|
Description:

|
Today's services marketers are in a unique position: in an environment
characterized by intense competition for skeptical and hard-to-reach
buyers, marketing has become the essential engine spurring growth and
profitability. Sales can no longer carry most of that responsibility.
Yet despite the opportunity—and need—to make a significant
impact, marketers' hands are often tied due to flat or declining budgets.
Business leaders know that strategic marketing is critical to survival
in a maturing industry, but these same executives are asking marketers
to deliver more with less. This leaves today's marketers in a difficult
bind: they must build a strategic platform for the company's long-term
success while at the same time delivering tactical programs that drive
short-term results.
Services Marketing Budgets and Benchmarks: 2005 Metrics, Trends,
and Challenges delivers a detailed look at the tradeoffs technology
services and solutions marketers are making as they look for balance
between their long- and short-term objectives. It provides data on
2005 services marketing budgets, budget allocations, and marketing
priorities from a range of companies across the technology and consulting
industries.
Topics covered in the report include:
- Services marketing budget size and growth rates
- Services marketing budget allocations
- corporate vs. field marketing
- personnel vs. nonperonnel
- investment by category
- investment in thought leadership
- Marcom budget allocation
- Services growth rates and margin trends
- Services revenue and profitability
- Solutions marketing
- Top services marketing challenges and priorities
Key trends highlighted in the report include:
- Projected services revenue growth for 2005 mirrors 2004 levels. North
American companies are more optimistic than Europeans.
- Services marketing budget growth is not keeping pace with revenue
growth; nevertheless, marketing budgets are holding steady as a percentage
of revenue.
- Services marketers are allocating proportionally more of their budgets
to offering development/management, marketing communications, and sales
support.
- The marketing communications mix is becoming more balanced. Marketers
are diverting funds away from advertising and collateral and spending
more on public relations, analyst relations, and interactive marketing.
- Solutions revenue is increasing, accounting for nearly half the revenue
at participating companies. Designated solutions marketing headcount
is on the rise.
Companies covered in the study include:
Agilent Technologies, Alfa Wassermann Diagnostic Technologies, Alliance
Consulting, Ariba, BearingPoint, Capgemini, Cisco Systems, Cognos, Inc.,
DecisionOne, Dimension Data, EDS, Equant, Getronics, Hitachi Consulting,
IBM, Intergraph Solutions Group, Juniper Networks, Inc., Lucent Technologies,
Inc., Microsoft, NextiraOne, Nokia, Patni Computers Ltd., SAP, Siemens
Communications, SITA, Sun Microsystems, Symantec, and VEGA Group PLC.
Study Methodology
In January and February 2005, ITSMA used a Web-based survey to gather
data from 28 companies about services marketing budgets, services growth
and margins, and top marketing challenges. ITSMA analyzed this study
data in three ways:
- The data set as a whole
- Company type—primarily services or product and services
- Company size—less than $500 million or more than $500 million
in annual services revenue
Respondent Demographics
| Industry |
|
Professional services firms
|
32% |
Network systems vendors
|
29% |
Software vendors
|
21% |
Computer and other systems vendors
|
11% |
| Other |
7% |

|