The Next Wave of Commoditization South Carolina

PCs, servers and a variety of services have been commoditized in recent years. What's next? Our IT/Biz Alignment columnist explores some possibilities.

Local Companies

TeamPoint Systems, Inc.
864.963.8471
P. O. Box 925
Simpsonville, SC
Rioux Vision
(803)865-5558
170 Pontiac Business Drive
Elgin, SC
www.procra.com
864-879-2021
PO Box 1026
Inman, SC
Rioux Vision
(803)865-5558
170 Pontiac Business Center Drive
Elgin, SC
tcnsolution
843-452-6791
112 old saybrook road
north charleston, SC
diamondSoft
803-925-9590
2688 Howells Ferry Rd.
Hickory Grove, SC
Parks Professional Services
(843) 413-0787
P.O Box 15126
Quinby, SC
Charlotte Web Design & Development
(704) 577-8242
Commodore point rd
Lake Wylie, SC
Intelli-NET
864 288 1114
319 Garlington Rd
Greenville, SC
Integrated AV
(803)396-0191
2058 Manila Bay Lane
Fort Mill, SC

The Next Wave of Commoditization

provided by: 
Originally published at Internet.com


A friend of mine runs a company that provides remote back-up and recovery. A very nice little company that makes money and provides a valuable service to its customers.

About a year ago they piloted their technology at my university. The results were great. They quoted us a price of around $14 per month per user for automatic, almost limitless back-up with guaranteed recovery of any file within hours. Good stuff. But just last month the university signed a deal with a competitor for around $2 per month per user for pretty much the same services.

In one short year the price had fallen from $14 to $2! How is that possible? Will the $2 vendor make money on the deal? Yes. How is that possible? Well, just like so many other things in our business, remote back-up and recovery simply got commoditized.

Here's a better story. In 1999 I worked with a company that built Web sites for Fortune 500 clients. Actually, in those days companies that built Web sites were often referred to as "agencies," since they liked to combine eBusiness marketing strategy with Web site development.

Many of these engagements resulted in the exchange of millions of dollars for hundred-page Web sites - and a marketing strategy, of course. Today anyone can hire some freelancers to build a hundred-page Web site for well under $10K.

Even better, one can post an RFP on the Web and receive bids for a site's development from all parts of the world. I bet you could get the same hundred-page site for less than $3K through this bidding and negotiating process. (I'm confident because a friend of mine just did it with some Eastern European Web developers.)

The Big Challenge

What else is getting commoditized? PCs and servers have already become commodities. So have a variety of services, like desktop and laptop support, legacy system maintenance, and even data center management.

What's next? Ah, this is the challenge - predicting the next wave of commoditization (especially as you're negotiating for the services as though they were still specialized).

What do you think? Here are five things that may or may not be true in a year or two (or three). You be the judge.

* Back-up and disaster recovery will be fully commoditized by 2008. The cost of storage and storage area network (SAN) technology has fallen so dramatically that security and/or SAN companies may well give back-up and disaster recovery services away for free - in exchange, of course, for some other higher-margin services like the development of security architectures.

* PCs, laptops and especially thin-client prices will fall dramatically over the next year or two. The age of the $200-$300 PC is upon us - again, in exchange for higher-margin services (in fact, many companies and organizations are working on $100 PCs and throwaway thin clients).

* Data base management platforms will become commoditized in exchange for long-term deals for data warehousing, business intelligence and data mining, which is where the money is today (and likely to be tomorrow). I'd gladly give away a DBMS in exchange for a long-term DW/BI/DM deal. Wouldn't you?

* The same fate will commoditize ERP applications, which will eventually give way - after a period of software-as-a-service delivery - to full commoditization where all sorts of services will be added on, a la carte, to the "free" platforms. This one will take more than a year or two, but certainly within five years there will be very few - if any - companies willing to pay $100 million to $300 million (or more) for an SAP or Oracle implementation. Would you?

* Broadband may well become a free commodity - in exchange, of course, for more profitable content-based services (yes, content will become the anti-commodity).

What do you think? What else will become commmoditized?

Just don't sign any long-term deals for hardware, software or services that might just turn into grain, soy, livestock or heavy metal.

Author: Steve Andriole

Read article at Internet.com site

Featured Local Company

diamondSoft

803-925-9590
2688 Howells Ferry Rd.
Hickory Grove, SC
www.twodiamonds.com

Regional Articles
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Aiken SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Anderson SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Beaufort SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Bennettsville SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Bluffton SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Boiling Springs SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Charleston SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Clemson SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Clover SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Columbia SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Conway SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Darlington SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Dillon SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Easley SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Florence SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Fort Mill SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Fountain Inn SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Gaffney SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Gaston SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Georgetown SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Goose Creek SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Greenville SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Greenwood SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Greer SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Hartsville SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Hilton Head Island SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Inman SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Irmo SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Ladson SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Lancaster SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Laurens SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Lexington SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Manning SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Moncks Corner SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Mount Pleasant SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Murrells Inlet SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Myrtle Beach SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Newberry SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization North Augusta SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization North Charleston SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Orangeburg SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Pickens SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Piedmont SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Rock Hill SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Seneca SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Simpsonville SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Spartanburg SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Summerville SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Sumter SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Taylors SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Travelers Rest SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization Walterboro SC
- The Next Wave of Commoditization West Columbia SC
Rate Article
     
Articles Insider

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Engineering Home Services Retail & Consumer Services
Business Services Entertainment Industrial Goods & Services Software
Career Family Insurance Technology
Cars Financial Services Internet Telecommunications
Computer Hardware Food & Beverage Legal Transportation & Logistics
Construction Health Pets Travel
Education Home Electronics Real Estate Wedding