>> Announcer: From theCUBE
studios in Palo Alto in Boston, connecting with thought
leaders all around the world, this is a CUBE Conversation. >> Hello everybody, welcome to this special CUBE Conversation. You know, as the COVID-19
pandemic grips the world, our friends at Enterprise
Technology Research have been hard at work to
really try to understand and quantify the impact on IT spending, and with me is Sagar Kadakia, who is the director of research at ETR. Sagar, great to see you
again, thanks for coming on. >> Great to see you too, Dave, yeah, great to see you, Dave, thank you so much for having me on. >> So you guys just
dropped your first look at the latest survey, and you specifically went out and asked about the impact
of coronavirus on spending. Can you share with our audience your working thesis? >> Yeah, no problem. And just to give some context, there was so much internal interest, so much interest from clients, not to just understand
how many organizations were being impacted,
but what are going to be the budget impacts on 2020,
when you think about IT, and so that's really how we
structured the drill down, that, and really getting to the bottom of why are these budgets changing.
And so our thesis right
now and what we're seeing based on the data is that
budgets have come down to about 0% or flat, for 2020. I think coming into the year,
Incentis was right around 4%, so you've seen a retraction from that, and if the environment
continues to go south, if we continue to see actions taken at the federal and state level, where more people are
going to be quarantined, working from home, I
think technology spend will inevitably continue to come down.
But there is some positives
that we are seeing, but right now we're right around 0%. >> And we should explain, so this is, currently a little over 1000 respondents, and you'll continue to collect data for the next several days,
or even weeks, correct? >> That's right, exactly,
so we launched a survey on Wednesday, and right now
we've got about 1100 CIOs, IT executives, it's a
really global sample, the goal was, across different job titles, across different regions,
across different verticals, ones that are being
impacted significantly, ones that are being impacted less. Let's try to gauge
overall what's going on, with IT budgets, and why people are making the decisions they are making right now. And so that was really
the focus of this study. >> Okay, so there's obviously
some negatives in the data, and there's a high degree of uncertainty, but there are some
bright spots that we see, particularly the shift to work from home, and I want to ask you about a chart that you guys put out.
It showed a large portion of the survey, about 40% of the respondents, indicated really no impact to spending, and another, 20% are actually
accelerating their spend, as a result of COVID-19, can
you add some color to that? >> Yeah, I think the positive spend, or the no change in spend,
I think that is what a lot of the market right now is missing, and I haven't seen a
lot of research on that, 'cause no one else has
really been able to quantify how budgets are changing, and so, as you noted, we're actually seeing people accelerate spend because of COVID-19, and the reason is, they're trying to avoid a catastrophe in productivity. They are ramping up all this
work from home infrastructure, not just collaboration tools,
virtualization infrastructure, increasing VPN networking bandwidth, mobile devices, laptops,
security, desktop support, right? You're a Fortune 500 organization, and you have 40, 50, 60,000 employees working from home all of a sudden, you have to be able to
support those employees, and as a result, you're actually seeing a large number of organizations
accelerating spend, and even the ones that are being hurt by the broken supply chains,
the demand coming down, they're seeing some of
their spend acceleration being offset by spending a little bit more on what we're calling this
work from home infrastructure.
>> Yeah, so in the chart you put out, there's a lot of red, but there's
also quite a bit of green, and then a big midpoint of no change. The midpoint average is a negative 3.8%, can you explain what that means, how we should interpret that? >> Yeah, I think the easiest
way I think about it is, consensus expectations
coming into the year were that there was going
to be a growth of roughly 4% in global IT spend. What we're seeing at the
midpoint average right now is roughly a 4% pullback,
and so that's how we're getting back to effectively flat, or 0% growth, and I think
a lot of organizations, a lot of clients that
we've been talking to, their expectations were, it
was going to be a lot worse, just if you're following
what's going on in the news, the markets and stuff like
that, and rightfully so. But I think a lot of
people are missing the fact that there is some of this
offset that is occurring from people who are not
changing their spend, because even though on one side they are reducing IT budgets, and they're having to accelerate their work from home infrastructure, and of course, the bucket
of organizations where, "Look, I'm not being as impacted "by the broken supply
chains or the demand, "but because I have so many
employees working from home, "I need to be able to allow
them to be productive." >> Sagar, you know, we've been working with ETR now for the better
part of six or seven months, and what I look for in the data is I try to identify
some of the macro trends that I see when we talk to theCUBE guests, and try to see if your data confirms that, and the other data point you put out was anticipated IT budget growth rate, and this chart to me was amazing, because it started in early to mid March, early March 12th, sort
of the starting point, and then you can see the
sentiment that just declines, to almost exactly the way in which, just daily, you saw coronavirus news just really impact the markets, and so, can you just explain
what you're seeing here in terms of the growth
rate of that IT spend, in terms of how people were responding, over the course of March? >> Yeah, one of the
things we knew going into, before we launched this drill down was, this is going to be a
very dynamic environment.
Even before we launched
the study last Wednesday, every single day another shoe is dropping in terms of government
actions being taken, what people were doing, and so
we made the decision up front that when we launch this drill down, we need to be able to
track the daily impact over the next three to four weeks, because we don't frankly know
how it's going to change, and so in that chart,
what you're seeing is, when we launched the
survey just last Wednesday, you did see a little bit of a retraction, I think maybe five or 600 CIOs had taken just in the first day or so, you saw about a 2% retraction
in annual budget growth, and just over a few days,
by last Thursday, Friday, where they really, everyone
was working from home, they put a lot of different
mandates in place, again, at the state and federal level.
You can see that was
dropping almost daily, and so I think our thesis again is, right now we're at 0%,
and again, some of that, the reason we're not more negative is because there is some offset occurring from the rampant work
from home infrastructure, but ultimately if the
environment continues to sour, we expect growth rates
to continue coming down, and ultimately to be a decline
in spend versus last year. >> And you made the point that
is somewhat counterintuitive, but like you said before, I've not seen any other research on this, certainly not as fresh as the ETR data, the other thing that I really
like about your data set is that you can drill into the industries and try to identify what's
going on within sectors, within industries,
certainly you can drill down with the specific vendors
within those industries, but what are you seeing
in terms of industries that are being affected,
obviously those that are exposed to the supply chain are susceptible, but can you share with our audience what your findings are there? >> Yeah, industrials,
materials, manufacturing, retail, consumer, healthcare, pharma, those are the verticals from
a supply chain perspective that are indicating elevated levels of broken supply chains, and
what's actually interesting is we, in this survey we actually asked, not only whether your supply
chains were broken today, but do you anticipate
continuing experiencing broken supply chains in
three months from now, and those percentages were up, and I think that really tells us that this is not a one or
two month type of recovery, we're going to see supply chains and demand continuing to be broken, continuing to come down over
the next three, four months, that, I think, is probably
one of the biggest takeaways from the drill down study.
>> Now, one of the things that struck me, and if you think about
the post-9/11 world, we've seen permanent
changes as a result of 9/11, and many people are thinking that COVID-19 will also cause some permanent changes. Perhaps people find that work from home actually drives some additional benefits, and it really reframes their thinking. Do you have any thoughts on that? >> I think based on the data
that we're seeing so far, a lot of CIOs did indicate, I think it was right
around 70% of the 1000 CIOs that took the survey, did indicate that the budget changes that they indicated were going to be temporary, and I think that's actually
a pretty positive takeaway. Again, I think everything
is very dynamic right now. Organizations are scaling their work from home infrastructure, that is priority number one, that's taking away from other IT projects, so we do expect emerging
and next-generation vendors to get impacted, we're moving towards a keep the lights on strategy right now.
And so when we look at it, I think, the changes that are
being made are temporary, but if things continue to worsen, I think you may see
organizations start going into those contingency plans and making some of these budget reductions permanent, so yes, there are some parallels to 9/11, but this one, we don't quite know how things are going to end up, because every week, we
find something different out in the news, we don't
really know how this virus is going to impact us moving forward, and there's a lot of lack of testing and things of that nature, so I think in the next few weeks, we should get a better
idea of whether or not these budget reductions are
going to become permanent, more so than we're seeing right now.
>> Yeah, I think you're right, I mean there is, the
watch word is uncertainty, which makes it all that
much more important that you keep a pulse on the market, and thank goodness you
guys are doing that. I'm interested in, if you have any data on the focus on productivity, how organizations are finding
their ability to adapt, and really of course they want
to drive that productivity, but are they able to scale it? >> I think that's one
of the other big issues that the media hasn't addressed yet.
Imagine again, you're a Fortune 100, Fortune 500 organization, you're not used to having 50, 60, 100,000 employees working from home. Forget the infrastructure component, just the productivity, the collaboration, a lot of the commentary
that we got from CIOs was, "We're not ready to scale an
entire workforce from home." You're seeing a lot of IT companies that rely on very large
conferences to generate revenue, that rely on client meetings
to generate revenue. You're seeing a lot of business
trips getting canceled, I think something around
70 or 80% of organizations, out of 1000 indicated that they are canceling business trips, so the productivity is coming down, because organizations
are just not capable, many of them, of scaling a work from home type of infrastructure. And so, you are going to
see productivity come down, and I think that probably
has the most relevant impact when you think about GDP growth, right? Organizations are coming
forward and saying "We're not going to be able
to produce or service as much, "and we're not going
to be able to prospect, "or maintain client relationships as much, "because of travel." And so I think those are going
to be some of the bigger impacts that we end up seeing.
Some business can work from home, and look, if you're in manufacturing, or you have employees that work on a rig, there's no work from home option for that, and so, I think in the next few months we are going to start seeing some of the declines on those ends. >> You noted in your analysis that things would likely worsen over
the next three months, that's not surprising.
Financial experts, we're
seeing a variety of scenarios, some are saying it's a
self-fulfilling recession, and others are actually
calling for V-shaped recovery, but nobody really knows,
and so just to make sure we understand ETR's thinking, you're calling right now for
0% IT budget growth this year, declines offset by some of the
investment in work from home, that's kind of the summary
on the outlook today, and we know that can change.
>> That's right, and I think
it's important to state the work from home infrastructure, it is not a one for one
offset on IT budget declines. That rate is definitely going down faster, which is why we went from 4% to what we're forecasting now at 0%. If things continue to worsen, which based on the data that we collected, the next three months, we don't see a recovery
in the next three months, because more organizations indicated, more broken supply chains, less demand on the consumer
or the business side, and so it's tough to say
what's going to happen six to 12 months from now, but at the very least, we do
know for the next three months, things are going to continue worsening, and if we continue taking
very strict actions just across the board, we
would expect that 0% number to go into a decline, and so that's really what we're looking for
now, is because this model is dynamic, because we do continue, we do want to continue polling individuals for the next four to six to eight weeks, as to how their budgets are changing, we should have a better idea,
'cause I think right now, everyone's watching, are
we going back to work in the next week or two, or
are we working from home, and the longer we are quarantined, the less meetings, the less
that we're getting on flights, the more that's going to add to technology spend coming down, and eventually, as I mentioned earlier, organizations, they're going
to go into contingency plans, those temporary changes that
they're making right now, those are going to
become permanent changes, because now they're going to have issues where they're just not
generating enough revenue because of productivity,
there's a downturn, layoffs, and then you
kind of see everything spiral out of control.
>> I meant to ask you, when you
talked about infrastructure, and we were talking about work from home, cybersecurity was another area that is showing some momentum, is that because people
are trying to adjust their work from home
infrastructure and secure that? >> That's exactly it. You're an organization, let's say again, same example, Fortune 100,
Fortune 500 organization. The number of endpoints you now have, all these employees are
accessing data, emails, applications from home, mobile
devices, laptops, right? iPads, things that they may
have not used historically, and so yes, organizations
are more exposed, and I think a lot of
organizations are worried about employees working from home, just from a security perspective, so you are going to see, and
we're already seeing this in the data as we're looking
at some individual companies and things of that nature,
endpoints, access points, those areas are critical,
and you are going to see more spend in those areas, no question.
>> So let's share with our
audience what they can expect in the coming weeks and months, so folks, just so you understand,
so ETR has a dataset based on a panel of about
4500 CIOs and IT buyers, about 1000, more than
1000 every quarter answer, ETR, very consistent survey, so you can do time series analysis, and what happens is, ETR
clients get access to the data, early access, and then
ETR drops a webcast, each quarter, where it updates its clients on the results. So where are we at in that process, you guys go into a
self-imposed quiet period, and then you release to the markets, can you explain that a little bit, and what we can expect over
the next couple of weeks. >> Yeah, sure, so we launched
a survey last Wednesday, we're already at about 1100
CIOs and IT executives.
Now it's interesting, we're actually doing
this COVID drill down, as well as our technology
spending intention survey. That survey captures spending
intent on about 350 vendors across about 28 or 29
different technology sectors, so security, networking, storage. So, all that data is coming through, in the next few days we're
actually going to release what we call thoughts in the field. It's kind of short narratives,
think like a sentence or two, on each vendor, how they're trending, and what we're doing uniquely this time is stating which vendors
are being impacted the most positively and negatively, by COVID-19, and so expect
that in the next few days, and then around, probably
around April first or so, we will close the survey, again, we're expecting like you said 13, 14, 1500 CIOs, IT executives globally, to take the survey.
We'll really go into the
trenches at that point, the entire team, we'll spend a solid week going through all the
data, and then mid-April, before companies, or a
large number of companies start reporting on the IT side, we will release a large
amount of research, we'll have some final COVID takeaways, though that will continue being dynamic for the next three to six months, but at least we'll try
to take a balance sheet type of look at it and say
"Look, here's where we are, "here's where the impact is,
whether we're at a decline "or growth or whatever it is," so we'll have a better picture in a few weeks on that as well, and then we'll really be able to dive into the sectors and vendors that we think are best
positioned for the rest of 2020.
>> Yeah, we're barely
scratching the surface here, as I said, this is a first look. So check out, it's ETR.plus
is where you can get updates on what's going on here, and we'll obviously keep
you updated as well, Sagar, thanks so much
for coming on theCUBE and sharing this very
important information. >> Yeah, thanks Dave, I really
appreciate having me on. >> All right, stay safe my
friend, we'll talk to you, and thank you for watching everybody. This is Dave Vellante for theCUBE, and we will see you next time. (calm music).
