The
growth of digital business and the Internet of Things (IoT) is expected to
drive large investment in IT operations management (ITOM) through
2020, according to Gartner, Inc. A primary driver for organizations moving to
ITOM open-source software (OSS) is lower cost of ownership.
"While acceptance of OSS
ITOM is increasing, traditional closed-source ITOM software still has the
biggest budget allocation today. Moreover, complexity and governance issues
that face users of OSS ITOM tools cannot be ignored. In fact, these issues open
up opportunities for ITOM vendors. Even vendors that are late to market with
ITOM functionality can compete in this area," said Laurie Wurster, research director at Gartner.
Gartner
believes many enterprises will turn to managed ITOM or ITOM as a service
(ITOMaaS) enabled by open-source technologies and provided by a third party.
With OSS, vendors can provide more cost-effective and readily available ITOM
functions in a scaled manner through the cloud.
Through 2020, public cloud and managed services are expected
to be leveraged more often for ITOM tools, which will drive growth of the
subscription business model for both cloud and on-premises ITOM. However, on-premises
deployments will still be the most common delivery method. This imposes
multiple challenges to incumbent ITOM vendors. First, those vendors that do not
offer a cloud delivery model will face continuous cannibalization from ITOM
vendors that can deliver ITOM through both cloud and on-premises.
Second, platform vendors, such
as Microsoft Azure and Amazon Web Services (AWS), are providing some native
ITOM functionalities on their public clouds. Customers that are running
workloads solely on these platforms may prefer these native features. There are
also "hybrid" requirements for ITOM tools that can seamlessly manage
both cloud and on-premises environments.
Future of Cloud Services and OSS for ITOM
"Customer demand has driven traditional software
vendors to transform and adapt to the changing technology and competitive
landscapes. Competitive pressure from cloud (SaaS offerings) and commercial OSS
(offerings with a free license plus paid support) is forcing ITOM providers to
move toward subscription-based business models for both cloud and on-premises
deployments," said Matthew Cheung, research director at Gartner.
"This shift will eliminate revenue growth spikes as the large upfront
investment seen in traditional models is spread out over time in a repeatable
revenue stream."
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