GIGJ.COM
welcome to my space
X
Search:  
Welcome to:gigj.com
NAVIGATION: Home >>
Top South African Companies Slow to Adopt E-Commerce
Published by: mike 2009-01-07
According to a report presented in Johannesburg on Tuesday by BMI-Techknowledge, large companies are dragging their feet in plans to commit to e-commerce.

The BMI-Techknowledge IT Top 200 Report revealed that while 98 percent of the top 200 IT companies in South Africa had Web sites, only 10 percent of these were e-commerce enabled.

The report indicated that this was due to change shortly, however, as development focus within the companies would highlight WAN infrastructure, e-commerce, ERP, LAN Infrastructure and data warehousing, as the most important development drives.

"Service and e-business are the way of the future for the top 200," said BMI-Techknowledge's IT consultant Barry Brady. "Once they have installed their WAN infrastructures they will set up the infrastructure they need to conduct business-to-business or business-to-consumer transactions over the Internet."

Melius Weidemans National research Foundation Research Page.::
Back to top. de la Harpe, R, Mrs. rdelahar@ctech.ac.za Software Development Company (SDC) in a e-Commerce Success: A South African Case Study
http://www.mwe.co.za/itresnrf.htm
HOME
NetworkSolutions Reviews Hosting NetworkSolutions reviews Network ::
97 out of 108 Web-Hosting-Top users found this review to be helpful! I switched from an e-commerce package to a hosting package and they still kept
http://www.web-hosting-top.com/web-hosting/web-hosting-top.networksolutions.com-reviews
HOME
While this indicates that businesses certainly intend to gear up for e-commerce, another trend highlighted by the report was that of a slight diversification in the local IT industry as small-to-medium enterprises (SMEs) muscle in for their share of the sizeable IT market.

In recent years, the Top 200 IT companies have accounted for the majority of spending in the IT sector. That figure dipped to 46 percent this year with SMEs finally taking the spending lead from the larger companies.

Brady predicts that the non-Top 200 companies will make up 60 percent of IT spend by 2003.

The growth in IT spend by the SMEs is outstripping that of the Top 200 by quite some margin, increasing by about 20 percent annually. Although a number of these SMEs will then inevitably merge into the Top 200 of IT companies, the competition and vitality of the sector is an encouraging sign for a sizeable market estimated to be worth roughly R28 billion (US$4 million), that is 0.6% of the world market.


CacheFlow Steals the Show
chello Takes Broadband Internet Access to Sweden

#If you have any other info about this subject , Please add it free.#
Your name:
E-mail:
Telphone:

Your comments:


If you have any other info about Top South African Companies Slow to Adopt E-Commerce , Please add it free.

About us -Site map -Advertisement -Jion us -Contact usExchange linksSponsor us
Copyright© 2008 gigj.com All Rights Reserved
Site made&Support support@gigj.com    E-mail: web@gigj.com