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Volume 3, Number 2 -- January 19, 2006

AMR Predicts SMB IT Spending Growth to Be a Paltry Few Percent in 2006

Published: January 19, 2006

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

The IT departments at small and medium businesses don't get a lot of respect from vendors, but the fact remains that the growth in the IT spending among this sector has been responsible for a lot of the recovery and then growth in IT spending in the past few years. (And, if you want to get real about it, the SMB market has been responsible for creating a lot of the new jobs the world's economies have created, too.) But, according to a new report from AMR Research, the little engine that could might be running out of steam.

AMR Research analysts Eric Klein and David O'Brien have run their budget models and reckon that IT spending growth among SMB customers will probably average somewhere between 2 percent and 3 percent in 2006. This is a lot lower than the 6 to 8 percent IT spending growth that SMBs racked up in 2005. The report says that smaller firms, like their larger brethren in the commercial world, are being hit with demands to reduce IT costs, deliver productivity gains, and to outsource some of their IT operations to third parties. The AMR IT spending estimates for SMBs was based on a survey of over 600 IT managers.

What this means for the iSeries market, if the AMR Research predictions turn out to be true, is uncertain. While the iSeries is perceived as a box for small businesses, it is really aimed more at reasonably large midrange shops with sophisticated back end applications and their remote facilities and offices, if they have any. If the anemic growth in SMB spending on IT in 2006 hits the Ss more than it does the Ms, then the iSeries biz might buck the trend AMR Research is predicting.



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Editor: Timothy Prickett Morgan
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik,
Shannon O'Donnell, Timothy Prickett Morgan
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
OpenSolaris Community Creates Kernel for Power Chips

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IBM Reshuffles Systems and Technology Executives

Mainsoft, IBM to Convert .NET Code to Java on All eServers

But Wait, There's More:


HP Weaves OpenView Security Tighter into HP-UX . . . IBM Tops U.S. Patent List for 13th Straight Year . . . AMR Predicts SMB IT Spending Growth to Be a Paltry Few Percent in 2006 . . . China Tops the United States in IT Exports, Says OECD . . . IBM Cancels Systems & Technology Group University Event in Las Vegas . . . RFID No Passing Fad, Aberdeen Says . . .

The Unix Guardian

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Novell Releases SUSE Linux Enterprise Server SP3

HP Eager to Sell Dual-Core Servers, Unfazed By Dell Rumors

Mainsoft, IBM to Convert .NET Code to Java on All eServers

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