The Cloud Market Experiences a Boom Among an Unlikely Source: Late Adopters

NEW YORK, NY--(Marketwired - January 30, 2017) - Few could have predicted how quickly the cloud market has evolved over the last six years. In a 2011 report, Bain & Company found that companies selling cloud-based products and services were struggling to define how they would make money. Today, the firm estimates that revenues for public and private cloud hardware, software and services amount to $180 billion, or 16 percent of the $1.1 trillion enterprise IT industry. The market, once driven by small start-ups and mid-size businesses, is now dominated by late adopters, who make up the fastest and largest growing segment of cloud consumers. This is according to the 2017 version of Bain's research, The Changing Faces of the Cloud.

According to Bain, cloud growth has been driven in large part by the changing profile of the cloud buyer, which has significant implications for technology vendors. An earlier Bain survey of 500 North American CIOs and other IT decision makers identifies five clusters of companies with common approaches to cloud computing. They include: 1) Transformational; 2) Heterogeneous; 3) Safety Conscious; 4) Price-Conscious; and 5) Slow and Steady. Even as their behaviors evolve, these clusters continue to be an accurate and useful way of understanding how customers are adopting the cloud.

"Early adopters that fueled the first waves of cloud adoption are being joined and overtaken by larger and more mainstream customers that, until recently, had taken a wait-and-see approach," said Mark Brinda, a partner in Bain's global Technology Practice. "As a result, executives need to understand the transformation that the cloud market is going through -- and make the necessary changes to their offerings and go-to-market and operating models to successfully serve the customers coming off the sidelines."

Cloud "laggards" are getting in the game
In the past five years, as cloud offerings have matured and the number of customer successes grows, slow-and-steady customers -- those that Bain defines as interested in the benefits of cloud computing but very cautious about the risks -- have gone from the smallest to the fastest-growing -- and potentially largest -- segment. In 2011, slow-and-steady customers had less than 1 percent of their applications, on average, in the cloud. In 2013, that number was at just 4 percent, but by 2015, this segment hit an inflection point and 16 percent of applications were in the cloud. That number is expected to reach 30 percent by 2018.

While this cluster demonstrates a significantly higher preference for private cloud solutions, they are not waiting for compelling offers from legacy providers to begin migrating. Instead, they are branching out beyond the major cloud providers, such as IBM and Microsoft, and moving to public cloud players and smaller, newer vendors.