If you don’t know SMAC, then you don’t know jack. SMAC – Social, Mobile, Analytics, and Cloud – is the ubiquitous term that every startup pre-IPO entrepreneur must use (no matter how awkwardly) in order to garner triple digit P/E valuations. Clearly not as superfluous as Pets.com, Goldman describes the powerful theme in enterprise software, enabling businesses to realign go-to market models with faster and informed decision-making driving an enhanced user experience.
Via Goldman Sachs’ Mohammad Moawalla,
Key factors driving the emergence of SMAC as the fifth wave in information technology are increasing internet and smartphone penetration, exponential growth in data and social media. Our US analysts estimate that 70% of the world’s population will be using smartphones by 2017. By 2020, corporates should be managing more than 50 times the data they do now. SMAC lets enterprises realign their go-to market model and expand their global reach with faster and informed decision making. Given SMAC stack’s high availability and ease of accessibility, companies are using them separately or as a whole to reach out to a greater consumer base and move into new business areas which should drive increased industry and competitive positioning among the peer group.
SOCIAL: With users spending 25% of their online time on social networking sites, these have become an effective medium for companies to engage customers and enhance brand value. Through social media, companies can target customers in a more informed way and gain real-time feedback from them in a costeffective manner. Starbucks’ management indicated an increase in revenues of US$180 mn in the first year of the launch of its “crowdsourcing” initiatives to understand customer preferences, which helped its product innovation capability. In our view, enterprise applications are becoming more “social” with an improved user interface and higher user interactions and the millennial generation is a key influencer in driving their growth.
MOBILE: Mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets have changed the way people access digital content. With the computing power of a laptop in a highly connected and portable smartphone, it is a powerful platform to deploy applications. Consumer use-cases of mobility applications can be seen in a wide range of verticals including retail (mobile commerce) and finance (mobile banking and payments). Enterprises use mobility applications for efficient customer relationship management (CRM), improved sales & marketing strategies , supply chain and product management. In the US, mobile commerce comprised 5.8% of total online retail commerce in 2013 and is expected to increase to 9% by 2018 (eMarketer). As businesses switch to enterprise mobility, mobile devices have increasingly become important to connect to customers and enhance user experience.
ANALYTICS: 90% of the data available today has been generated in the past 3-4 years. While the pace of data generation is only going to increase, organisations are looking to analytics to process this huge pool of data to give customers a personalized experience in a fast and cost-efficient manner. Amazon, for example, leverages its customers for product reviews and uses analytics for real-time recommendations to enhance sales and customer satisfaction. Analytics tools such as SAP’s HANA help businesses make intelligent and faster decisions by analysing large volumes of data to predict and identify change and new opportunities. Improved analytics capabilities are also driving changes in the front-end presentation and visualization layer, resulting in an improved user interface to facilitate better and faster decision-making.
CLOUD: Cloud computing is the delivery of computing services over the internet rather than a local server or a personal computer. Cloud services reduce cost and the complexity of owning and operating computers and networks. Cloud technologies are driving a major change in the IT landscape with disruptive applications enhancing user experience. We believe that increasing penetration of cloud technologies in enterprise software spending should decrease the mix of maintenance related spending to c.50% of the total from c.70% currently, thereby allowing re-allocation to spend in growth related areas.
Each of the components of SMAC has brought about a change in the way the markets and businesses operate, but their integration takes the impact to a whole new level. This drives consumer decisions: as a user searches for something on a mobile device, they are provided the most relevant results using analytics, their selection is then served to them via the cloud and the user would then recommend it on social media. According to a recent industry survey, global 2000, firms will spend c.15% of their IT services and outsourcing budget on SMAC. In the coming two years, the firms are expected to spend around 10% of their total IT budget on big data and analytics, about 9.5% on cloud services (including software as a service, and platform as a service), around 5.3% on mobile apps and devices, and 3.4% on social media.
The integration of SMAC is affecting businesses across industries as they move from material-based value chains to the virtual platform. Robust SMAC strategies must cover both – an optimal integrated online presence and the bricks-and-mortar side of the business. This wave of integration is a threat to conventional businesses unless they evolve and remodel parts of themselves in coherence with SMAC. With increased visibility on social media and ease of access owing to the cloud, the ripple effect is of a much greater magnitude than any other technological shift so far. At the same time, it is a boon for businesses that were either born into this phenomenon or are able to remodel their business platforms to merge with this evolution. Companies in our European coverage that are favourably exposed to the SMAC wave are SAP which operates across the stack , Monitise which is exposed to the mobile money market and Dassault Systemes, especially in the cloud.
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So there u have it… just what all those totally ubiquitous buzzwords mean and why you are paying $18 bn for Uber…
via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1u9Ll1k Tyler Durden