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News Release from: Butler Group | Subject: SOA competitiveness report
Edited by the Manufacturingtalk Editorial
Team on 22 June 2007
SOA competitiveness in the spotlight
Butler report shows that SOA vendors need to acquire a 'critical mass' market share in order to sustain ongoing development investment
A new report, just published by Butler Group, Europe's leading IT research and advisory organisation, reveals the competitive nature of the market for Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) deployment technologies According to the report, ' SOA Platforms', SOA vendors need to acquire a 'critical mass' market share in order to sustain the ongoing development investment that will be needed, and to prosper in a market that is set to become commoditised
This article was originally published on Manufacturingtalk on 13 Oct 2006 at 8.00am (UK)
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For enterprises the adoption of SOA provides significant potential to improve the value they derive from their IT investments, in terms of increased flexibility, improved use of assets, alignment with business objectives, and reduced integration costs.
"The high adoption rate of SOA has attracted a large and diverse set of software vendors to compete for market share in the provision of the supporting infrastructure".
"As the market starts to mature it is inevitable that vendor consolidation, which is already significant, will accelerate further".
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Butler Group's report provides a competitive analysis of thirteen leading vendors of SOA infrastructure products, together with descriptions of the business issues, technology issues, and market issues that are shaping the delivery of SOA.
It also gives a feature-by-feature comparison of the vendors, organised into eight categories: quality of service; messaging; standards; transformations; adapters and connectors; orchestration; business rules; and integrated development environment.
When scored on their ability to support the strategic deployment of SOA, the report highlights Oracle, TIBCO, and IBM as vendors that should be shortlisted.
However, different deployment scenarios emphasise different sets of capabilities.
In an integration-focused deployment with simpler orchestration requirements, little call for business rules automation, but high expectations for performance and availability, Cape Clear and Progress provide strong capabilities at a lower cost than the more strategic vendors.
When the objective is to deliver automated and optimised business processes, the product sets built around a shared repository, such as Intersystems and Cordys, perform well due to the tighter integration between the environments for business analysts, developers, and administrators.
Sun and JBoss feature well where the requirement is for a low-cost introduction of SOA capable of scaling to a strategic deployment.
The report identifies that the market conditions are constantly changing.
Currently, a large number of vendors are all attempting to provide complete suites.
As the market matures it is inevitable that the number of competing vendors will be reduced through acquisitions, mergers, and vendors deciding unilaterally to target different markets.
At the present time SOA vendors mainly target large enterprises, so the market is dominated by high value, low volume sales.
Butler Group expects this will start to change within two or three years as the large enterprise market starts to become saturated.
The need to address medium-sized enterprises will impact not just sales and marketing strategies, but will also have a large impact on the products themselves, with ease-of-use and reduced administration being prerequisites to mid-market success.
In fact Butler Group expects some vendors will find it difficult to address the high volume market.
At the same time, leading users of SOA will continue to evolve, leading to an increasing set of expectations.
"Business drivers will soon stretch beyond the present expectation of greater IT responsiveness".
"In the future, business managers will expect to be able to define a policy, and to have that policy implemented directly by the IT infrastructure, with minimal involvement from IT staff".
"The automation of different types of business policies will be a major feature of the forthcoming IT landscape".
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