2011: The Year That Security Took to the Cloud

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Security-as-a-Service market grows 17.2% within 12 months

Sydney, 15 December 2011 – The Australian security-as-a-service market, which includes the delivery of content security services over the public network, grew by 17.2 per cent during the 2011 calendar year and is now valued at $38.4 million. Ongoing migration from on-premise software and increasing cloud services penetration among small businesses is expected to drive a robust compound annual growth of 16.6 per cent through to 2016, taking the market to a value of $83 million.   These are among the major findings contained in Frost & Sullivan’s latest cloud computing research: A Strategic Analysis of the ANZ (Australia, New Zealand) Security as a Service Market.

Cloud adoption in Australia is amongst the highest in the world and software-as-a-service is the most popular service model, used by 72 per cent of cloud computing users.  Australia is the largest market by revenues in Asia Pacific for many software-as-a-service vendors and the majority of security-as-a-service vendors have already established a local strong presence.

The marked shift to security-as-a-service during the past 12 months has been driven by a number of factors including the business desire to classify IT expenses as operating rather than capital expenses.  This ensures a more predictable monthly expenditure for organisations along with other benefits such as lower up-front costs, greater standardisation, ease of upgrades and ubiquitous access.

Another factor aiding the adoption of security-as-a-service is the shortage of qualified IT expertise. Shortage of qualified in-house security professionals has led to a dramatic increase in demand for contractors and specialist security experts, and has raised the costs for end-user organisations. Security-as-a-service removes this issue, at the same time as lowering management and maintenance overheads,  by placing responsibility for delivery and maintenance of the security solution on the cloud services provider.

The other major attractions of security-as-a-service are:
·      the flexibility it gives an organisation to scale up or down depending on organisational needs;
·      the simplicity of implementation as messaging security often requires just a change in the Mail Exchange record, while for web security, cloud forwarding can be enabled on proxies, firewalls and routers; and
·      the ability to protect users irrespective of their work location.

Despite the growth in the market, organisations still hold some concerns about moving security to the cloud with the most common being fear of loss of control by outsourcing to a third party service provider and the question of data sovereignty.  Large organisations are also being held back by the potential regulatory impact of relying on the Asian or US-based data centres used by many of the existing security-as-a-service providers.

From a technology viewpoint this use of international data centres has also raised uncertainties about latency, particularly as it applies to web security. Web browsing is a synchronous action with real-time two way communication. The laws of physics mean that round-trips are longer in slow network connections and/or when the data centre is far away from the user. Frost & Sullivan suggests that this will ensure that latency continues to be a prominent restraint for adoption of web security as a service in the medium term.

The banking, financial services and insurance (BFSI) sector is leading demand for security-as-a-service from the cloud, driven by the desire to ensure business continuity, prevent loss of intellectual property and enhance employee productivity. This sector has also been an early adopter of add-on modules such as encryption to adhere to regulatory compliance. Other prominent users include federal and state government ministries and agencies looking to consolidate IT infrastructure across departments, and legal, mining and e-business services.

The vendors

The major market participants in the Australian security-as-a-service market segment include Symantec.cloud, Websense, ZScaler, Cisco, Trend Micro, McAfee, Microsoft and Google. While Symantec is an early entrant in this segment and is a clear market leader, over the last couple of years, the other vendors have been gaining increasing traction with organisations in Australia.

Telecommunications service providers are also an important delivery channel for security-as-a-service.  The two foremost examples of this are Telstra’s partnership with Symantec.Cloud for the delivery of business security solutions and Optus’ relationship with Websense for the delivery of email and web security-as-a-service.

Andrew Milroy, Vice President – ICT Practice, APAC, Frost & Sullivan, says, “Although some hesitancies remain, within the past year the security-as-service market has evolved from being a niche segment to an increasingly mainstream application. Organisations are attracted by the cloud model’s promise of business agility, low overheads and substantial cost benefits. Momentum and awareness are there, and we expect the market to show steady, solid growth over the next five years. The only slightly negative blip on the radar is a likely dip in 2012 due to the current economic slowdown in Australia and the ongoing crisis in global financial markets.”

Frost & Sullivan’s  Strategic Analysis of the ANZ (Australia, New Zealand) Security as a Service Market forms part of the Frost & Sullivan’s Cloud Computing Research: 2011 program. All research services included in subscriptions provide detailed market opportunities and industry trends evaluated following extensive interviews with market participants. Interviews with the press are available.

About Frost & Sullivan
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For further information, please contact:

David Bass | Bass Public Relations
Direct: 61 2 9922 6820
Mobile: 61 416 017 194
david@basspr.com.au

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