June 05, 2008 — CIO — The enthusiasm for and growth in the software-as-a-service (SaaS) market cannot be discounted. SaaS has become a viable and cost-effective (initially, at least) means of application delivery for the small, midsize and even large businesses.
A sampling of recent CIO headlines and article themes tells the tale: "Enterprises Adopt SaaS Aggressively"; "CIOs Embrace On-Demand Software. Really, They Do."; "SaaS CRM has gone mainstream"; and "On-Demand Software: SaaS Appeal." 数据挖掘研究院
And yet, according to Forrester Research survey data, not everyone has jumped on board the SaaS Train. (If you want a "cold SaaS shower," see "The Truth About Software as a Service.")
A late 2007 survey of North American and European software IT decision-makers found that just 16 percent of respondents said they were already using or currently piloting SaaS applications. Conversely, more than 80 percent were still on the sidelines—curious, for sure, but not yet completely sold or running SaaS apps right now. (Forty-six percent said they were interested in SaaS or planning to pilot; 37 percent said they were "not at all interested.") 数据挖掘实验室
So what's the holdup? "The SaaS market is still shaking out, marked by an abundance of startups, acquisitions and even some early examples of companies having to shut their doors," write Forrester analysts Liz Herbert and Bill Martorelli in the April 2008 "SaaS Clients Face Growing Complexity"

