IBM vs. Oracle, Mobility, Cloud: What IT Pros Need to Know for 2011 - IT Management - News & Reviews - eWeek.com

IBM vs. Oracle, Mobility, Cloud: What IT Pros Need to Know for 2011

IBM vs. Oracle, Mobility, Cloud: What IT Pros Need to Know for 2011
Written By
Eric Lundquist
Eric Lundquist
Nov 19, 2010
3 minute read
eWeek content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More


IBM vs. Oracle, Mobility, Cloud: What IT Pros Need to Know for 2011

1

by Eric Lundquist


Big Blue vs. Big Red

2

That would be IBM versus Oracle. The successful strategy of IBM built on services versus Oracles strategy of buying up the enterprise software universe is a major act for business-to-business in 2011. CIOs know the value of buying a fully integrated software offering in terms of compatibility but are wary of getting tied to one vendor. The rest of the B2B tech vendor community has to find a way to outmaneuver IBM and Oracle. This will be fun to watch on the outside, less fun on the inside if you make the wrong choice.


Reverse Consumerization

3

Technology advances used to happen first in business, as that was where the money was. Now, consumer technology leads the way in smartphones, social networks and SAAS (software as a service). Next year will be the key year for businesses to move off the sideline and actively begin using and promoting those consumer technologies in the business universe. You can already see this happening with smartphones (getting a secure area to conduct business), social networks for B2B communities, and services (financial, CRM, project management), built on the backbone of companies such as Google but aimed at the business community.


Advertisement

The Mobile Enterprise

4

All the major players have finally gotten their new (or new again) devices in the marketplace. Enterprises recognize mobility is the key driver to productivity. Next year is when the apps will forcefully arrive to enable the secure, private, and robust mobile enterprise.


Remember PCs?

5

They are still around and, in fact, are growing in units and revenues. PCs are now lightweight (think Apples MacBook Air), robust (solid-state memory), and very cool-looking, which all help keep the PC market strong. However, big changes are in store as Apple re-enters the enterprise for real, Google tries to replicate its Android phone success in the tablet and laptop space, and a business refresh continues to push Microsoft Windows 7 sales. The PC goes from being the center of the IT universe to a good team player.


IT Services

6

The app store concept, where users can try out any number of applications as a service to find the right CRM, contact manager, and financial reporting tool for their device, is changing application development. IT managers need to find a way to allow that user-based application decision process while maintaining the compliance controls a company requires.


Tablets

7

The iPad and other upcoming tablets are changing the media consumption model. The rise of the tablets will revive a financially viable model to deliver specific editions to a user.


Video

8

In 2011, video will become one, if not the major, way that media is consumed. Video creation has reached a point where the YouTube goofy videos are becoming more professional, the integration of social networks into video production provides a differentiation that the big networks cannot deliver, and smart mobile devices will make video the major activity for consumers. Businesses will increasingly use video to provide new product details, showcase executives, and create how-to explanations for their products and services.


Advertisement

Apple Stores

9

One of the biggest secrets of Apples success is the Apple Store. When you buy a new product, you can get unlimited training in person for a year for $99. The ability to go back to a store and have access to experts, as well as like-minded newbies, creates a user community that a digital setting cannot match. Major tech vendors need to think how to create an Apple Store-like environment for their customers. Smaller, face-to-face events based on regions and similar interests could see a revival here.


The CIO as Services Maestro

10

The CIO has traditionally been the person trying to translate technology developments into business strategies. Increasingly, that translation means quickly finding and evaluating new software service offerings. The discovery, education, and deployment of a service offering in a company will be the hallmark of the 2011 CIO.


Virtualization, Cloud Computing, and All That Stuff

11

Virtualization has proved to have real benefits. The next step is to tie those islands of virtualization together under one management umbrella. That is a big task and a major agenda item for CIOs and technology managers. Taking what they have learned about virtualization and spinning those capabilities up to a private cloud and then tying the whole thing into that big public cloud will move from a wish list item to a must do next year.

eWeek Logo

eWeek has the latest technology news and analysis, buying guides, and product reviews for IT professionals and technology buyers. The site's focus is on innovative solutions and covering in-depth technical content. eWeek stays on the cutting edge of technology news and IT trends through interviews and expert analysis. Gain insight from top innovators and thought leaders in the fields of IT, business, enterprise software, startups, and more.

Property of TechnologyAdvice. © 2026 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved

Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site including, for example, the order in which they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies or all types of products available in the marketplace.