This link has been bookmarked by 44 people . It was first bookmarked on 21 Apr 2008, by a77ila.
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26 Oct 09
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n 2008, firms with 1000 employees or more will spend $764 million on Web 2.0 tools and technologies. Over the next five years, that expenditure will grow at a compound annual rate of 43%.
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The top spending category will be social networking tools. In 2008, for example, companies will spend $258 million on tools like those from Awareness, Communispace, and Jive Software. After social networking, the next-largest category is RSS, followed by blogs and wikis, and then mashups.
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14 Jul 09
Alleson TateA new report released today by Forrester Research is predicting that enterprise spending on Web 2.0 technologies is going to increase dramatically over the next five years. This ...
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12 Jul 09
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24 Nov 08
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19 Nov 08
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Enterprise 2.0 To Become a $4.6 Billion Industry By 2013
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Enterprise 2.0 To Become a $4.6 Billion Industry By 2013
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Enterprise 2.0 To Become a $4.6 Billion Industry By 2013
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4.6 billion by the year 2013
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4.6 billion by the year 2013
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4.6 billion by the year 2013
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4.6 billion by the year 2013
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4.6 billion by the year 2013
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4.6 billion by the year 2013
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4.6 billion by the year 2013
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4.6 billion by the year 2013
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4.6 billion by the year 2013
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Enterprise 2.0 To Become a $4.6 Billion Industry By 2013
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Enterprise 2.0 To Become a $4.6 Billion Industry By 2013
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Enterprise 2.0 To Become a $4.6 Billion Industry By 2013
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Enterprise 2.0 To Become a $4.6 Billion Industry By 2013
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Enterprise 2.0 To Become a $4.6 Billion Industry By 2013
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11 Nov 08
Carsten Pötter"A new report released today by Forrester Research is predicting that enterprise spending on Web 2.0 technologies is going to increase dramatically over the next five years." Big vendors like Microsoft and IBM will profit from it. Europe and Asia/Pacific
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07 Oct 08
Martin Lindnerbasics, definition of e20 tools, role of IT departments ---
SME 2.0: US/Europe IT decision makers in SUs (> 99 employees): 20% buying, 13% considering only, 68% not considering -
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25 Jul 08
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18 Jul 08
Mike NallA new report released today by Forrester Research is predicting that enterprise spending on Web 2.0 technologies is going to increase dramatically over the next five years. This ...
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12 Jul 08
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09 Jun 08
Michael MarlattVery interesting.
socialnetworking enterprise2.0 web2.0 readwriteweb enterprise forrester trends
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Enterprise 2.0 To Become a $4.6 Billion Industry By 2013
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A new report released today by Forrester Research is predicting that enterprise spending on Web 2.0 technologies is going to increase dramatically over the next five years. This increase will include more spending on social networking tools, mashups, and RSS, with the end result being a global enterprise market of $4.6 billion by the year 2013. -
Instead, collaboration and productivity tools based on the concepts of web 2.0,
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02 Jun 08
Thieme HennisEnterprise 2.0 To Become a $4.6 Billion Industry By 2013. Text with explanation about the report on which this statement is based.
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Enterprise 2.0 To Become a $4.6 Billion Industry By 2013
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- I.T. shops being wary of what they perceive as "consumer-grade" technology
- Ad-supported web tools generally have "free" as the starting point
- Web 2.0 tools will have to now compete in a space currently dominated by legacy enterprise software investments
For vendors specifically, there are 3 main challenges to becoming successful in this new industry, including:
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One of the main challenges of getting Web 2.0 into the enterprise will be getting past the gatekeepers of traditional I.T. Businesses have been showing interest in these new technologies, but, ironically, the interest comes from departments outside of I.T. Instead, it's the marketing department, R&D, and corporate communications pushing for the adoption of more Web 2.0-like tools.
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In addition, I.T. departments currently work with a host of legacy applications. The new tools, in order to compete with these, will have to be able to integrate with existing technology, at least for the time being, in order to be fully effective.
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The vendors expected to do the best in this new marketplace will be those that bundle their offerings, offering the complete package of tools to the businesses they serve.
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24 May 08
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16 May 08
Bryan LabuttaSome insight into a recent Forrester report about Enterprise 2.0 spending through 2013. The post isn't extremely well written but the information from Forrester is interesting and I didn't have to pay $700+ to get it.
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Mark TrappA new report released today by Forrester Research is predicting that enterprise spending on Web 2.0 technologies is going to increase dramatically over the next five years. This ...
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25 Apr 08
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To make matters worse, I.T. tends to view Web 2.0 tools as being insecure at best, or, at worst, a security threat to the business. They also don't trust what they perceive to be "consumer-grade" technologies, which they don't believe have the power to scale to the size that an enterprise demands.
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Right now, it's people between the ages of 12 and 17 that are the more avid consumers of social computing technology, with one-third of them acting as content creators. Meanwhile, only 7% of those 51-61 do the same. However, this is another trend that is going to change over the next few years. By 2011, Forrester believes that users of Web 2.0 tools will mirror users of the web at large.
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24 Apr 08
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22 Apr 08
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To make matters worse, I.T. tends to view Web 2.0 tools as being insecure at best, or, at worst, a security threat to the business. They also don't trust what they perceive to be "consumer-grade" technologies, which they don't believe have the power to scale to the size that an enterprise demands.
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Right now, it's people between the ages of 12 and 17 that are the more avid consumers of social computing technology, with one-third of them acting as content creators. Meanwhile, only 7% of those 51-61 do the same. However, this is another trend that is going to change over the next few years. By 2011, Forrester believes that users of Web 2.0 tools will mirror users of the web at large.
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The vendors expected to do the best in this new marketplace will be those that bundle their offerings, offering the complete package of tools to the businesses they serve.
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However, newer, "pure" Web 2.0 companies hoping to capitalize on this trend will still have to fight with traditional I.T. software for a foothold, specifically fighting with the likes of Microsoft and IBM. Many I.T. shops will choose to stick with their existing software from these large, well-known vendors, especially now that both are integrating Web 2.0 into their offerings.
Microsoft's SharePoint, for example, now includes wikis, blogs, and RSS technologies in their collaboration suite. IBM offers social networking and mashup tools via their Lotus Connections and Lotus Mashups products and SAP Business Suite includes social networking and widgets.
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What this means is that much of the Web 2.0 tool kit will simply "fade into the fabric of enterprise collaboration suites," says Forrester. By 2013, few buyers will seek out and purchase Web 2.0 tools specifically. Web 2.0 will become a feature, not a product.
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Web 2.0 Graduates from "Kids' Stuff": Right now, it's people between the ages of 12 and 17 that are the more avid consumers of social computing technology, with one-third of them acting as content creators. Meanwhile, only 7% of those 51-61 do the same. However, this is another trend that is going to change over the next few years. By 2011, Forrester believes that users of Web 2.0 tools will mirror users of the web at large.
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I see a shift in investment going towards introducing free lower featured versions to garnish market interest. This is especially true for low budget value targeted at individuals or small groups. For enterprise-wide Web 2.0 solutions that need corporate approval, I agree with Perry Mizota that the freemium model may not work when decisions need come from above. He favors the 30-day free trial approach.
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21 Apr 08
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Lennie SymesOne of the main challenges of getting Web 2.0 into the enterprise will be getting past the gatekeepers of traditional I.T. Businesses have been showing interest in these new technologies, but, ironically, the interest comes from departments outside of I.T
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Noah CarterDouble it.
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Ruth ParlinA new report released today by Forrester Research is predicting that enterprise spending on Web 2.0 technologies is going to increase dramatically over the next five years. This increase will include more spending on social networking tools, mashups, and
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Rotkapchen .Only addresses the technologies. The larger economic gains are outside of the technologies themselves. A factor of 30 would be conservative.
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Frank HammThe sentence I like most: "One of the main challenges of getting Web 2.0 into the enterprise will be getting past the gatekeepers of traditional I.T.". Because it's true :-)
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