Recession Drives Demand for Hosted Project Management and Portfolio Management
- 24 February, 2009 08:26
- Comments
As businesses tighten their belts in response to the recession, they're turning to project and portfolio management software to help them identify which IT projects are mission critical and to help them execute those projects as efficiently as possible.
Increasingly, they're opting for software as a service (SaaS) versions of project management and portfolio management solutions because software as a service is cheaper and easier to deploy than traditional, on premise software, according to tech industry analysts and customers who've gone the SaaS route. (SaaS is also known as hosted or on demand offerings.)
Melinda Ballou, program director for IDC's application lifecycle management research, says demand for software as a service versions of project management and portfolio management tools was on the rise prior to the collapse of the financial services industry in the fall, and that despite the recession, she expects demand for hosted project portfolio management (PPM) solutions to continue. The market for IT project portfolio management software is expected to hit US$791.6 million in 2008, up from US$679 million in 2007, according to IDC's estimates. Software as a service versions of project portfolio management solutions are a growing segment of the larger IT project portfolio management market.
"On demand PPM tools don't require a huge investment upfront to deploy and implement-both the cost and risk are significantly less," says Ballou. "In addition, companies urgently seeking to better coordinate increasingly scarce resources across projects, programs and portfolios can get the functionality benefits very quickly."
Tale of Two Companies That Used Hosted Project Management
Cost and the need to improve service were on the minds of executives at Chicago's Department of Public Health and 24-by-7, a small, Denver-based provider of telephone maintenance and installation services, when they selected hosted project management software from CA and Clarizen respectively, to help them run their businesses.
Carlo Govia, the Chicago Department of Public Health's CFO and first deputy commissioner, says his organization went with a software as a service project portfolio management solution to avoid maintaining software in-house. "It's not a cost-effective way for us to manage our infrastructure," says Govia. "We thought it was better to outsource that functionality so we can focus on the core health services we provide."
Indeed, the Chicago Department of Public Health will begin using CA's Clarity PPM On Demand solution in early 2009, to measure the effectiveness of the health services the department provides, to better orchestrate evacuation exercises and simulated outbreaks of chemical and biological agents, and to better manage grant money, says Govia.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
- Improving Storage Efficiencies with Data Deduplication and Compression
- Best Practices for Energy Efficient Storage Operations Version 1.0
- Stopping Fake Antivirus: How to Keep Scareware off Your Network
- SOA and Business Processes: Making the Connection
- Protecting Against the Leading Causes of Data Breach
-
All Systems Down
-
Married to your desk? 5 tips for a better relationship
-
Married to your desk? 5 tips for a better relationship
-
NBN to deliver disability support services to regional Australia
-
Beware of malicious QR codes: Report
-
Work Life Web 2011
The 2011 WorkLifeWeb research shows that, while the new social Web is a potential tool for corporate success, there are ‘social media growing pains’ in evidence among both frontline workers and their managers. -
Fibre Channel over Ethernet
Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) is the proposed industry standard being developed by an ecosystem of Fibre Channel and networking product vendors to drive network convergence in the enterprise data center. The technology will map native Fibre Channel traffic onto Ethernet frames, and be capable of benefiting from proposed enhancements to Ethernet. FCoE’s Ethernet compatibility will leverage the ubiquity and economics of Ethernet networks while preserving the infrastructure, strengths, and tools of the existing Fibre Channel storage management framework. -
Pay-As-You-Grow: Investment Protection and Elasticity for your Network
Enterprise IT teams are being challenged to increase overall IT flexibility and business agility by incorporating emerging cloud technologies into their next generation datacentre architectures. Top of mind is how to embed a high degree of elasticity to properly handle increasingly unpredictable application traffic loads, while still meeting strict performance service level agreements (SLAs). Satisfying these often opposing goals requires that individual elements within the larger datacentre infrastructure provide a native capability to increase capacity and performance as conditions dictate. Read on.
-
Upgrading & Fixing Laptops for Dummies
-
Network Services Investment Guide:maximizing ROI in Uncertain Times (Networking Council)
-
QuickBooks 2004 for Dummies
-
QuickBooks 2009 All-In-One for Dummies®
-
IPhoto '09 for Dummies®
-
Alcatel-lucent Scalable IP Networks Self-study Guide
-
Iphone 3Gs Portable Genius
-
Enterprise Database Connectivity the Key to Enterprise Applications on the Desktop Paper
-
Adobe Premiere Pro Cs3 Bible









Comments
Post new comment