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Hadoop, you don’t have many takers in India!

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Sonal Desai
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merv adrian Gartner

MUMBAI, INDIA: A recent Gartner survey has highlighted challenges to Hadoop adoption, and revealed that more than 50 percent respondents have no current plans for Hadoop investment.

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Respondents pointed to two interesting reasons for the lack of intent. First, several responded that Hadoop was simply not a priority. The second was that Hadoop was overkill for the problems the business faced, implying the opportunity costs of implementing Hadoop were too high relative to the expected benefit.

The finding:

In its 2015 Hadoop Adoption Study, Gartner found that investment remains tentative in the face of sizable challenges around business value and skills. The survey, which was conducted in February and March 2015 among 284 Gartner Research Circle members, found that only 125 respondents who completed the whole survey had already invested in Hadoop or had plans to do so within the next two years. The Gartner Research Circle is a Gartner-managed panel composed of IT and business leaders.

"Despite considerable hype and reported successes for early adopters, 54 percent of survey respondents report no plans to invest at this time, while only 18 percent have plans to invest in Hadoop over the next two years," said Nick Heudecker, Research Director, Gartner. "Furthermore, the early adopters don't appear to be championing for substantial Hadoop adoption over the next 24 months; in fact, there are fewer who plan to begin in the next two years than already have."

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Ground realty:

Only 26 percent of respondents claim to be either deploying, piloting or experimenting with Hadoop, while 11 percent plan to invest within 12 months and seven percent are planning investment in 24 months, Gartner said.

"With such large incidence of organizations with no plans or already on their Hadoop journey, future demand for Hadoop looks fairly anemic over at least the next 24 months. Moreover, the lack of near-term plans for Hadoop adoption suggest that, despite continuing enthusiasm for the big data phenomenon, demand for Hadoop specifically is not accelerating," said Merv Adrian, Research Vice President, Gartner.

"The best hope for revenue growth for providers would appear to be in moving to larger deployments within their existing customer base," he said.

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Resource crunch:

Skills gaps continue to be a major adoption inhibitor for 57 percent of respondents, while figuring out how to get value from Hadoop was cited by 49 percent of respondents.

The absence of skills has long been a key blocker. Tooling vendors claim their products also address the skills gap. While tools are improving, they primarily support highly skilled users rather than elevate the skills already available in most enterprises.

Hadoop vendors are responding to this challenge by offering a variety of training options. However, Gartner estimates it will take two to three years for the skills challenge to be addressed. Beyond skills, demonstrating the value of Hadoop is the second-highest challenge.

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Those respondents who are actively piloting or deploying Hadoop report small numbers of users accessing the cluster with 70 percent of respondents having between one and 20 users accessing Hadoop and a surprising four percent reporting zero users.

"Early Hadoop projects typically involve a small number of users and this no doubt keeps user populations down at this stage of the market; moreover the Hadoop stack remains unsuitable for simultaneous use by multiple users, also keeping numbers down. Another factor, and possibly the best explanation for the small number of Hadoop users, is the skills shortage," said Heudecker.

Failing to live up to its promise?

"One of the core value propositions of Hadoop is that it is a lower cost option to traditional information infrastructure. However, the low numbers of users relative to the cost of cluster hardware, as well as any software support costs, may mean Hadoop is failing to live up to this promise," he concluded.

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