cater to growing mobile employees while medium
businesses will spend more on servers.”
Traditional telephony will continue to account for a large majority of
the telecom spending and is expected to remain so in the next few
years. The close association of reliability with traditional telephony
is one of the key factors driving its continued growth. IP telephony,
meanwhile, has also started to make inroads into the SMB market, with
growth expected to be highest in the mid-market segment.
In applications, security and storage will see the fastest growth in
the Philippines this year. “Both technologies are expected to
register high annual double-digit growth, in excess of 20%,”
Ms.
Garin says. “The growing volume of email and use of digital
media
will be the top drivers for adopting or enhancing storage
infrastructure. Security threats and the growing online population of
the country will see growth in security software spending.”
In addition, companies see business applications such as ERM and CRM as
important to their businesses – whether or not they are
currently
using it. “SMBs may not have deployed such enterprise
software
but they recognize its strategic importance to their
business,”
Ms. Garin says. “This is a crucial first step to their
adoption
of such applications.”
Though SBs and MBs behave differently, both are on the same footing
when it comes to competition. Both cited strong competition as the
topmost challenge for this year. “SMBs recognize
IT’s role
in maintaining a competitive edge and are prepared to build
competencies around technology,” Ms. Garin says.
“The
effective use of technology in product and services delivery is a key
differentiator among a very competitive market.”
Understanding how SMBs behave, their purchase cycle and who influences
their purchase decision, channel preferences, and their top investment
priorities would be key to nailing this market. The study reveals that
there is a huge opportunity that vendors can tap on the Philippine SMB
market.