IT leaders must prepare for changed business priorities with a harsher economic climate ahead, Gartner’s head of global research Peter Sondergaard has warned.
“We see the potential for troubled times ahead,” Sondergaard told delegates at Gartner’s symposium in Cannes, France.
The troubled housing market, the credit crunch, the continuing energy crisis “and last but not least the declining rate of CEO confidence” all signal more difficult times, he said.
This would change the priorities and strategies of businesses, he warned in his keynote address. “Your bosses will move from growth to execution. You must be prepared for changing business objectives.”
Sondergaard questioned the belief among chief information officers that IT budgets would continue to grow. A Gartner survey had shown 59 per cent of CIOs expected an increase in their IT budgets in 2008. “But are you sure this is the case three months from now?” he asked.
CIOs should prepare two budgets for 2008, he urged, echoing remarks he made last month at Gartner’s ITXpo in Orlando, Florida.
The first should assume growth similar to that seen over the past six years. The second should “assume the need to cut costs with the arrival of a recession,” Sondergaard said.
CIOs and other business executives would try to deal with the more difficult economic climate with “new efficiencies, new innovations and new ideas to sustain growth”, he said. “IT will be at the core of those responses.”
This situation “confronts you with heavy responsibilities”, Sondergaard warned.
The Gartner research chief said 2007 had been a “milestone year” for IT, but a tightening economy would “change the growth rate of the IT industry in 2008,” he cautioned.
The past year had seen other key developments, such as the huge growth of consumer-driven Web 2.0 technologies. In the US this year, the MySpace social network had accounted for 6 per cent of internet visits, “33 per cent more than Google,”
Increased interest in virtualization and the rise of software as a service had also marked the year out, he added. “Innovations such as these are increasingly visible to business leaders and your non-IT colleagues,” Sondergaard said.