Server Shipments to Medium Businesses in Bangladesh Expect over 10% Growth in 2012

Gradual business expansion and increased technology adoption act as key drivers, says AMI

KOLKATA, India--()--The server market among Bangladesh medium businesses (MBs, firms with 100-999 employees) is expected to show a rise in shipments of over 10% in 2012. Bangladesh MBs are an attractive segment for IT vendors although by volume they comprise a minuscule proportion (less than 3%) of the overall small, medium and enterprise universe accounting for a major portion of total IT spending. These findings emerge from the latest study by New York-based Access Markets International (AMI) Partners, Inc. Focusing on ICT usage, AMI has comprehensively surveyed Bangladesh medium and large businesses during the last quarter of 2011 within the cities of Dhaka, Khulna, Chittagong and Rajshahi.

“Bangladesh medium businesses have been gradually overcoming the effects of the economic downturn and are slowly on the path towards recovery,” said Dev Chakravarty, Manager - Research at AMI-India. “This is evidenced by their demographic trends related to future economic performance and growth. A typical Bangladesh MB anticipates a around a 5% rise in revenues next year. In addition, close to half of these MBs anticipate new employee hires and over a quarter are contemplating expansion of their branch office network in the same timeframe. These growth trends have a direct link with technology & connectivity infrastructure needs and consequently lead to greater server adoption,” Chakravarty continued. This greater server need is further corroborated by the fact that the top application areas of servers among MBs are collaboration-related functionalities such as file sharing, web conferencing, printer sharing, etc.

Another key factor in the rise of server usage is the need to provide an adequate infrastructure platform for greater adoption of business application software like ERP, CRM and other software like groupware/ workflow, imaging/ document management, etc. “Although ERP penetration has just crossed double digits among Bangladesh MBs,” adds Chakravarty, “there is significant potential for future growth as part of their strategic adoption plans for business process automation like CRM in the immediate future.” AMI research also indicates among various strategic IT issues in the future, Bangladesh MBs indicate interest in technologies like groupware/ workflow and imaging/ document management.

As a general rule, Bangladesh MBs prefer rack-mounted servers, followed by tower servers. Usage of blade servers is least popular due to high initial cost. This indicates that these MBs are still not fully aware of the multiple advantages of the blade server such as higher computing power, greater space and energy savings. It also indicates an opportunity for vendors to educate these companies on the advantages and uses of various server types.

AMI has discovered that server adoption is nearing full saturation within the largest Bangladesh MBs (500-999 employees). But there remains substantial white space and latent opportunity for first-server purchases within smaller and mid-sized MBs, or the 100–499 employee firms. A considerable percentage of the latter (almost three-in-ten) do not yet possess any server. Further, the planned propensity of acquiring servers is also relatively higher within this segment. Consequently, this space should be on the radar of most of the server vendors (both global and local) wishing to establish a presence in the Bangladesh market.

Related Studies

AMI - India has conducted the following studies exploring IT adoption in Bangladesh “2011-12 Bangladesh Medium Business Market Opportunity Assessment” and “2011-12 Bangladesh Large Business Market Opportunity Assessment.” These studies track a broad spectrum of issues pertaining to the adoption and usage of information technology and communications (ICT) solutions. Products and services covered in these studies include Computing, Networking, Software, Internet, Services, Storage and Security. Further, the studies encompass detailed firmographics, critically important technology attitudes, and strategic planning priorities.

For more information about these studies, e-mail njalan@ami-partners.com.

For more information about our other studies, AMI-Partners, or our global SMB research, call 212-944-5100, e-mail ask_ami@ami-partners.com, or visit us at www.ami-partners.com.

About Access Markets International (AMI) Partners, Inc.

AMI-Partners specializes in IT, Internet, telecommunications and business services strategy, venture capital, and actionable market intelligence — with a strong focus on global small and medium businesses (SMBs), and extending into large enterprises and home-based businesses. The AMI-Partners mission is to empower clients for success with the highest quality data, business strategy perspectives and go-to-market solutions. Led by Andy Bose, the firm has built a world-class management team with deep experience cutting across IT, telecommunications and business services sectors in established and emerging markets.

AMI-Partners has helped shape the go-to-market SMB strategies of more than 150 leading IT, Internet, telecommunications and business services companies. The firm is well known for its IT and Internet adoption-based segmentation of the SMB markets; its annual Retainership services based on global SMB tracking surveys in more than 25 countries; and its proprietary database of SMBs and SMB channel partners in the Americas, Europe and Asia-Pacific. The firm invests significantly in collecting survey based information from several thousand SMBs annually, and is considered the premier source for global SMB trends and analysis.

Contacts

AMI-Partners
Quoted Analyst:
Mr. Dev Chakravarty, (91) 33 4003 3093 ext 217
devc@ami-partners.com
or
Media Relations:
In US (New York): Nancy Carty, 212-944-5100 ext 581
ncarty@ami-partners.com
or
In EU (London): Claudia Jachtmann, (44) 208 987 2756
cjachtmann@ami-partners.com
or
In Asia Pacific (Singapore): Abhilash Pillai, (65) 6220 5535
apillai@ami-partners.com
or
In India (Kolkata): Jyoti Singh, (91) 33 4003 3093 ext 223
jsingh@ami-partners.com
or
In India (Bangalore): Rati Ghose, (91) 80 4148 2661 ext 36
rghose@ami-partners.com
or
In India (Mumbai): Neha Jalan Goenka, (91) 99300 20420
njalan@ami-partners.com

Contacts

AMI-Partners
Quoted Analyst:
Mr. Dev Chakravarty, (91) 33 4003 3093 ext 217
devc@ami-partners.com
or
Media Relations:
In US (New York): Nancy Carty, 212-944-5100 ext 581
ncarty@ami-partners.com
or
In EU (London): Claudia Jachtmann, (44) 208 987 2756
cjachtmann@ami-partners.com
or
In Asia Pacific (Singapore): Abhilash Pillai, (65) 6220 5535
apillai@ami-partners.com
or
In India (Kolkata): Jyoti Singh, (91) 33 4003 3093 ext 223
jsingh@ami-partners.com
or
In India (Bangalore): Rati Ghose, (91) 80 4148 2661 ext 36
rghose@ami-partners.com
or
In India (Mumbai): Neha Jalan Goenka, (91) 99300 20420
njalan@ami-partners.com