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DUBLIN, IRELAND: Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Different Wavelengths: SMBs, Change, and SaaS Adoption" report to their offering.
Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) is often touted by SaaS providers and others as a key competitive advantage for small and mid-sized businesses (SMBs) worldwide. The most aggressive adopters of SaaS in most markets are found within SMB ranks.
Unfortunately, SaaS providers' approaches and offerings too often fail to resonate with SMB executives. Providers tend to focus on business advantages more germane to larger firms; or they fail to perceive important differences in SaaS awareness and buying based on key sub-categories of SMB.
Meanwhile, SMB executives are increasingly caught in a pattern of aggressive SaaS adoption activity without strategic or tactical plans. As a result, many if not most SMBs today could soon face expensive, and even prohibitive, integration requirements to link disparate SaaS solutions together and with on-premise systems. But an emerging generation of SMBs are more likely to use SaaS – and its close cousin, cloud computing – to cost-effectively outpace their peers.
Our new study of SMB SaaS acquisition, adoption, and management focuses on the business and technological challenges that are unique to smaller firms, and how these translate to business value for SMBs and for SaaS providers. The study examines and illustrates important differences in SMB SaaS adoption and use by company size, and by company age. And the study provides guidance to SMB executives for cost-effective SaaS management, as well as insights for SaaS providers on how to deliver real value to different types of SMB customers.
This report includes data and analysis from over 200 SMB executives worldwide, insights on SaaS challenges from interviews with 20 SMB business and IT executives, and approaches to SMB SaaS sales and marketing from more than 30 SaaS providers.
At the bottom line, SaaS is about business. And the smaller the firm, the more likely it is that what you don't know will hurt your business.
Read this report to learn:
Research Highlights:
There are clear delineations within the overall SMB class when it comes to SaaS adoption, usage, and value. We see three basic groups of SMBs based on SaaS behavior and preferences: