- Asia Pacific excluding Japan (APeJ) big data and analytics-related (BDA-related) services marketing will grow from US$3.8 billion to US$7 billion in 2019 at a 16.3% CAGR, driven by the growing demand for analytics-related systems integration and business process outsourcing (BPO) services.
- Half (53%) of organisations in the region consider BDA important and have adopted or plans to adopt it in the near future.
- Enterprises in APeJ are in the early stages of big data and analytics adoption due to the lack of trained professionals and data science skills.
- There will be growing interest seen in cloud-based delivery of business analytics services, security analytics services and predictive analytics.
IDC’s Asia/Pacific (excluding Japan) Big Data and Business Analytics Services Market Opportunities, 2016 research has forecast that APeJ BDA-related services marketing will grow from US$3.8 billion to US$7 billion in 2019 at a 16.3% CAGR, driven by the growing demand for analytics-related systems integration and BPO services. Also, the research reveals that 53% of organisations in the region consider BDA important and have adopted or plans to adopt it in the near future.
"Enterprises are overwhelmed with massive amounts of data, and additionally, mobility and Internet of Things (IoT) are adding to this exponential growth and complexity. This in turn is facilitating enterprises to relook at their big data and analytics strategy and leverage the growing data to make quick and right decisions to achieve business goals,” states Sherrel Roche, IT Services Senior Market Analyst, IDC Asia Pacific.
As enterprises have generated, collected, and stored vast amounts of data for years, they are currently interested in analysing this data to drive business innovation. However, enterprises in APeJ are in the early stages of BDA adoption due to the lack of trained professionals and data science skills. Despite this, there are massive amount of services opportunities due to the growing awareness about BDA technology – not to mention the push of various governments on smart cities, which all have strong BDA components. Moving forward as the BDA market matures, there will be growing interest seen in cloud-based delivery of business analytics services, security analytics services and predictive analytics.
“(The) majority of the enterprises in the region prefer to manage big data and analytics services in-house as the complexity of big data and analytics technologies is turning off end-users,” adds Roche.
However, the research also reveals that enterprises that engage with external services providers prefer partnering with independent software vendors (ISVs), and outsourcing services providers for BDA professional services. IDC believes that ISVs and management consultant service providers need to take the lead role and drive industry-specific BDA solutions.
"One in three organisations in the region find it difficult to build business case or measure ROI while leveraging BDA solutions, and we see organisations are becoming more pragmatic in justifying business cases and starting small in their BDA journey," comments Qiao Li, Senior Market Analyst, big data and analytics, IDC Asia Pacific, "ISVs and consulting service providers, need to partner with organisations to identify appropriate use cases and relevant data sources to drive faster and quantifiable benefits in BDA initiatives."
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