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In a highly undifferentiated market, professional services providers
invest in their brands and craft marketing campaigns to stake out areas
of uniqueness. Leaders find ways to break through the noise of sound-alike
value propositions. Other firms, recognizing some of these same opportunities,
follow and thereby add even more competitive pressure to differentiate.
All firms’ innovators and adapters require detailed knowledge of
buyer needs, decision influencers, and purchase criteria as well as an
understanding of how buyers perceive their companies in relation to key
competitors.
This report provides critical insight into the prevailing buying reality
for IT professional services and solutions providers, analyzed by respondent
perspective, vertical industry, and size of organization. By breaking new
ground, pushing the envelope, or exceeding expectations, IT professional
services leaders stake their ground in ways that are reinforced by perceptions
of their brands and market positioning. Challengers are ever present.
Study Scope
ITSMA’s Leaders and Contenders: 2006 Professional Services
and Solutions Brand Tracking Study focuses on providers of IT professional
services and solutions. This study delivers the data study sponsors
need to validate internal assumptions, improve marketing strategies
and tactics, and hone their brand communication. Included are new data
and analyses on key market indicators and topics, such as:
- Market knowledge. Who are the leaders and followers? Are providers
recognized for their services capabilities? Are they making credible
claims?
- Brand equity. How familiar are buyers with each firms' brand?
Who would they call first? Are their impressions favorable?
- Provider preference. To which firms do clients turn first?
Are they familiar with others? Can firms leverage positive brand equity,
or do they carry baggage?
- Services decision influences. When there are a number of qualified
providers, what breaks the deadlock?
- Competitive differentiation. Is what’s different really
different? Does it really matter?
- Alternative service delivery models. Does offshore services
provision matter in a global economy? Are attitudes changing?
- Report card. Are professional services firms meeting expectations?
Which ones are hitting home runs?

Study Methodology
ITSMA recruited sponsors for its Leaders and Contenders: 2006 Professional
Services and Solutions Brand Tracking Study in early 2006. Primary
sponsors of the study included BearingPoint and SAP. Cognizant, EDS,
and Hitachi Consulting joined as secondary sponsors.
ITSMA interviewed, by telephone, 400 U.S.-based senior IT and business
decision makers (CXOs, vice presidents, and directors). The sample includes
two types of professional services buyer (information technology executives/CIOs
and business executives) and spans eight industry segments (communications,
financial services, healthcare payer, life sciences, manufacturing, public
sector, retail trade, and transportation). Organizations eligible to
participate in the study reported annual revenue or operating budget
of $200 million or greater. Participants qualified for inclusion based
on their decision-making authority. ITSMA donated money to two charities
in return for participants’ contribution to the study.
The 2006 edition of this survey represents the latest in nearly a decade
of ITSMA’s multiclient brand tracking research focused on the IT
professional services market.

Respondent Characteristics
ITSMA recruited 400 senior-level respondents in midmarket and large
organizations and further qualified them based on their roles in selecting
IT professional services and solutions firms. We imposed quotas to distribute
representation across eight vertical industries and two organizational
perspectives.
Figure 2.1 Respondent Title

Source: ITSMA, Leaders and Contenders: 2006 Professional Services
and Solutions Brand Tracking Study
Figure 2.2 Respondent Role in Purchasing IT Professional Services

Source: ITSMA, Leaders and Contenders: 2006 Professional Services
and Solutions Brand Tracking Study
Figure 2.3 Respondent Perspective

Source: ITSMA, Leaders and Contenders: 2006 Professional Services
and Solutions Brand Tracking Study
Figure 2.4 Respondent Industry Group

Source: ITSMA, Leaders and Contenders: 2006 Professional Services
and Solutions Brand Tracking Study
Figure 2.6 Organization Size by Annual Revenue or Operating Budget

Source: ITSMA, Leaders and Contenders: 2006 Professional Services
and Solutions Brand Tracking Study

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