About half of the respondents at the Interop New York show held
mid-September 2008, reported that their budgets for security and
network performance management are slated for increases.
The current economic turmoil and the ongoing slowing of the overall
U.S. economy aren't likely to slow spending for network management,
according to a survey of attendees at Interop New York.
IT professionals polled by NetQoS said overwhelmingly that they
expect their network management budgets will either increase or
remain flat next year. Only 15% of the more than 100 attendees
questioned said they expect their network management budgets will
decrease.
Calling the performance aspects of network performance
"recession-proof," Steve Harriman, senior VP of marketing at
NetQoS, was satisfied with the poll's results.
"While network security is always a concern, our customers tell us
their fault and availability issues have largely been solved,"
Harriman said in a statement. "Instead, smart organizations focus
on network and application performance management to understand how
well they are delivering services and whether changes such as
adding bandwidth or deploying WAN optimization technologies are
worth the investment."
About half of the respondents reported that their budgets for
security and network performance management are slated for
increases, while overall IT infrastructure and management software
budgets are likely to remain stationary next year.
Virtualization and wireless LAN/WAN are areas the Interop attendees
have earmarked for spending increases, the NetQoS survey revealed,
while spending will remain static on WAN optimization, unified
communications, change management, and managed services.
NetQoS said the surveyed companies represent a cross-section of
industries that include financial services, government, media,
professional services, manufacturing, retail, telecommunications,
and technology sectors.