lundi 2 janvier 2012
Les
secteurs de l’énergie, de la santé et du secteur public vont largement
bénéficier des technologies de l’information, sans doute au prix de
transformations importantes. Le cabinet de conseil IDC dresse un tableau
des évolutions à prévoir pour l’année à venir (en anglais).Energie
IDC Energy Insights predictions for the next 12 months have been developed specifically taking into consideration the future impact of the major world events of 2011. Starting with the long-term impacts of Fukushima on electricity generation mix and security of supply, and Germany, strategizing the country's nuclear phase out in favor of renewable and gas energy sources. Regionally speaking, the Middle Eastern and African regions will continue to strive to increase their power supply focusing on energy interconnections and fuel diversification. Europe will focus on the completion of its internal energy market goal by 2014, which will have to cope with the Euro-zone's sovereign debt crunch that became a major issue for some of the major EU economies in the latter half of 2011.
IDC Energy Insights' Top 10 Predictions for the EMEA utilities industry for 2012 and beyond are:
1. Smart meter installed base across EMEA will scale up to 71 million units
2. Investments in Advanced Distribution Automation will accelerate in 2012
3. Growth of additional PV modules installation will decline in 2012
4. Demand Side participation will call for markets redesign in order to take off
5. Proactive suppliers will take competitive advantage of rollout of smarter technologies
6. Smart cities journey will evolve from concept to orchestrated actions
7. Smart Grids vendors ecosystem turmoil will not stop
8. Smart Grids end-to-end cyber security & data privacy will bring new forms of collaboration
9. Smart Energy and Operational Excellence will both call for “Smarter Data”
10. EMEA Utilities IT spending will reach $16.1 billion in 2012
Santé
"Talking about EMEA, it's never easy to get a general picture. We need to consider that we are talking about a hundred different countries, with their specific healthcare organizations and settings and peculiar issues. Nevertheless, across the region there are common threats of cost pressures, human resources /skills constraints, and the changing demand for healthcare services driven by chronic patients' needs and the increasing expectation on quality. From the analysis of these general trends combined with single countries situations, at IDC Health Insights we have identified three themes that have guided us through this year's top 10 predictions" says Silvia Piai EMEA Research Manager at IDC Health Insights.
According to IDC Health Insights, three key themes for EMEA healthcare in 2012 are:
- Smart delivery models: to cope with the chronic fragmentation of the sector, healthcare organizations are looking for smarter delivery models for their IT infrastructures, integrating technologies as cloud and virtualization and revamping the shared services business models. IT systems need to support integrated care delivery model and a transmural shared EHR is the key building block of effective IT strategies.
- Smart information management: the data explosion phenomenon is hugely impacting healthcare, so healthcare organizations will need to look for effective information management. Secure document and content management and analytics will be key areas of investment. Organizations will also look at capitalizing on the large amount of patient information for secondary uses as research, knowledge and organization management.
- Smart procurement and contracting: the new market environment will oblige healthcare executive to carefully analyze their procurement models, finding ways to rationalize and standardize their IT assets. As EMEA moves towards a more services based healthcare industry, definition and evolution of SLAs will be the key to success for new implementations.
IDC Health Insights EMEA top 10 predictions for 2012 and beyond are:
1. Cloud, virtualization, streamlined infrastructures will see solid uptake
2. Shared services is, again, the “new black”, but rightsizing will make the difference
3. Integrated personal health systems will blur the lines of social care and healthcare information systems
4. Mobility will be a key driver for wider focus on interoperability
5. Security will be the corollary of investments on document and content management
6. Storage growth and PACS replacements drive investment in VNA
7. Investment in analytics continues to surge
8. EHR/EMR data secondary use will start having real world experience
9. Rationalization of health IT assets will drive standardization
10. Fine-tuning SLAs will be the success factor for new IT delivery models
Secteur public
According to Jan Duffy, Research Director, IDC Government Insights, EMEA "This year was a particularly difficult year for governments across Western Europe. Economic conditions in some cases were dire and in many cases, governments are considering alternative models of service delivery as part of their ongoing plans to deal with longer term financial austerity, but the challenge is balancing service delivery with reduced expenditure. These challenging conditions have had a significant impact on IT spending in the region and on our 2012 Top Ten Government Predictions. In 2012 governments in Western Europe will take a hard look at IT operations with the goal of becoming smarter, focusing on Smart IT Delivery, Smart Information Management, and Smart IT Procurement and Commissioning. These three themes are focused on answering the question of "What makes government IT smart?" and they frame our 2012 Top Ten Government Predictions."
IDC Government Insights' Top 10 Predictions for the EMEA public sector for 2012 and beyond are:
1. In Western Europe 2012 will see a dramatic increase in government use of private cloud services.
2. The perception of lower cost and increased flexibility will drive higher government interest in the use of open source software in 2012.
3. As the belt-tightening continues there will be a marked increase in the adoption of shared services in many shapes and sizes at all levels of government, across all public sector organizations, departments and functions.
4. Once the poster-child of Green IT, virtualization and consolidation are now considered key to optimized resource use and cost reduction and we expect governments to accelerate the reduction in the number of servers and data centers.
5. Interest in BPO will increase across governments in Europe, particularly if there are obvious cost savings.
6. Governments will continue to re-write the procurement and commissioning rules and ICT and related services will be subjected to changes including innovative funding, multi-party joint ventures, pay as you go, and cross-agency contracts.
7. To minimize the risk of inappropriate public sector spending, in 2012 we expect to see more contracts based on payment for priority-based measurable outcomes.
8. Increased use of cloud computing will require more time to be spent on reviewing the terms and conditions of service-level agreements to ensure needed services are properly covered.
9. The volume of digital information will continue to grow but, in a world of changing technologies and increasing threat sophistication, government investment in organizing, managing, and securing this data will receive high priority and continue to increase.
10. Governments will develop plans that allow for easy access and analysis of both data and content to better support the most appropriate distribution of social, healthcare, and educational services and resources.
Source: infoDSI.com
http://www.infodsi.com/articles/127084/previsions-sectorielles-selon-idc-energie-sante-secteur-public-2012.html?key=
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