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Hosting Industry Perspectives: Issues, Trends, and Opportunities Melanie A. Posey Research Director, IDC May 9, 2007

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Agenda• Service Provider Landscape, 2007

• Forecast and Market Segmentation Update

• The Demand Side: What Do Businesses Want?

• The Supply Side: What Works?

• Q&A

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Service Provider Landscape, 2007

IT Services/Systems Integrators

Pure-plays/MSPs

Application AggregatorsNetwork Operators

SMB Hosters

Colocation Providers

Diversity of Vendors, Diversity of Value Propositions

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Hosting Offer Landscape, 2007

Application Hosting

Infrastructure-as-a-Service

Online Business Enablement

IT Outsourcing/ Consolidation

SaaS-enablement

Hosted Applications

Service Providers’ Dilemma: Is What You’re Selling What Customers Need (or Think They Need)?

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Market Highlights Increasing enterprise willingness to outsource hosting/management

of infrastructure for both public-facing Web sites and internal enterprise applications and platforms

Growth in small businesses Web site implementation and evolution of shared/mass market hosting into comprehensive online business solutions

Demand for content, particularly Web 2.0-type applications, is fueling interest in dynamic hosting and networking solutions to improve performance and reliability.

The return of colocation: increased power/cooling requirements of next-generation architectures are generating new enterprise interest in off-site solutions. Supply constraints in key metro markets result in increased service provider pricing power.

Utility/Virtualization computing: customer interest and adoption is expanding, but service provider delivery and pricing models are still evolving

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U.S. Hosting Services Market Sizing

Revenue by Service Type, 2006

Dedicated Hosting

5%

Shared & Virtual Private

Server20%

Colocation17%

Complex Managed Hosting

58%

Revenue by Service Type, 2011

Colocation14%

Shared & Virtual Private

Server15%

Dedicated Hosting

4%Complex Managed Hosting

67%

Source: IDC, 2007

Total Market: $8.2 billion Total Market: $16.4 billion

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Outsourced Hosting

59% 20% 15% 6%

55% 24% 18% 4%

55% 20% 17% 8%

45% 28% 25% 3%

0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

<100 employees

100 to 999employees

1,000 to 9,999employees

10K+ employees

In-house Fully outsourced Partially outsourced Don’t know/Refused

Source: IDC Hosting Services Survey, 2007

• Drivers include interest in flexible service options, data center power/cooling requirements, networking needs, and utility/virtualization

• Overall adoption of outsourced hosting has remained constant over past 2-3 years, but companies that do outsource are shifting more and more responsibility to service providers

• Among small businesses, some of the in-house hosting segment is actually leveraging DIY tools and free/low-priced hosting from online service aggregators

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Farming it Out: Outsourcing Decision Factors

48%

58%

59%

64%

66%

66%

67%

72%

0% 20% 40% 60% 80%

Performance and scalability

Improved backup/redundancy capabilities

Cost savings

Improved security

Facilitate technology upgrades/migrations

Time-to-market/speed of implementation

Lack of internal skills and/or resources

More efficient way to meet regulatorycompliance mandates

Decision Factors for Outsourced Hosting

• The largest businesses surveyed (>10K employees) cited security and regulatory compliance as the Top 2 decision factors. In prior years, the key issue was cost savings

• Performance improvements and skills augmentation are key decision factors for smaller companies.

• Smaller companies are also more influenced by the cost savings aspect of outsourced hosting

Source: IDC Hosting Services Survey, 2007

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10%

59%

61%

67%

69%

74%

77%

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80%

Lack of cost savings

Sufficient in-housetechnical skills

Security

Maintain control

Lack of flexibility

Regulatorycompliance concerns

Other

Inhibitors to Outsourced Hosting

Why Aren't They Outsourcing?Why Aren't They Outsourcing?

• Lack of cost savings emerged as a more important outsourcing inhibitor in 2007 than in previous years’ surveys

• The largest businesses surveyed are most concerned about retaining control of their infrastructure and believe that the security of the infrastructure and applications is best handled in-house

• Smaller companies are most confident of their ability to handle Web infrastructure in-house

Source: IDC Hosting Services Survey, 2007

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Service Provider Selection: Who Gets The Call?

Other3%

Don't know3%

Pure-play hoster7%

Web designer16%

Application services/mgmt.

provider13%

Shared/dedicated hosting provider

10%

Telecom provider18%

ITO/SI22%

Web services/software

company 8%

• IT outsourcers/systems integrators are well represented among larger companies, especially the 10K+ employees segment

• However, telecom carriers are also key service providers across the market, including large enterprises

• Position of ITOs/SIs, telecom carriers, application management providers’ is partly a function of how large enterprises buy hosting:

Nearly 50% of large enterprises procure hosting as part of a larger network or IT outsourcing engagement

Source: IDC Hosting Services Survey, 2007

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What Else Are Hosting Customers Buying?

8% 5%

29% 30%

30% 32%

30% 32%

31% 37%

34% 41%

34% 29%

37% 35%

39% 31%

44% 30%

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80%

None of the above

Desktop management/help desk services

SaaS-based business apps

Enterprise application management

WAN/data networking services

Disaster recovery/business continuity

IT outsourcing

Hosted email/messaging

Storage

Network security

Other Services Purchased from Current Hosting Provider

Source: IDC Hosting Services Survey, 2007

• Disaster recovery/business continuity is a key growth area, especially in the small business segment

• Hosted email, already the primary hosting add-on for SMBs, is set to pick up steam among large enterprises

• Large enterprises indicate continued interest in bundled hosting, networking, and IT outsourcing services, underscoring the central role of hosting in enterprise business processes

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Hosting Spending, 2007• <100 employees

Average: $1,900/month

Median: $630/month

• 100-999 employees

Average: $10,000/month

Median: $1,150/month

• 1,000-9,999 employees

Average: $16,100/month

Median: $6,400/month

• >10,000 employees

Average: $35,000/month

Median: $22,100/month6%

11%

20%

20%

13%

12%

6%

11%

0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25%

Don't know/Refused

Less than $100

$100 to $999

$1,000 to $4,999

$5,000 to $9,999

$10,000 to $24,999

$25,000 to $49,999

$50,000 or more

Monthly Spending on Web Site/Applications Infrastructure

Source: IDC Hosting Services Survey, 2007

Modest year-over-year growth in adoption of outsourced hosting, but healthy year-over-year spending growth highlights the importance of upselling/cross-selling and providers’ ability to position hosting as the foundation for convergence, SaaS, and other key IT transformation initiatives.

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New era of business critical systems New business trends

New usages New consumption models New environment

New era of business critical systems Real-time, network-centric IT applications “Anywhere, anytime, always”-enabled business processes Business-criticality as a key driver: reliability, availability, security

Enabled by technology innovations▪ Content delivery networks▪ Application optimization/acceleration▪ Virtualization▪ Broadband▪ IP Convergence▪ Mobility

Hosting as the foundation

Customers

Employees

Partners

Suppliers

Hosting

Storage

CDN

SOAApps.

Security

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What Works? Levers of Differentiation• Build a better value proposition: hosting as a means toward an end…

Dynamic, flexible IT infrastructure Functional software apps (your own or someone else’s) Community Advertising

• Automated service delivery and process development Repeatable solutions or “factory” infrastructure Certified libraries of hardware, software and applications Portals for customer self-management of on-demand functionality

• Integrate virtualization and service-oriented architectures into your own business model: creation of infrastructure-based “aggregation ecosystems” with services laid on top of utility platforms or plugged in from the side (partner-developed services)

• SaaS-enablement: But be clear on the hosting provider’s role – is the hoster provider the mall, the mall’s anchor tenant or both?

• Hosted applications: must be more than “software-as-a-service” -- the functionality must solve a key business problem

The differentiation dilemma: no one wants to be “just” a hoster but a clear, sustainable value proposition means service providers must be careful and not overreach