
By Steve Ranger
Published: Thursday 06 March 2008
Email story to a Friend | Report Abuse
Name
Byron Graham
Location
U.K, USA, SA
Occupation
SAAS Wholesaler
Comment
Well Steve, I agree.
Recently I came across an interesting article that states 62 per cent of IT decision makers to increase security spending this year – That money has to come from somewhere & I don’t believe most of it will go straight into their pockets. Those however who do utilise that money in an innovative way and can justify a return – will most likely reap the benefits.
Another article I came across mentioned that many in the know will seriously be considering an in-depth look at SAAS solutions for the benefits they bring to table like: Lower admin overhead, Increased performance, gain a knowledgeable partner, empowering IT dept to better focus on tasks relating to companies direction ect.
So to conclude I believe the IT sector will triumph as it main function is just making life that much easier, but it’s nothing without the people behind IT.
Byron Graham
Google/Postini, SAAS Wholesaler
These days more and more IT departments have in pl...
Serge Thorn
Well Steve, I agree.
Recently I came across an ...
Byron Graham
Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.
Data Protection Strategies: Deduplication for More Efficient Backups
Dell PowerVault DL2100 Powered by CommVault - Spec Sheet
True Convergence Demands a Communication Service Provider that Embraces a Customer-Centric...
Learn how Performance Metrics for Telcomm Expense Management Drive new ROIs and SLAs
Copyright © 2008 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved. Top of page
The Round-Up The Weekly Round-Up: 03.12.09 'Ere guv, you'll never guess who I had in the back of my cab the other day…'
Stuart Roberts Shared services - how to get it right in your business Recession boosts uptake