Author: Prashant Shukla

Driving Factors for IT Services Recovery in 2024: Insights from Everest Group’s Forces & Foresight™ Research | Blog

Our inaugural Forces & Foresight research uncovers three factors we predict will drive a gradual recovery in tech services this calendar year. Continue reading to understand the projected path for the IT services industry’s rebound and implications for providers.

Learn more about Forces & Foresight™.

After the global financial crisis in 2008 and the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the IT services industry took five to eight quarters to recover. Both recessions had specific catalysts, and the IT services growth rebound after each downturn was fueled by weak comparisons and a release of significant pent-up demand (as illustrated in Exhibit 1).

Let’s explore whether the current economic decline will follow a similar trajectory based on Forces & Foresight research that dives deep into comprehensive dynamics to understand the industry implications.

Forces Foresight Exhibit 1

Over the past year, the contrasts between past recessions and ongoing macro challenges have been well-researched and discussed. More importantly, the industry is now facing multiple forecasts – pulling in different directions – on how the broader macroeconomic outlook will impact IT services growth.

The following three factors are fueling our foresight:

  1. Stabilizing base

Despite the uncertainty that has impacted enterprise decision-making for the past several quarters, we now see signs of spending stability. The fundamental need to leverage technology for growth or cost is keeping enterprise IT budgets green.

Some examples of various factors that give us confidence the demand downtrend has at least stabilized include:

    • Enterprises: Everest Group’s Key Issues Study of enterprise priorities captured that over 60% of enterprises (from a sample of 200-plus) plan to increase technology budgets in 2024
    • IT Providers: A notable trend for technology platform players’ performance and outlook is that SaaS/PaaS players are not only reporting double-digit growth and new clients but also foresee growth continuing in 2024
    • Services: We see strong resilience for IT services spending in specific segments such as public sector, healthcare, and energy
  1. Fixing revenue leakage

Over several past quarters, service providers have reported contradictory numbers for revenue growth versus bookings (Exhibit 2).

Our research uncovered some key factors creating this dichotomy, including shifting profiles of existing deals to longer terms and lower annual contract values (ACVs), delayed/canceled commitments, and slow ramp-ups of large deals.

As a result, signings did not translate into revenue growth even after expected ramp-up periods. However, we see signs of stabilization in the latest quarter, especially for mid-tier players, and some stalled projects moving forward. This signals that the net negative effect is reversing and that net positive revenue contribution from bookings may begin.

Forces Forsigh Exhibit 2jpg

  1. Pockets of additional demand

We see some specific growth areas in 2024. Rising cybersecurity demand is promising (as is the case in challenging periods) and is seeing more takers, such as governments expanding cybersecurity budgets. Engineering, Research, and Development (ER&D) demand in asset-heavy industries like automotive is getting stronger as enterprises strategically invest in next-generation concepts to modernize, such as smart factories. Data and analytics will continue its growth trajectory, with the rise in Artificial Intelligence (AI) fueling more robust use cases.

Beyond these promising areas, we also see signs of a turnaround in segments and sub-segments that were hit hard in recent quarters. Prominent ones include investment banking and high-tech industries, and North America.

Note: We are not factoring in benefits from AI and generative AI (gen AI) in our foresight for 2024. While we strongly believe in the immense potential of gen AI, our research suggests that scaled adoption will still take time, and the effect on this year’s growth will not move the needle.

Implications for service providers

Despite the ongoing challenges, the industry has not slumped. The revenue declines seen in one to two quarters is better than several quarters in previous downturns (Exhibit 3). We predict pivotal growth soon.

Forces Foresight

However, given the “classical economics” nature of this downturn impacting IT services, we anticipate the industry’s recovery will be more gradual than previous event-based downturns, in contrast to the sharp recovery in the last two recessions. We expect a diverse mix of industry verticals and geographies to undergo various recovery cycles, making it an interesting and complex scenario.

The key for IT service providers lies in identifying early recovery pockets and attacking rather than being defensive and possibly investing in account management on late recovery cycle areas.

For more insights, supporting data, and trends on IT services growth, please read the report, Forces & Foresight Q1 2024.

Contact Prashant Shukla to learn more at [email protected].

Key Issues for 2023: Rise Above Economic Uncertainty and Succeed | Webinar

LIVE WEBINAR

Key Issues for 2023: Rise Above Economic Uncertainty and Succeed

As we look toward 2023, economic uncertainty is prime and center. Rising inflation, interest rate hikes, and GDP contraction – matched with low unemployment rates and high talent demand – have left business leaders unsure of what to expect and how to prepare for 2023.

Join Everest Group’s Key Issues 2023 webinar as our experts provide insights into the outlook of the global IT-BP industry and discuss major concerns, expectations, and key trends expected to amplify in 2023.

All the data is based on input from global leaders across enterprises, Global Business Services (GBS), and service providers.

Our speakers will discuss expectations for 2023, including:

  • The outlook for global services
  • Top business challenges and priorities
  • Changes in sourcing spend and service delivery costs
  • In-demand digital services and next-generation capabilities
  • The evolving strategy for talent, locations, and the workplace

Who should attend?

  • CIOs, CDOs, CTOs, CFOs, CPOs
  • Service providers
  • GBS / Shared services center heads
  • Global services leaders
  • Locations heads

The R-word and What It Means for IT Services Spending This Time | Blog

What factors make this economic downturn different, and is IT services spending recession-proof? Despite recessionary fears, digital transformation and post-pandemic demand will help maintain IT services growth with more cautious tech spend moving forward. Learn the three strategies service providers should take now to plan for the slide in this blog. 

By all accounts, it seems we are entering a cyclical phase of economic downturn. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) declined for the US, Italy, and Japan in the first quarter, while the UK, France, and Canada flatlined or deaccelerated meaningfully.

This has been visible a long way off, and the equity markets have adjusted their guidance for IT services stocks accordingly. However, we at Everest Group believe this is very different than past cyclical downturns.

To truly understand the nature of the impact on the IT services industry, we need to ask the following three questions:

  1. Is IT services spending truly discretionary?

Chart one tells us a few things:

  • During a downturn, IT services spending tends to follow a meaningful lag effect. Our channel checks reveal careful prioritization of fresh capital expenditure (CAPEX) items, but not cancellation of committed tech spend
  • Modern enterprises view technology and tech spend to transform their business and become more innovative and efficient. A downturn will sharpen the focus on pragmatic digitalization to create new revenue streams
  • A meaningful part of the inflationary pressures can be attributed to global fiscal expansion post-pandemic. This is not necessarily true for private businesses and tech spend. If anything, remnants of pent-up demand continue in the wake of pandemic-induced austerity

A combination of the second and third factors is leading to the divergence between the IT services and aggregated economic activity, as measured by the GDP.

Chart 1

Picture1 1

  1. How much has already been baked in?

Now, look at this second chart. Suffice to say that IT services stocks have taken a beating in 2022.

While some stock price erosion can be attributed to inflationary pressures leading to margin compression, a significant part is due to negative macro expectations.

Curiously, during the same period, consensus revenue estimates have continued to expand (Accenture, Cognizant, Infosys, Wipro, TCS), and book-to-bill ratios remain healthy (expanded Year-over-Year for Capgemini and IBM, with mild deceleration for TCS and Accenture).

Quite simply, this downturn was visible a mile off. All of us could see it, as could customers, economists, governments, central banks, and equity markets. And a little bit like seeing a slow train coming, we skipped the tracks and readjusted our expectations. Consequently, it’s unlikely we will see a trainwreck, but tech Return on Investment (RoI) will be increasingly scrutinized.

Chart 2

Picture2 1

  1. Are the usual lemons drying up?

Finally, we need to remember that the world is still coming out of COVID-19. Every enterprise made massive cost adjustments during the pandemic by automating routine tasks, moving to the cloud, and divesting non-core assets. In other words, many of the usual cost adjustment levers are already pre-adjusted, and one has to pause and ask – how much padding do we still have before we risk cutting too close to the bone?

What’s likely to happen – our prognosis

  • Yes, there will be a downturn in the IT services industry. But it is very unlikely to be severe. We forecast 6.7 % growth (organic, constant currency basis) as the base case for the year ending March 2023. This includes a set of very large supply side players with company-specific issues (e.g., Atos), while more resilient companies will comfortably beat the average. Irrespective, industry growth will be significantly above the pre-pandemic trendline. The reality is that we are in the midst of a decadal mega cycle of digital transformation, which will significantly counteract a slow-burning cyclical downturn
  • Enterprises will have to grow out of the recession through waste avoidance, innovation, and digitalization, and not through canceled tech spend
  • There will be limited manifestation of the usual downturn-linked opportunities (e.g., shared services divestments, vendor consolidation, etc.)

Three service provider strategies

Service providers will still need to readjust. Here are some recommended immediate steps to take:

  • Examine your portfolio: Not every industry and customer within the same industry will be impacted equally. Now is the time to critically examine your portfolio and evaluate every account. Ask yourself:
    • Which parts of my portfolio are critical to the customer’s business success? If they are not core, how can I gain share in business-critical categories?
    • Have parts of my portfolio already been adjusted for maximum efficiency during the pandemic? If not, what can I proactively do about this?
  • Focus on systems of growth: Systems of growth are digital platforms that help enterprises create new revenue streams and transform the customer experience. In a downturn where brute-force cost-cutting options are likely to be limited, having a robust strategy to help customers grow will be a true differentiator
  • Continue hiring: The talent market may move from “white hot” to “warm,” but the war for tech talent is not over by a long stretch. A temporary lull may represent a brilliant opportunity to attract and train differentiated talent. When the markets rebound, it will make a difference

What is your outlook for IT services spending? And how are you planning for the downturn? Please feel free to share your perspectives, email me at [email protected] or Contact Us.

To learn more about the increase and changing rates across the services industry, request a 30-minute briefing.

5 Success-driving Actions to Unlock BPS 4.0 Value | Webinar

On-demand WEBINAR

5 Success-driving Actions to Unlock BPS 4.0 Value

Access the on-demand webinar, which was delivered live on January 20, 2022.

Today’s rapidly changing business environment, influenced by economic, demographic, societal, and environmental forces, is causing enterprises to revisit their Business Process Services (BPS) model and strategy – making the role of BPS 4.0 crucial for success.

In this on-demand webinar, our experts will capture five success-driving imperative actions for enterprises that should be incorporated into their 2022 planning, and beyond.

Our experts address the following topics:

  • How can enterprises increase value from BPS initiatives?
  • What are the immediate opportunities vs. long term?
  • What do enterprises need to do internally to tap maximum value potential from next-generation BPS models?

Who should attend?

  • CEOs and CXOs
  • BPS strategy leads
  • BPS department leads
  • GBS/shared service leaders
  • Global sourcing mangers
  • Vendor managers
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