2017 Technology Trends
2017 Technology Trends
Trends
Increasing
stratification
and changing
competitive
dynamics
Contacts
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About the authors
PwC’s Sahil Bhardwaj, Matt Kramer Coakley, Ariel Futter, Yolande Wilson, David Wu, and
Eric Yeh contributed research and analysis to this report.
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Introduction
The trends and innovations that will shape the technology industry
over the next several years came into sharper focus in 2016. Cloud
computing has gone mainstream for many enterprises, and the Internet
of Things (IoT) is changing how both industrial and consumer-oriented
companies do business. Drones and autonomous vehicles, blockchain,
augmented and virtual reality, increasingly sophisticated digital
assistants, machine learning (artificial intelligence, or AI) — the
list of technological megatrends just keeps growing.
Further disruption will come from five other companies, all of them
based in China: Alibaba, Baidu, Huawei, JD.com, and Tencent. Highly
successful in their home market, these companies have been expanding
their scope around the globe; Huawei, for instance, has been active
outside China for more than 10 years. The competitive struggle within
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and among these three groups of companies — the Big Five, the
Next 20, and the Chinese Challengers — will define the technology
industry for the foreseeable future.
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Why the Big Five will continue
to dominate
The Big Five have developed an enormous advantage over their rivals in
the tech industry. Four core factors combine to form a self-reinforcing
cycle that allows them to keep building on their success.
• Platform strength. Over the past decade or so, the Big Five have
built highly successful businesses based on the ubiquity of their
platforms and business ecosystems, that is, the networks of smaller
companies that gravitate toward them. That in turn has enabled
them to reach virtually unprecedented levels of enterprise value,
revenue, profits, and cash flow. Just since 2011, these companies
have grown revenues by US$287 billion, while, taken together, the
Next 20 have seen their revenues shrink. When it comes to enterprise
value, the contrast is even more dramatic: In that period, the Big Five
created more than $1.5 trillion in enterprise value, while the Next 20
combined created only a third of that. In addition, the huge cash
hoards that the Big Five have accumulated serve only to reinforce
their dominant position, through innovation and the acquisition
of both capabilities and talent.
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Key metrics: The Big Five vs. the Next 20
Cumulative growth (US$, billions),
FY11–FY16
$1,600 $1,535
Exhibit 1
Key metrics: The Big Five vs.$1,400
the Next 20
Key metrics: The Big Five vs. the Next 20
$1,200
Cumulative growth (US$, billions),
FY11–FY16
$1,000
$1,600 $1,535
$800
$1,400
$600
$503
$1,200
$400
$1,000 $287 $308
$200
$800 $102
$71 $52 $25
$2
$0
$600 –$2
$503
–$200
$400 Revenue Enterprise value EBITDA Free cash flow Cash
$287 $308
$200
Source: S&P Capital $102
$71 IQ, Strategy& analysis
$52 Big Five (U.S.)
$2 $25
Next 20
$0
–$2
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Exhibit 2
Varying strengths among technology’s Big Five
Varying
Varyingstrengths
strengthsamong
amongtechnology’s
technology’sBig
BigFive
Five
Capabilities
Capabilitiesin in
technology megatrend
technology areas,
megatrend 2017
areas, 2017
Drones and Machine Augmented
Drones and Machine Augmented
Cloud Internet autonomous learning and virtual
Cloud Internet autonomous learning and virtual
computing of Things cars and AI reality Blockchain
computing of Things cars and AI reality Blockchain
Alphabet
Alphabet
Amazon
Amazon
Apple
Apple
Facebook
Facebook
Microsoft
Microsoft
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When it launched its Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud unit
in 2006, Amazon had often been under fire for the size of its
investments, which had resulted in lower margins and lower profits
that could be used to pay back investors. Outsiders were skeptical
that the company could successfully launch the new offering, let
alone compete with Microsoft and Google. Nonetheless, as of late
2016, Amazon’s AWS unit has captured by far the largest share of the
corporate cloud computing business, controlling 70 percent or more
of the public cloud infrastructure market, according to Oppenheimer
& Co. Microsoft and Alphabet are second and third, respectively.
• Talent attraction. The competition for top talent in the U.S. is fierce,
but skilled technologists know that after a successful stint at one of
the Big Five, they are eminently employable elsewhere. The Big Five
also continue to hire aggressively to support new product development
and capital deployment. In absolute employment gains since 2011,
the Big Five have led the way, adding more than 418,000 net jobs
among them, compared with a loss of 40,900 for the Next 20.
Meanwhile, the war for talent rages on — and indeed, may even
heat up, if it becomes more difficult for U.S. companies to hire
talented immigrants under the new U.S. administration. In early
January 2017, Amazon announced it would be hiring 100,000 new
employees in the United States. Although many of these jobs will be
in distribution centers and logistics networks, some recruits will be
software and hardware engineers, joining areas of the firm dedicated
to growing AWS, Alexa, drones, and other highly technical offerings.
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The path forward
What’s left for the Next 20? Many of them are trying to reposition
themselves by focusing on high-growth areas. IBM, for example, is
placing a large bet on artificial intelligence with its Watson business.
Texas Instruments is targeting analog chip markets for sensors and
video processors, booming areas in the automotive and industrial
sectors. And Adobe is aggressively marketing its products in cloud
computing environments. Other hardware, software, and technology
service firms, including many that gained prominence in the 1980s
and 1990s, are struggling to compete, and going through major
restructurings in hopes of moving away from their legacy offerings.
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risk: Value is often a function of scale in their business, and as end-
user markets become saturated and new technologies rise, they will
experience the shrinking margins of commoditization. When this shift
occurs, technology companies that have developed platforms and scale
will be in the best position, especially if they also have access to the
data generated by their customers’ use of the hardware and software.
In those cases, companies will try to employ the data to expand the
relationship with these customers into new applications, such as
information analytics and equipment networking.
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Challengers from China
As successful as the Big Five have been and will likely continue
to be, they face increasing competition from China’s own tech
supercompetitors. Their efforts correspond in some ways to those of
the Big Five: Amazon faces off with Alibaba and JD.com in e-commerce,
Google with Baidu in search, and Facebook with Tencent in chat,
photo sharing, and social media. Huawei’s primary focus has been a
bit different; the company offers networking services and equipment,
including mobile phones, and has strong backing from the Chinese
government. Its evolving phone business will pit it more closely against
Apple (and Samsung).
All these companies are highly successful in their home market and
are growing more rapidly than the Big Five, and far more rapidly than As they
the rest of the U.S. tech industry. As they gain even more traction in
markets traditionally served by their Western competition or not yet continue
dominated by any single player in a given segment, a land grab among to expand,
these platforms is likely to ensue, in particular in emerging markets. the Chinese
The Chinese Challengers do not compete on an entirely level playing Challengers will
field, especially within China. The Big Five are seen as outsiders in the face tougher
country, and they continue to face challenges in serving consumers competition,
or companies in China — as of January 2017, consumers in mainland
China were still unable to access many of Alphabet’s consumer-facing especially from
Web properties and applications, including Google, Gmail, and YouTube, U.S. companies.
and Facebook was also blocked. Within China, the Chinese companies
have been designated as winners by the Chinese government, a base
on which they have captured the lion’s share of their home markets.
The Chinese Challengers have also used that base to gain share
in markets abroad; Huawei in particular has been able to compete
effectively on price with telecom equipment rivals from other countries.
But as they continue to expand, the Chinese Challengers will face
tougher competition, especially from the U.S. companies, such as
Alphabet, Amazon, and Facebook, that they have so successfully
emulated at home. Will these players be able to develop the products,
business models, and go-to-market innovation needed to compete
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Chinese tech leaders’ growth threatens U.S. Big Five
20% 5% 19%
18%
16% 0% 0%
15% 0%
13% -1%
10% –5%
10% Revenue Enterprise value EBITDA Employees R&D Cash
8%
7%
5%
Source: S&P Capital IQ, Strategy& analysis Big Five (U.S.)
Chinese Challengers
0% 0% Next 20
0%
-1%
Source: S&P Capital IQ,
–5%
Revenue Enterprise value EBITDA Employees R&D Cash Strategy& analysis
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globally? Will they put in place security and censorship policies that
are flexible enough to placate powerful regulators at home, while still
satisfying varied interests abroad? And what might rising nationalism
and protectionism around the world mean for the evolution of their
ambitions?
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The next winning strategies
What does the increasing power of the Big Five and their Chinese
Challengers mean for the technology industry as a whole? Winning in
the tech space is no longer simply a matter of understanding a customer
need and using a new technology or channel to build a product or
service value proposition to fulfill it.
There is no inherent reason why the Next 20 can’t follow the same
playbook, define a strategy and capabilities system based on a strong
identity, build a future-oriented operating model and cost structure, and
leverage a distinctive talent base and culture to differentiate themselves
by customer value. That said, it is certainly not wise to choose a strategic
identity that puts one in direct competition with Alphabet, or Amazon,
or Facebook. But given the multitude of growth areas, new technologies,
and cross-vertical disruptions surrounding technology companies, there
is still ample opportunity to define winning strategies and create new
multibillion-dollar businesses — even in areas where the Big Five and
Chinese Challengers are already competing as well. As long as the Next
20 (and beyond) don’t try to do too much with too little commitment,
there is hope and a lot of opportunity.
As for the Chinese Challengers, they are both helped and hindered by their
established dominance in their home market. That market will potentially
be larger and more lucrative in the long term than the U.S. market; China
already exceeds the U.S. in online customer count and in mobile phone
users. But as these companies begin to compete in international markets,
they will have to force themselves to build capabilities that are not very
important in their home markets. In some ways, they are already rising
to this challenge — they are fierce and persistent competitors — but
they have not yet demonstrated the type of product or business model
innovation that can easily translate beyond China and that would allow
them to play the kind of global role that the Big Five play today.
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