28 July 2013
Booz & Company's global ranking of the world's 50 biggest ICT companies sees IBM take the top spot, SAP break into the top five and stiff competition from new market players

Dubai, UAE, 28 July 2013

Progressive digitization is not only changing end-consumer behavior - it is also driving significant change in the wider Information and Communications Technology (ICT) space. Clear role divisions have long disappeared - hardware companies, software companies, telecommunications companies and IT service providers are operating in an overlapping market. Software and hardware companies with integrated solution models are continuing to gain ground over IT service providers. And, European companies with a regional focus are coming under strong pressure. In addition, Internet players have continued to penetrate the Middle East with high speed; while they initially only managed the broader MENA region, they are increasingly focusing on individual markets and finally understanding what is required to succeed in each country. These are just some of the key findings from the Global ICT 50 Study published today.


For the study - conducted for the second consecutive year - the global strategy consultants at Booz & Company once again investigated the major trends, critical success factors and performance of the world's 50 biggest ICT companies.

The same companies occupy the top three places, but in a different order: thanks to its broad product portfolio and global presence, IBM has moved up two places from 2012 and now leads the global ranking, followed by software giants Oracle and Microsoft. Ranked at number four, SAP is the best-placed German ICT company. Hardware-centric solutions providers take the following three spots - Cisco, Apple and HP. "The top 10 ranking reveals that software and hardware providers are dominating the ICT industry," said Olaf Acker, a Partner with Booz & Company. "Software and internet businesses like SAP, Google and Amazon have also made big advances. Regional IT service providers, however, have not been able to keep pace with the market trend this year."  

With their continuous expansion of service offerings and products, Samsung and Google have succeeded in achieving top 10 rankings.

"A broad portfolio on its own, however, is not the key to success," explained Dr. Germar Schröder, a Principal with Booz & Company. "We are seeing that extending the portfolio often fails to go hand-in-hand with financial success - coherence wins out over breadth. Other critical factors are a global presence, innovation and branding."

In effect, six from the top 10 companies listed in the Global ICT 50 study rank amongst the 10 most innovative businesses in the world, as identified in a separate Booz & Company analysis. And, 13 out of the top 50 companies rank in the Top 100 Interbrand Best Global Brands 2012.

Global IT Service Providers Under Pressure
While the top 50 companies in the study achieved modest growth in revenue for 2013 - up from USD 2.01 bn in 2011 to USD 2.07 bn in 2012 - these figures are not as impressive as those from earlier years.

"Global ICT services providers in the Middle East are under constant pressure from value and offshore players - as the growing appetite for IT services comes with a "value for money" mentality that is stronger in the region  than it is in other markets," said Danny Karam, a Principal with Booz & Company.

Indeed, some market players are reaching the limit of their capacity for growth. Moreover, the major software providers are the only group to have demonstrated strong revenue growth for a fifth straight year. Conversely, the global IT service providers and telecommunications companies studied were the only groups in the survey where growth stagnated - although they did manage to stabilize their EBIT margins in 2012.

"The Middle East's regional telecommunication companies - in line with their global counterparts - still struggle when it comes to more advanced services and expansion into the broader ICT space," added Karam.

And, the only group to achieve continuously-increasing margins and stable growth over the past five years were the hardware and infrastructure companies. The reason for this is their individual, integrated business models that are based on a hardware core business and supplemented with service and cloud elements. The results of the study confirm the strength of this business model.

"In the Middle East, hardware makers - especially device manufacturers like Apple and Samsung - recognize the region's growing appetite for smart devices," said Acker. "And so, they did well in the 2013 study. After all, the Middle East contributes to their bottom-lines given relatively stable price levels."

"Puretones" Analysis
This year, Booz & Company consultants added a criterion to the four aspects of financial performance - Portfolio Breadth & Coherence, Growth Potential and Market Presence -evaluated for the study.

"There are different approaches to combining essential capabilities and an individual product and service offering for a market, and these work well in different ways," said Schröder. "For instance, the Innovator, like Apple, the Solutions Provider, like IBM, or the 'one-stop-shop' Consolidator like Cisco, have altogether bought up to 120 companies over the past 20 years. The analysis shows that, in the market, three puretones have produced the best financial results in recent years: a focus on innovation, a focus on forward-looking digitization, and a focus on achieving a price advantage through offshoring."

-Ends-

About the method used in the study:
For the Global ICT 50 Study, Booz & Company examined the four sub-industries in the digital provider market (hardware, software, telecommunications and IT services) in a joint study for the second time. The results of the study and the Global ICT 50 Ranking are based on an analysis of publicly-available data sources, notably with regard to financial parameters, product and portfolio structure, strength of innovation and sales orientation. These core areas were evaluated using quantitative and qualitative criteria to produce a consolidated points score for the respective company, which, in turn, generates the sectoral and top 10 ranking.

Click here to download the pdf report by Booz & Company.

More Communications and Technology, Information Technology and Organization and Strategy reports and whitepapers are available on the Booz & Company website.

About Booz & Company
Booz & Company is a leading global management consulting firm focused on serving and shaping the senior agenda of the world's leading institutions. Our founder, Edwin Booz, launched the profession when he established the first management consulting firm in Chicago in 1914. Today, we operate globally with more than 3,000 people in 58 offices around the world.

We believe passionately that essential advantage lies within and that a few differentiating capabilities drive any organization's identity and success. We work with our clients to discover and build those strengths and capture the market opportunities where they can earn the right to win.

We are a firm of practical strategists known for our functional expertise, industry foresight, and "sleeves rolled up" approach to working with our clients. To learn more about Booz & Company or to access its thought leadership, visit booz.com. Our award-winning management magazine, strategy+business, is available at strategy-business.com.

© Press Release 2013