Revenue uncertainty triggered by the pandemic could push CIOs with tighter budgets to migrate to cloud resources, according to research company.

Joao-Pierre S. Ruth, Senior Writer

July 15, 2020

4 Min Read
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Now that 2020 is past its midpoint, it seems clear, if not obvious, that spending on IT around the world is down compared with the prior year. Gartner issued a projection that IT spending will reach $3.5 trillion worldwide this year, down 7.3% from spending in 2019. Broken down by categories, devices and data center systems are expected to see the deepest cuts in spending this year at 16.1% and 10.3%, respectively.

John-David Lovelock, research vice president at Gartner, says this reflects the economy under COVID-19 and may continue well afterward. “IT spend is a reaction to revenue uncertainty,” he says.

When the pandemic initially struck, there was little change, Lovelock says. After lockdowns swept across industries, revenue uncertainty gripped the world, he says. The scale of lockdowns could increase that uncertainty, which led to more stringent cuts in IT budgets. National governments have increased their IT spending in various ways, Lovelock says, but many other sectors continue to see diminished revenue. “If we get into the airline industry, the hotel industry, bars and restaurants, the cuts are rather dramatic,” he says.

Lovelock estimates the global airline industry is down about 33.5%, the entertainment industry is down 34%, restaurants and hotels down 24%. “There are some industries dragging IT spending much lower,” he says. Even critical infrastructure sectors such as hospitals, grocery stores, and health insurers are down 2% to 4%, he estimates. The collective revenue uncertainty, Lovelock says, leads to cash freezes that shake up CIO spending. “They stop buying hard things and they start buying services,” he says. That includes slowing new purchases of PCs, laptops, mobile phones, servers, and networking equipment storage.

Licensed software is off 17% this year, Lovelock says, but cloud software is up. “When enterprises come back to revenue certainty, and cash flows come again, CIOs are going to have more IT to do but less cash to do it,” he says. “That will mean cloud.”

Lovelock is not optimistic for a sudden turnaround of economic conditions in the near term. “The economy, particularly in the US, is undoubtedly going to get worse,” he says. “It’s going to get worse more slowly.” States that never really flattened the curve of viral spread, Lovelock says, seem to be losing ground against the pandemic and will be in trouble. When it does become possible to revisit reopening strategies, he says it is unknown if some businesses will be able to operate and cover their costs under the changed levels of activity. With social distancing, restaurants might be able to serve about half of their usual flow of customers, Lovelock says.

Businesses might rethink staffing levels, product make up, and other options to adjust their revenue flow, he says, but it still raises questions about being able to make rent. “There are many industries and corporations that will not be able to operate profitably at less than 100% of what they used to do,” Lovelock says. It might be easier for some companies to file for bankruptcy than fight with the debt burden of being closed for months, he says.

Companies will have to move forward with new technology, Lovelock says, which may include reassessing the IT they deploy and leverage. “Organizations that were already farther along the digital road are doing better than those that are not,” he says.

Domino’s, for example, deployed multiple ways to order pizza through social media, their app, and website and has done well, Lovelock says. Television broadcasters have adjusted, he says, but streaming services such as Netflix, Amazon Prime, and Hulu have thrived. Likewise, online retailers have done well compared with struggles that brick-and-mortar companies face under the pandemic. “Since they can’t bounce back to analog they have to bounce forward to digital,” he says.

Naturally, there will be variations by industry in the amount of digital that can be incorporated into a business model, Lovelock says. A complete move to digital might not be possible for some companies. Still, he expects more businesses to pursue various remote substitutes for face-to-face interactions.

Lovelock says Gartner continues to monitor and assess this fluid situation and should publish its next forecast in three months. The histogram IT spending impact is as wide as it has ever been because of the uncertainty COVID-19 has brought, he says. “2020 is a year like the world has never seen for IT,” Lovelock says. “There are no touchstones. There are no comparators. 2009 was nothing like this. In 2009, every industry slowed down a bit. In this one, a few industries have been hammered but every industry has been affected.”

 

For more content on IT spending and the cloud, follow up with these stories:

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About the Author(s)

Joao-Pierre S. Ruth

Senior Writer

Joao-Pierre S. Ruth has spent his career immersed in business and technology journalism first covering local industries in New Jersey, later as the New York editor for Xconomy delving into the city's tech startup community, and then as a freelancer for such outlets as TheStreet, Investopedia, and Street Fight. Joao-Pierre earned his bachelor's in English from Rutgers University. Follow him on Twitter: @jpruth.

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