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More Research Highlights
Research Highlights

Reports

Web Sites Targeting Small Businesses Gaining Prominence
The market for online business centers (OBCs) is sprouting as these Web sites implement new marketing strategies. OBCs - sites that offer targeted content, interactive features, software for rent, and online marketplaces - will become key channels for reaching small businesses. OBCs will spend millions over the next six months to promote themselves and will focus on offering more interactive features.

User Confusion Hampers Wireless Manufacturing
The use of wireless technology in manufacturing is on the upswing, bu
t confusion among users is hindering growth. Most users think that wireless technology can improve accuracy and cut costs in the manufacturing process, but are uncertain about how to justify investment in the technology. Wireless vendors should embark on a campaign to educate users about the benefits of wireless in the factory.

Large Firms Will Boost Internet Spending
Enterprises of over 1,000 employees are investing heavily in Internet infrastructure, though they are not necessarily selling their wares directly online. Large companies are seeking to bolster their offline resources and supply chains via the Web. By 2002, large firms will invest more than $84 billion, roughly 20 percent of their total technology spending, on Internet technology.

MP3 Flash Memory Demand Soars Past Expectations
The worldwide market for MP3 players in 1999 will reach 1.3 million units. The market for MP3 flash memory cards, the recording media for MP3 players, will reach 5.2 million units by the end of 1999. Though the United States is manufacturing the most MP3 units, South Korea is rapidly becoming an MP3 player-manufacturing powerhouse and is expected to export 300,000 units in 1999.

Mobility, Collaborative Apps Drive Mid-Sized Firms' Hardware Spending
Medium-sized companies will increase their computer hardware spending from $13 billion in 1998 to $17 billion in 2002. The average medium-sized business spends roughly $166,000 on computer hardware annually. Today medium-sized businesses are buying hardware to prepare for Y2K, provide laptops for mobile workers, and enable their technology infrastructure to support collaborative software.

Small Business Boasts Big Tech Market
Computer hardware and software vendors should not ignore small businesses in the US. These firms are not large in size, but they do spend money on computing infrastructure today and will continue to do so in the future. The key is to be creative about target marketing to this segment so they are informed and educated buyers.

Internet Sparks Small Business Networking Sales
The small business internetworking hardware market is expected to show substantial growth over the next few years, growing from over $8 billion to roughly $13 billion by 2002. The evolution of small business networks from non-existent a couple years ago to complex distributed computing environments is resulting is significant demand for network hardware in this market. Opportunities are present for vendors to capitalize on this trend, particularly if they are creative about approaching the small business market.

Internet Drives SOHO Technology Spending
With more than 7 million firms in 1998, the Small Office/Home Office (SOHO) market stands to represent substantial cash flow for technology vendors over the coming years. Despite their large numbers, Cahners In-Stat Group does not expect the SOHO market to emerge as significant buyers of technology as compared to the other commercial market segments, though this $39 billion opportunity is not to be ignored.

Top Tier ERP Vendors Think Smaller
Top tier Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) vendors have set their sites on small enterprises with under 500 employees, but their early efforts don't seem to have paid off. So they may have to look at their second-tier competitors to find a way to get into this market, a new research report from Cahners In-Stat says.

DTV Broadcasters Taxi To the Runway,
But Set Manufacturers Delay Takeoff

The first digital television broadcasts opened a new chapter in broadcast history last November, a positive sign for TV manufacturers who are looking for a way to shore up revenues in a market where unit prices are falling. But despite the optimism of the Consumer Electronics Manufacturers Association (CEMA), manufacturing history is not quite ready to be made, according to a research report from Cahners In-Stat Group.

Scaling China's
"Great Silicon Wall"

Tapping into the vast Chinese electronics market does come with conditions and definite external risks. The Cahners In-Stat Group report, Scaling China's "Great Silicon Wall," provides an in-depth analysis of the risk/ reward equation for chipmakers contemplating entrance into China. Gaining access to China's semiconductor market does not come cheap or with any solid assurances, but as this report demonstrates, chipmakers have thrown caution to the wind and the rush is on to conquer this uncharted frontier.

 

 

 

 


 

Cahners In-Stat Group
High Technology Market Research Covering:

box.gif (815 bytes) Consumer/ Convergence
box.gif (815 bytes) Networking
box.gif (815 bytes) Wireless
box.gif (815 bytes) Telecom
box.gif (815 bytes) Computing & Internet
box.gif (815 bytes) Markets & Opportunities
box.gif (815 bytes) Semiconductors

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