The application development (AD) software market is expected to reach more than $227 million in 2012, a 22.6 per cent rise over 2011.
Growth will be driven by evolving software delivery models, new development methodologies, emerging mobile application development and open source software, according to a study by global research and analyst firm Gartner Inc.
“Application modernisation and increasing agility will continue to be a solid driver for AD spending, apart from other emerging dynamics of cloud, mobility and social computing,” said Asheesh Raina, principal research analyst at Gartner.
“These emerging trends are directing AD demand towards newer architectures, programming languages, business model and user skills,” he added.
Cloud computing
According to Gartner, cloud is changing the way applications are designed, tested and deployed, resulting in a significant shift in AD priorities. About 90 per cent of large, mainstream enterprises and government agencies will use some aspect of cloud computing by 2015.
“The trend is compelling enough to force traditional AD vendors to ‘cloud-enable’ their existing offerings and position them as a service to be delivered through the cloud,” said Raina.
Mobile AD projects
Gartner predicts that mobile AD projects targeting smartphones and tablets will outnumber native personal computer projects by a ratio of 4:1 by 2015.
Emerging mobile applications, systems and devices are transforming the AD space rapidly, and are one of the top three CIO priorities at the enterprise level.
Gartner research found that CIOs expect more than 20 per cent of their employees to use tablets instead of laptops by 2013, hastening the process of change as AD tools and applications evolve to address the requirements of these new devices.
Open source software
Also driving the AD shift, Gartner expects open source software to continue to broaden its presence and create pressure on market leaders during the next three to five years, especially as open source becomes a key element of the software quality landscape beyond the developer level.
It predicts that at least 70 per cent of new enterprise Java applications will be deployed on an open source Java application server by the end of 2017.
“Open source software tools will continue to erode revenue for some AD categories in design, testing and Web development,” said Raina.
“This is being driven primarily by the success of Eclipse and NetBeans, as well as by overall revitalization of the market by new small software providers looking for technical and market disruptive approaches for offering products. Limited budgets and economic conditions compelling enough to focus on cost reduction, also fuel the use of open-source software in various development projects,” he added.