IDC has ranked IBM as the number one in worldwide market share for enterprise social software, for the third consecutive year.
According to IDC’s analysis of 2011 revenue, IBM grew faster than its competitors and nearly two times faster than the overall market which grew approximately 40 percent, IBM said.
The growing popularity of social networking continues to explode, with more and more organisations looking for ways to adopt social business practices to integrate global teams, drive innovation, increase productivity and better reach customers and partners. Microsoft’s reported recent $1.2 billion (£772m) agreement to buy enterprise social networking specialist Yammer is evidence of this, as is Salesforce.com’s acquisition of Buddy Media and Oracle’s buy of Vitrue.
According to IDC, the enterprise social platforms market is expected to reach $4.5 billion (£2.9bn) by 2016, representing growth of 43 percent over the next four years.
“Social software is gaining in momentum in the enterprise,” says Michael Fauscette, group vice president for IDC’s Software Business Solutions Group, in a statement. “Companies are seeing significant gain in productivity and increasing value from successfully deployed social software solutions including supporting ad hoc work by bringing people, data, content, and systems together in real time and making more effective critical business decisions by providing the ‘right information’ in the work context.”
IBM said more than 35 percent of Fortune 100 companies have adopted its social software offerings including eight of the top 10 retailers and banks. IBM’s social business software and services combine social networking capabilities with analytics to help companies capture information and insights into dialogues from employees and customers and create interactions that translate into real value, the company said.
Moreover, IBM’s social networking platform, IBM Connections, allows for instant collaboration with one simple click and the ability to build social communities both inside and outside the organisation to increase customer loyalty and speed business results. IBM Connections is available both on premise and in the cloud.
In the past year, new IBM Connections clients include Lowe’s Home Improvement, Electrolux, TD Bank, Newly Weds Foods, Russell’s Convenience stores, Bayer Material Science, The Ottawa Hospital, Premier Healthcare Alliance, Earthwatch, and the law offices of LaVan & Neidenberg.
“The opportunities for organisations to adopt social business processes to connect people and speed innovation are limitless,” said Alistair Rennie, general manager for social business at IBM, in a statement. “A successful social business can break down the barriers to collaboration and transform the next-generation workforce, from device to delivery vehicle of your choice, to improve productivity and speed decision making.”
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