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Getting Ready for Hosting 3.0 with Antonio Piraino of Tier1 Research

<p>The Tuesday morning keynote at HostingCon was delivered by Antonio Piraino of Tier1 Research&comma; who delivered a session entitled &&num;8220&semi;Are You Ready for Hosting 3&period;0&comma;&&num;8221&semi; a title that promised to <a href&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;tefmedu&period;com">illuminate the opportunities<&sol;a> in the upcoming market for hosting&period;<&excl;--more--><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He uses examples from some of the huge and growing tech giants to illustrate his point that we are in a second tech bubble&period; But he doesn’t think that should be confused with what he refers to as &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;cloud 2&period;0” or &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Hosting 3&period;0”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He says phase 3 &lpar;3&period;0&rpar; of hosting has to do with a lot of new layers being placed on top of the hosting resources&comma; which creates a new layer of expectations&comma; including some around performance and security&period; It’s a lot like what &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;cloud 2&period;0” is at the same time&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Cloud computing was originally a playground for developers&comma; and it’s only in the last two or three years that we’ve seen businesses migrating their processes onto the cloud&period; Businesses are looking to cloud or hosting providers to enable business-to-business communication and other connections&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Piraino refers to some research produced by one of the 451 Group’s properties&comma; ChangeWave research&comma; which illustrates that businesses’ IT spending expectations &lpar;charted on a graph of time&rpar; is followed almost exactly by the S&amp&semi;P 500&comma; about two months later&period; Very interesting data&comma; more of which he says is available at ChangeWave’s site&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He also says the debt reduction issue in the US has had 16 percent of US enterprises saying they plan to reduce IT spending in the near future&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The point&comma; generally&comma; is that IT spending is very sensitive to macro-economic issues&comma; as well as influential over them&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The cloud era&comma; he says&comma; is characterized by IT being consumerized into a product that is taken in the same way workers consume services in their day to day lives &lpar;online banking being the example offered by Piraino&rpar;&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He also showed some data illustrating the fact that a significant chunk of websites are now being hosted on cloud infrastructure services&comma; like those provided by Amazon or Rackspace&period; And these are the kinds of sites that would ordinarily been on traditional hosting&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Amazon&comma; and IaaS in general is a growing market&period; But he sees another opportunity in the cloud services space&comma; which is in the 70 to 80 percent of cloud services spending that goes toward software as a service&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The growth in the more traditional internet infrastructure market is still coming&period; And the market is still bigger – in the &dollar;45 billion dollar range – than cloud&period; For now&comma; at least&period; Growth numbers in the shared and dedicated hosting markets are single-digit&comma; however&period; Managed hosting&comma; however&comma; is growing at 20 percent per year&period; Here’s a big opportunity&period; Though people are spending less on IT&comma; they’re spending more on services around people helping them migrate into hosted environments&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Among small businesses&comma; the workloads most commonly put into the cloud are email and CRM&comma; followed by document management&comma; collaboration tools and business intelligence and analytics&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>There are threats to your hosting business&comma; says Piraino&period; He has a long list&comma; but a few of the key ones are new entrants to the market &lpar;including the big companies – Microsoft&comma; Amazon&comma; Salesforce&comma; Facebook&comma; etc&period;&rpar;&comma; customer perceptions around the reliability and security of cloud computing and the increasing complexity of cloud services&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>He says there are some clear options for competing – virtualizing and automating&comma; taking advantage of IaaS and PaaS in-a-box products&comma; focusing on management&comma; control&comma; security and reliability&comma; and very importantly avoiding price wars&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Ultimately&comma; he says&comma; hosts need to make a decision&colon; partner&comma; build&comma; be acquired&comma; change shape or compete&period; To that end&comma; he says there are opportunities in the venture capital and private equity space&period; There are companies out there looking to partner with innovative hosting companies&period; Larger players in the hosting space are looking for acquisitions&period; He also believes really strongly in the opportunity to provide services&comma; and not just infrastructure&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<address>Source&colon; WEB HOST INDUSTRY REVIEW<&sol;address>&NewLine;

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