The Corporate Executive Board, a research and advisory services company, released new data that indicates a 3.3 percent increase in IT operational budgets for 2011, following two years of zero growth. This finding is based on the benchmarking of projected IT spending, staffing and project data of CIOs and IT managers at 133 Fortune 1,000 Companies and collectively represents an IT spend of approximately $70 billion. Based on the projections, leading corporations are cautiously preparing for a return to growth.
CEB's research, conducted by its Information Technology practice, also revealed that nearly 45 percent of the IT project budget within the surveyed companies will be allocated to deploying business intelligence and collaboration tools, or to enabling the customer interface. In fact, 10 percent more business intelligence and collaboration projects are expected to be undertaken in 2011 vs. 2010. This spending will come at the direct expense of process automation projects, which will decrease to 41 percent of the total projected budget.
Additional key findings of CEB's benchmarking research include:
-- Broad-based Growth Among Companies: Encouragingly, the trend of increasing IT operational budgets is broad-based, as two-thirds of CIOs will increase expenditures in 2011. This compares starkly with forecasts of last year, when 75 percent of CIOs expected operating budgets to remain flat or decline.
-- Integrated IT Services are Fast Becoming a Reality: CIOs plan to integrate their traditionally siloed infrastructure and applications groups or merge IT into a cross-functional enterprise services organization. By 2012, 20 percent of organizations will be integrated into a multi-functional shared services organization, and an additional thirty-five percent of organizations will have integrated IT services.
-- IT Capital Budgets Will Remain Flat in 2011: Two-thirds of the total IT budget will be continue to be consumed by "keep-the-lights-on" maintenance or costs associated with regulatory compliance activities. IT capital budgets will remain flat in 2011, at 0.6 percent of revenue, mirroring the lack of growth IT organizations saw in the last three years.
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