CRN Monthly Technology Spending Outlook, January 2005

1. Near-Term Sales Outlook
(based on a CRN survey of 347 VARs in December 2004)

As 2005 gets under way, the channel is feeling pretty good about its prospects.

Last month, solution provider expectations for near-term sales reached their highest level in the four and a half years that CRN has collected data. The overall spending expectations index came in at 128 for December, surging from 93 in November and eclipsing the previous record of 111 last May.

The December index represents a breakout from the narrow range of spending expectations during the past six months. What's more, the increase was broad, as expectations jumped in all seven hardware and software categories surveyed as well as in all four customer segments.

Networking saw an especially strong gain in near-term sales expectations last month. In fact, both networking hardware and software reached multiyear highs, breaking out of the relatively low range of expectations seen over the past two years. Desktops, peripherals, PC servers and Unix servers hit all-time highs in terms of sales expectations. Yet notebooks topped all categories, although the December sales expectations figure was slightly below the June 2004 record.

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On the customer end, sales expectations in the small-business segment hit their highest level in several months, while those for the midsize- and large-company arenas strengthened considerably in December vs. November. Though year-over-year data isn't available for the government segment, monthly trends exhibit a clear upward pattern, and outside research data show the federal sector as a key market for solution providers this year in terms of sales growth.

The big question, of course, is whether these results are merely a one-month blip or signal the launch of a sustained increase in sales expectations at a new, higher level. Additional information will shed more light in the coming months. At this point, economic and market data still point to continued steady--but modest--growth in technology sales for 2005, although some areas, such as VoIP, stand to see higher growth rates compared with other categories.

SPENDING EXPECTATIONS INDEX

(May 2000=100)

DECEMBER 2004
NOVEMBER 2004
Desktops
127
100
Networking hardware
99
65
Networking software
103
75
Notebooks
179
150
Peripherals
115
92
PC servers
138
88
Unix/RISC servers
136
81
OVERALL AVERAGE
128
93
* NOTE: No index figures are available for storage, but sales expectations were sharply higher in December vs. November. In December, 60 percent of respondents expected an increase in storage hardware sales of 6 percent or more in the following three months, up from 45 percent in November. For storage software, 56 percent of VARs polled in December expected a sales gain of 6 percent or more, up from 39 percent in November..

Sales Expectations By

CUSTOMER SEGMENT

Percentage of VARs expecting sales growth of at least 6 percent in next three months*

DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
DEC. 2003
Large Firms
54%
55%
36%
Midsize Companies
66
56
55
Small Businesses
70
61
60
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
OCT. 2004
Government
61%
52%
43%

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2. Large-Company IT Spending Plans
(based on a CRN survey of 125 enterprise IT executives in December 2004)

Large companies appear ready to boost their level of technology spending over the next few months, according to the December CRN Business Spending Survey.

Sixty-eight percent of large firms (those with at least 1,000 employees) polled said expected to hike their IT budgets over the next year--the highest figure recorded in the three years CRN has gathered data on this segment. Moreover, that figure is up 16 percentage points from September, the last time the enterprise space was examined. Only 11 percent of large firms said they expected to cut technology spending in 2005.

For the companies planning to boost spending, the gains are likely to be sizable. Two-thirds of enterprises expect to raise spending by more than 15 percent over the next year, and four out of five said they're "extremely" or "strongly" committed to carrying out planned increases in spending.

In terms of IT categories, networking hardware/software and storage rose sharply as enterprise spending priorities in December. Other areas offering strong enterprise sales opportunities for VARs include security, desktop PCs, Web services and Web site design/development. However, the relative importance of spending in Internet-related categories, as well as hardware and software, remains below year-earlier levels.

LARGE-COMPANY IT BUDGET FORECAST,

Next 12 Months

\

Percentage of companies citing each choice

DEC. 2004
CHANGE FROM SEPT 2004
Increase
68%
+16%
Decrease
11%
-2%
Stay The Same
21%
-14%

DEGREE OF SPENDING INCREASES/DECREASES

Percentage of companies citing each choice

INCREASES
More Than 20%
46%
From 11% To 20%
33%
Between 1% And 10%
21%
DECREASES
More Than 20%
50%
From 11% To 20%
21%
Between 1% And 10%
29%

COMMITMENT TO SPENDING CHANGES

Percentage of companies citing each choice

INCREASES
Extremely/Strongly Committed
86%
Moderately Committed
9%
Slighly Committed
5%
INCREASES
Extremely/Strongly Committed
28%
Moderately Committed
14%
Slighly Committed
58%
* NOTE: “Extremely/strongly committed" signifies that the spending changes are already being instituted or stand to be implemented soon. "Moderately committed" means the spending changes are actively being considered. "Slightly committed" signifies that the spending changes are being discussed but aren't likely to be implemented soon..


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3. Channel Satisfaction And Loyalty
(based on December CRN Channel Satisfaction Survey, with at least 20 VARs polled for each company listed)

In December, solution providers were about as satisfied with vendor channel programs as they were in November. But they didn't seem to get as much satisfaction from distributors.

Channel partners' overall level of satisfaction (defined as the percentage of solution providers satisfied with a company's channel program minus the percentage dissatisfied) for distributors came in at 29 percent in December, plunging from 44 percent in November. Vendors, on the other hand, saw a 1-point uptick to 46 percent in that time frame, according to CRN research. Solution providers generally give higher satisfaction ratings to vendors than distributors.

All major distributors tracked by CRN--Ingram Micro, Tech Data, Synnex and D&H Distributing--saw their channel satisfaction ratings fall in December. Reversing a sharp gain in November, Synnex had a decline of more than 20 percent in December, as did D&H.

Nine of the 20 vendors tracked showed increases in their overall satisfaction rating, and 11 registered declines. As in November, the December data showed strong volatility, with many individual vendors showing significant changes on the upside and the downside. 3Com, for example, saw a 27-point increase in its satisfaction rating, while Citrix Systems, ViewSonic and Sun Microsystems also posted big gains. Intel, AMD and Dell, however, suffered significant declines.

These trends illustrate that month-to-month data can show unusually wide swings and that the use of three-month or six-month moving averages, which involve a much larger respondent base, gives a much clearer picture of channel satisfaction trends. These averages will be available soon.

Channel loyalty showed a similar level of volatility and the same overall trends as channel satisfaction. The level of channel loyalty for all 20 vendors as a group rose to 49 percent in December, up from 46 percent the previous month. 3Com, Citrix, Sun and Computer Associates International saw major increases in channel loyalty, while Dell, AMD and Red Hat experienced sizable declines in loyalty--as did the four major distributors.

Although channel satisfaction plays a key role in channel loyalty, the data demonstrate that it's not the sole factor. Intel saw a 15-point drop in its satisfaction rating in December, but the chip giant's loyalty rating showed no change. Similarly, Hewlett-Packard had a 2-point gain in its satisfaction rating last month, but its loyalty rating dipped 3 points. IBM, Novell, Symantec, Lexmark and Samsung experienced such situations as well.

VAR SATISFACTION

With Channel Programs

\

Percentage of respondents satisfied with programs minus percentage dissatisfied (highest possible score is 100 percent)

VENDORS
DEC 2004
CHG FROM NOV 2004
ViewSonic
61%
+17%
Sun Microsystems
61
+14
IBM Software
60
+10
Samsung
58
-4
Microsoft
55
+9
AMD
52
-12
Citrix
52
+20
3Com
52
+27
Cisco
51
+2
Computer Associates
49
+12
IBM Hardware
49
-10
Intel
47
-15
Oracle
41
-7
Red Hat
40
-6
Hewlett-Packard
39
+2
Novell
37
-3
Lexmark
34
-13
Veritas
33
-3
Symantec
26
-8
Dell
23
-16
AVERAGE
46
+1
DISTRIBUTORS
DEC 2004
CHG FROM NOV 2004
Tech Data
40%
-7%
Ingram Micro
34
-6
Synnex
21
-24
D&H
21
-24
AVERAGE
29
-15

VAR LOYALTY

To Vendors And Distributors

\

Percentage of respondents citing a "high" or "very high" level of loyalty minus percentage citing a "low" or "very low" level of loyalty
(highest possible score is 100 percent)

VENDORS
DEC 2004
CHG FROM NOV 2004
Citrix
71%
+33%
Microsoft
63
+1
Sun Microsystems
62
+27
IBM Software
58
-13
Intel
58
0
Computer Associates
53
+22
Samsung
53
+12
Oracle
51
-1
3Com
49
+39
Symantec
49
+9
Cisco
49
+4
IBM Hardware
48
-8
Veritas
48
-7
Novell
48
+12
Red Hat
48
-25
ViewSonic
47
+13
AMD
40
-23
Hewlett-Packard
39
-3
Lexmark
31
-3
Dell
24
-21
AVERAGE
49
+3
DISTRIBUTORS
DEC 2004
CHG FROM NOV 2004
Tech Data
43%
-8%
Ingram Micro
25
-7
Synnex
24
-23
D&H
18
-11
AVERAGE
27
-13

4. Best-Selling Hardware Brands
(based on a CRN survey of 347 VARs in December 2004)

The custom-system market had a robust performance in December--unlike the major system vendors, which showed mixed results at best.

The percentage of solution providers citing custom systems as their best-selling desktop, notebook, PC server and Unix/RISC server increased in December from November, with the biggest gains in the desktop and PC server segments. And in each category, the December percentages were considerably above year-earlier levels, a sign of the growing dominance of white boxes in the small- and midsize-business market.

Of the three major PC hardware vendors, Hewlett-Packard had the best performance as it realized increases in the percentage of VARs citing its desktops and notebooks as their top-sellers. Yet that measure declined for PC servers and showed no change for Unix/RISC servers. Over the past year, HP managed to boost its presence in the SMB notebook market as it battles Dell head-to-head, but it hasn't fared as well in its efforts to enlarge its presence in the desktop and server markets.

Dell saw declines in its channel best-seller percentages in the desktop, notebook and PC server categories. The vendor maintained its edge over HP in the desktop market, but the margin has narrowed significantly during the past year. Dell also has made little headway against HP in the PC server market over the past 12 months.

IBM generated a mixed bag of results in December, seeing an increase in the notebook arena but a drop in Unix servers. PC servers saw no change. During the past year, IBM has seen great success in penetrating the Unix/RISC portion of the SMB market and has established itself as the No. 1 branded vendor. And in the same time frame, the percentage of solution providers citing IBM as their top-selling Unix/RISC server vendor has more than doubled.

Percentage of VARs Citing Each As Their

\

TOP-SELLING COMPUTER

DESKTOPS
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
DEC. 2003
HP
23%
21%
24%
Dell
26
29
37
IBM
5
7
7
White-Box
39
34
26
NOTEBOOKS
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
DEC. 2003
HP
25%
19%
22%
Dell
23
31
28
IBM
15
12
17
Toshiba
10
12
11
White-Box
12
11
11
PC SERVERS
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
DEC. 2003
Dell
22
24
31
IBM
11
11
11
White-Box
34
30
15
UNIX SERVERS
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
DEC. 2003
HP
16%
16%
25%
Sun
13
14
25
IBM
19
24
9
White-Box
32
30
21

5. Custom Systems & Component Availability
(based on a CRN survey of 347 VARs in December 2004)

Shortages of several key components eased in December, including microprocessors, motherboards and video graphics cards.

Less than one in four white-box VARs reported moderate to severe shortages of components such as memory, hard drives and motherboards. Hard drives was the only category to see an a significant increase in shortages. Still, 85 percent of white-box VARs indicated that supplies were adequate. These trends are a major factor behind the continued growth of custom systems in the PC hardware market.

A trend toward white-box VARs building their own custom notebooks also may be developing. In December, for example, 11 percent of white-box VARs said they build their own systems exclusively, and another 26 percent said they use a hybrid model--building their own systems in some cases and outsourcing construction to system builders in other cases. In October, those figures were 10 percent and 18 percent, respectively. However, most solution providers operating in the custom notebook market still rely exclusively on outsourcing construction to system builders.

WHITE BOXES:

Build Or Buy?

\

Percentage of custom-system VARs citing each choice

DESKTOPS
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
OCT. 2004
Build My Own
29%
29%
25%
Buy Already Assembled
31
30
35
Do Both
40
41
40
NOTEBOOKS
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
OCT. 2004
Build My Own
11%
12%
10%
Buy Already Assembled
63
72
72
Do Both
26
16
18
SERVERS
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
OCT. 2004
Build My Own
24%
25%
24%
Buy Already Assembled
43
38
44
Do Both
33
37
32

COMPONENT AVAILABILITY

\

Percentage of custom-systems VARs citing each level of availability

MICROPROCESSORS
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
DEC. 2003
Severe Shortages
7%
8%
12%
Moderate Shortages
12
15
14
Few/No Supply Problems
81
77
74
MOTHERBOARDS
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
DEC. 2003
Severe Shortages
5%
10%
7%
Moderate Shortages
13
10
12
Few/No Supply Problems
82
80
81
MEMORY
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
DEC. 2003
Severe Shortages
5%
6%
7%
Moderate Shortages
14
12
7
Few/No Supply Problems
81
82
84
HARD DRIVES
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
DEC. 2003
Severe Shortages
1%
5%
2%
Moderate Shortages
14
5
14
Few/No Supply Problems
85
90
84
LCDs
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
OCT. 2004
Severe Shortages
6%
4%
10%
Moderate Shortages
16
18
19
Few/No Supply Problems
78
78
71
VIDEO GRAPHICS CARDS
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
OCT. 2004
Severe Shortages
5%
7%
5%
Moderate Shortages
11
11
12
Few/No Supply Problems
84
82
83
NETWORK INTERFACE CARDS
DEC. 2004
NOV. 2004
OCT. 2004
Severe Shortages
2%
4%
5%
Moderate Shortages
9
7
8
Few/No Supply Problems
89
89
87