Buyers are finding it increasingly difficult to distinguish one vendor's products from the products of other vendors in the social software market. According to Gartner's latest magic quadrant for social software, competition between vendors is no longer about product functionality, but about the vendors themselves.
Researched and developed by Nikos Drakos, Jeffrey Mann and Mike Gotta, this year’s Magic Quadrant for Workplace Social Software points to a market that is mature, well developed, and crammed with competing companies offering — well offering much the same product when all the marketing literature is brushed aside.
To be clear about what is being discussed here, Gartner defines social software for the workplaces as software that is used principally for enterprise collaboration by putting individuals, teams, communities and networks in contact with each other. The principal gains in using this software and which Gartner sees as key includes:
The current social and collaboration market is worth an estimated US$ 840 million but, unlike some other software sectors, is growing strongly. Gartner estimates that between now and 2016, the market will grow 13.4% annually and will be worth US$ 1.4 billion.
That said, the business objectives of social enterprise software remain the same. Those that are responsible for developing enterprise strategies around social software are still looking to:
While there is still room for technological development within the market in areas like social analytics and gamification, Gartner argues that the market has developed so much that it is now extremely difficult for vendors to compete with each other on the basis of functionality alone.
Functions that were once exclusive to market leaders are now present in even the most limited products, offering features such as activity streams, profiles, embedded messages, and dynamic profiles.
Because of this, Gartner says it was obliged to look beyond core capabilities in order to provide any kind of meaningful distinction between products. It did this by breaking products up into three different categories.
These are social capabilities that come out-of-the-box with other kinds of related capabilities like content management, unified communications, or enterprise portals. They are favored by IT buyers that are looking for products that work straight away with their information access and management systems.
These are social capabilities that are already embedded in another applications and generally target specific user roles. Gartner says the attraction here is the pulling-together of collaboration activities inside applications that carry out other functions too.
These are products that offer superior user experiences, frequent, or automatic updates, or cloud-based delivery, making it easy to access information from outside the firewall. They aim to appeal directly to end-users who then pressurize IT, or enterprise buyers, to legitimize the choices. Gartner says this category of products is the fastest growing category and will continue to grow rapidly as more enterprises take to SaaS.
However, the market is changing as vendors start to realize that merely providing the same set of functions under a different banner is not going to work anymore. Vendors, Gartner says, need to take into account:
Finally, as a result of all this, Gartner says that the market will remain extremely volatile for the coming years and that potential buyers should look not at functionally, but should consider their needs as social-enabled businesses..
There are only 4 vendors that made it into the Leaders’ Quadrant this year, which given the number of vendors in the space is surprising. To make it into the Quadrant in the first place, vendors must be able to provide the following functions at least:
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From a quantitative perspective they must have:
This year in alphabetical order the Leaders are:
From the very beginning, IBM has been present in the social software with Connections, then with Sametime, IBM Notes, IBM Domino, FileNet Content Manager and WebSphere Portal Server. Its longevity in the market combined with its varied products have gained it a place in the Leaders’ Quadrant.
This year marks the 5th consecutive year that Jive has made it into the Leaders’ Quadrant largely, Gartner says, because of its broad product capabilities and high visibility.
Two of the best known products on the market at the moment — Yammer and SharePoint — have placed Microsoft in the Leaders’ Quadrant. While the two are often mentioned in the same breath, SharePoint has a much wider set of capabilities than Yammer, ranging from document management to application development and beyond. There are signs, though, that the two are increasingly becoming part of a single solution.
Another giant in the Leaders’ Quadrant, Salesforce.com is there because of its social networking tool, Chatter, which is used for enterprise networking and sharing, as well as communications and capturing discussion ideas.
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That’s the list of Leaders’ for this year. In a second part, we will take a look at the Challengers and, perhaps more importantly, the list of companies that didn’t make it into the Quadrant.
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