Database And Systems Management Markets Grew In 2011

The global database and systems management markets grew in 2011defspite a weak economy, according to IDC

The worldwide systems management and database software markets grew significantly through 2011, despite a weak global economy, according to two reports from IDC.

IDC’s Worldwide Semiannual System Management Software Tracker showed that the global systems management software market is expected to reach $15.4 billion (£9.8bn) by the close of 2011. That is a 9.2 percent increase from the 2010 level.

Healthy growth

IDC’s Tracker monitors more than 110 vendors globally in a total of 49 countries, providing biannual market size, vendor share and forecast data for the six functional markets that make up the systems management software market in IDC’s software taxonomy.

“The systems management software market achieved double-digit growth during the first half of 2011,” said analyst Wilvin Chee. “The change and configuration management, and workload scheduling and automation markets maintained the best growth among the functional, but the strongest gains were in the event management market, fuelled significantly by the US, Japan and CEMA [Central and Eastern Europe and Middle East and Africa].”

Among the six functional markets, three had revenue of more than $1 billion (£638m) for the first half of 2011. These were change and configuration management (CCM), workload scheduling and automation (WSA), and performance management.

All three markets experienced very strong growth in the United States, while other regions such as Western Europe and CEMA also had good year-over-year growth. Canada and the Asia-Pacific region (excluding Japan) had somewhat lower growth in the first half of 2011, compared with previous cycles, but maintained double-digit momentum. Japan and Latin America held steady growth in most markets.

“The first half of 2011 results show continued healthy growth in worldwide systems management software revenue,” said analyst Tim Grieser. “Growth was fuelled by increases in IT spending due to the continuing economic recovery and associated hardware refresh and upgrade cycles, and new investments in managing virtualised and cloud infrastructures. Automation to simplify and optimise IT operational costs was a key factor.”

Smaller players growing

IBM, BMC and Hewlett-Packard held the top three spots in terms of revenue share in the first half, though none were able to generate growth exceeding the market average. IBM and BMC had solid growth in the WSA market while HP achieved its best gains in the CCM and problem management markets.

A number of vendors, including Microsoft, Hitachi, NEC, VMWare, Symantec and Dell, enjoyed above market average growth in the first half of the year. Microsoft, NEC and VMware performed well in all the systems management software markets where they compete. IDC also observed that a total of 14 vendors achieved worldwide revenue of more than $100 million (£63.8m) in the first six months of 2011.

The systems management market has not been the only bright spot in the enterprise IT arena. IDC is also reporting that the global database and data integration software market is expected to end 2011 with 11.6 percent growth.

“We expect the database and data integration market to experience year-over-year growth of 11.6 percent in 2011, reaching a total market size of $35.5 billion (£22.7bn),” said Chee. “While the relational database management software market should grow at the same rate, the best improvement will be seen in the database development and management tools market, where year-over-year growth of more than 300 percent is expected.”

IDC garnered the figures from its Worldwide Semiannual Database and Data Integration Software Tracker. The Tracker monitors more than 100 key vendors across a total of 49 countries, provides biannual market size, vendor share, and forecast data for the four market segments involved – relational database management systems (RDBMS), non-relational database management systems, data integration and access software (DIA), and database development and management tools (DDMTs).

“The need for better overall management in enterprises has expressed itself in initiatives to collect and manage high quality, trusted data for use in decision support as well as driving increasingly automated business processes,” said analyst Carl Olofson. “This has resulted in strong growth for database management systems, data quality, dynamic data movement, and other software that supports growing efforts in the areas of master data management, data governance and enterprise data integration.”