Posts Tagged ‘ESRI’

Data Is to ESRI as Search Is to Google

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

Do you remember the SAT exams?  These word games were always fun, so let’s play.

Google is not a web search company, but rather Google is an advertising company (they generated 97% of their revenues from advertising in 2009).  Search is the candy they give away to you so they can market advertising services.  Granted without search they have no advertising sales, so it is hard to separate Google from search.  But the point is that the company uses search as the marketing material to sell its products.

In previous posts (here and here), I have made the case that the mapping industry will change because players like Google and Microsoft (and Apple) will create mapping services embedded in their products as a feature enhancement.  The dollars that these companies are willing to spend on creating mapping products as features to their main business lines create “gravitational” distortions in the geospatial industry.  (For example TomTom stock is down ~60% since Google canceled its Tele Atlas contract in October 2009 and released its own turn-by-turn navigation system for mobile phones using the Android operating system. )

What was a bit unexpected was that other professional software companies would follow this free “Data-as-a-Feature” business model.  Yet this is exactly what ESRI has done.  Over the past couple of years, they bought a big piece of i-cubed to provide raster imagery products to their customers, and they have cut deals with data vendors, such as Microsoft Bing Maps, DeLorme, Tele Atlas, and others.  They have brought free data to light from federal agencies like USGS.  And they are combining these sources (with their stellar cartographic capabilities) to create derivative products that are extremely useful and appealing.

Just look at this topographic synthesis product from ArcGIS Online.  At the FedUC, Jack showed 1:1000 scale topographic data for selected cities within a worldwide map.  Nice and oh and by the way, it is free to users of ArcGIS Desktop products who maintain their license.

Data-as-a-Feature for ArcGIS Users

ESRI is a software company and generates most of its revenues via software sales and maintenance.  In fact, I’ve heard ESRI claim they have >90% of the core professional GIS market.  Data is the “new” free candy that ESRI gives away to maintain its market dominance in GIS software.  You have to admire the strategy to leverage their market dominance.  Data is a necessary “feature” for working in the GIS field.  Getting quality data, styled with beautiful cartography, as part of your content creation tool is a great benefit to users of that tool.

Software customers may be happy with data-as-a-feature; and anecdotal stories from GIS software integrators and solution providers suggest their customers are quite happy with the free regional products ESRI.  However, for independent data vendors it is a scary prospect.  If you produce regional or worldwide data, you can either sell your product to ESRI at “their” price, or face the prospect of losing access to their ecosystem of GIS developers by virtue of ESRI (re)creating the free product.

Life for independent data vendors has become more difficult.  On one hand they have to worry about Google, Microsoft, and Apple creating free worldwide data sets and applications to enhance their products.  Yet, I think these data vendors may have gotten used to this new paradigm and sought refuge in the “professional” data quality niche.  However, another hand is now in the picture (and in their till) with free professional data.  That hand is ESRI with its free Data-as-a-Feature.

Spatial Is Special, Spatial IT Is Not

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

Part One – The Revenge of Moore’s Law

James Fee made an eloquent case for why he made the leap to WeoGeo. While I would like to claim the powers of a Jedi knight, I think the true motivation of his choice was the hard economic realities of the spatial IT business. As James mentioned, the pricing pressures in basic spatial IT integrations are increasing, which are resulting in a falling revenue flow for many integrators.

The future of Spatial IT as a technology sub-discipline.

I think this is happening for many reasons, but here is the major one. Spatial technology is becoming more robust and easier to use for repetitive business functions, i.e. building a slippery map that shows points-of-interests (POIs), lines, and polygons no longer requires a specialized GIS technology stack. Just getting an organization’s information on a map that can be viewed internally (intra-net) or externally (inter-net) used to pay a lot of bills. The problem is that it doesn’t anymore. To a large extent, we are the victims of our own success at demonstrating the power of spatially-enabled business content and services.

In addition, for other types of higher-order analysis, display, and spatial enterprise operations, you don’t need a proprietary specialized database any more (i.e. Oracle Spatial 11g ) as Microsoft SQL 2008 and others built geometry and geography natively into their applications. And of course there are the plethoras of open source options that allow you to avoid proprietary databases all together (e.g. PostGIS). With these databases, one does not need the spatial data engine abstraction layers (e.g. ESRI’s SDE, which might be why they quit selling it as a stand-alone product) to expose your organization’s spatial data to those that need it or other applications to consume it.  These spatially enabled databases also provide for some high-order geospatial analysis to be preformed without the need of desktop- or server-side products (like ArcGIS Desktop or Server), and in many cases without the need for GIS Professionals to run that analysis.

Part of this enhancement in the spatial technology stack could be laid at the doorstep of web advertising companies (e.g. Google), which are bringing billions of new dollars to bear on spatially enabling web services. Yet, I believe the trends were there before the release of Google Maps and Google Earth, as Oracle was putting spatial operators into their main release in version 9 in the early 2000’s.  Innovations in web mapping systems have been occurring at an ever-increasing rate; and we in the spatial field are just the latest recipients of the impacts of Moore’s Law on complex business services. As the spatial IT stack continues to evolve, one should expect the distinct separation between the “GeoWeb” and the “Web” to become increasingly fuzzy, with the distinction eventually becoming irrelevant.

What does that mean for the specialized services of the spatial technology integrator? The simple mapping stuff will be just part of the web programming stack, with little separation between web programming and spatial web programming. Spatial technology integrators will have to evolve to create more value from enterprise technology operations, where spatial is just one part of their enterprise project. This can be successfully done, and one only has to look at Dave Bouwman’s group DTSAgile (which is just kickin’ it) to see that it can be accomplished.

However, the competition will be fierce because the specialized spatial IT stack will evolve into the plain vanilla IT stack, with more competitors and easier-to-use technology. This will mean much lower margins per spatial project; and that is just the way of the economic “force”. In addition, I have been hearing stories of increased competition from specialized software vendors like ESRI for consulting revenues on increasingly smaller and smaller projects. This suggests that the integrators will be squeezed from multiple directions, setting up the potential for a shakeout for integrators in our industry.

Trust Jack

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

I am not sure how many people in our industry are paying attention to the meltdown of the global financial services industry, but I want to point out the following interview with Jack Dangermond:

In it, Jack describes that growth of our industry as well as his expectations of ESRI:

ESRI has been growing annually at about 10-15% worldwide for many years, and in 2008 the company is growing at a rate of 17%, said Dangermond, adding that this “is counter intuitive to the whole stock market and economic downturn.”

In addition, he gives some thought to the differences between money capital and resource capital:

In terms of the global financial turmoil, Dangermond said “people today are very nervous about what is happening on Wall Street and what I am more concerned about is ecological sustainability and global warming issues on the planet, because they are not something that you can go to the bank and borrow more money from. The real sustainability issue and the real economic foundation is nature’s capital, it is not artificial money capital.”

Now, I’ll be the first to admit that I don’t see eye-to-eye with Jack on a lot of things. Money and intellectual capital are important for transitioning goods and services towards a more sustainable path. But for the most part, I think he is dead-on about the opportunities for our industry and the importance of our field.

Hang in there people, we’re in for a wild ride for the next 18-24 months. Keep your heads down, work hard, and keep pushing the envelope, and we will change the world.

Jack Dangermond, wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Dangermond