Survey: IT pros are optimistic about bigger budgets next year
Deferred upgrades, network capacity demands will drive higher spending, study says
By
Tim Greene
,
Network World
, 07/06/2009
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While most IT network professionals report modest cutbacks in spending this year vs. last year, they seem optimistic that will change for the better next year, according to an early
look at an ongoing study from The Info Pro consultancy.
Of 150 IT professionals interviewed so far from a group of 250, 40% say they expect more funds in 2010 than this year, and
another 40% say they expect flat funding, according to The Info Pro's director of networking and information security research
Bill Trussell. About 20% expect spending declines.
Some say that any increased spending is due to making up for network refreshes that were planned but nixed this year and cannot
wait another year, Trussell says. Some are stuck with network gear that is no longer supported and others have increased demands
that require higher speed equipment, he says.
Earlier upgrades in certain aspects of a network may have an impact on other areas, forcing other spending. For instance,
virtualization projects may increase demand at sites whose firewalls are now inadequate to handle increased traffic.
WAN optimization is one area where spending has kept a constant pace between 2008 and 2009, Trussell says. It is proving its worth as an element
of improved application performance and a way to reduce WAN bandwidth needs or at least defer bandwidth increases.
Trussell says he expected to see an increase in demand for 10Gbps Ethernet switching based on higher core traffic levels due
to larger data centers. "There's no data to support that," he says. "We haven’t seen with virtualization rollouts that this
is coming to fruition."
Similarly, while there has been talk of merging storage network infrastructure with data network infrastructure, that doesn't seem to be panning out either, at least short
term. Slightly more than a third of respondents say they either have created a single infrastructure already or plan to by
year-end, but 55% say they will not do it in the near future because they're not sure the benefits justify the cost.
In some cases where businesses have outsourced their data and storage networking to separate providers, long-term contracts
prevent merging the two networking technologies anytime soon, Trussell says.
Meanwhile, demand for network-access control (NAC) is stalling out, with 30% saying they are piloting the technology or have
long- or short-term plans to deploy it. That is down from 40% who said the same thing last fall. And those who have installed
at least some NAC technology in their networks has hovered around 25% for the past 12 to 18 months, he says.
Buyers seem to have trouble justifying NAC as a stand-alone purchase, but as they refresh their networking gear buy NAC-capable
switches and routers. "We haven’t seen network-wide NAC as overly successful," he says. That could change over time especially
with single-vendor rollouts that avoid potential interoperability problems, he says.
In the next round of surveys this fall, The Info Pro plans to ask how extensively it is deployed within those businesses that
say they have adopted NAC at least to some extent.\
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