Cloud Market in West Africa, 2018–2019

Cloud Market in West Africa, 2018–2019

Appropriate Communication Infrastructure Development and Consumer Legislations Central to Growth in Cloud Services

RELEASE DATE
05-Feb-2019
REGION
Africa
Research Code: 9ABE-00-45-00-00
SKU: IT03802-AF-MR_22842
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Description

The study provides information about the cloud market in West Africa. Ghana and Nigeria are the countries that have been analyzed in great detail. According to Frost & Sullivan, the cloud services market in West Africa is in the early stages of development, with international brands dominating the supply side. Local ICT providers are positioning themselves as intermediaries for global providers. Operators are leveraging their infrastructure to offer reliable cloud services, thus intensifying competition for cloud service providers.

While the global cloud market is more established because of the rise in the adoption of hybrid cloud, West African markets are in need of regulatory policies to boost the use of cloud services. Key concerns for cloud and data centre providers are lack of access to electricity and trade policy issues.

Mature cloud markets have shifted their focus to SaaS, while West Africa is still developing IaaS. Cloud customers prefer local cloud providers to international providers, as they are more familiar with local data sovereignty issues. As economic growth is relatively low, the demand for cost-saving applications will increase.

While the global cloud market is more established because of the rise in the adoption of hybrid cloud models, the West African market is in need of regulatory clarity to boost the use of cloud services, along with increased awareness of cloud service benefits. Telecommunications providers are leveraging their existing infrastructure to deliver cloud services and diversify their revenue base away from traditional voice and messaging revenues.

To promote the adoption of cloud services in West Africa, changes from economic to the regulatory side are required, as well as increased reach of the Internet that is affordable. Infrastructure, legislation, and human resources have been identified to be the 3 enablers of cloud services impacting growth and the competitive landscape.

To conclude, reliability and stability of solutions such as cloud is more of the key criteria for large enterprises than it is for the small ones. This has been especially cited by large financial service providers in Nigeria. Furthermore, while cost was found to be a key selection criterion across different sectors, it was found to be more pertinent for small enterprises. Discounted bundled communications and hosting solutions can appeal more to SMEs. Finally, local support was found to be a key priority, especially for manufacturing and retail in Nigeria, as they typically outsource a large portion of their IT. BFS primarily look for local hosting and best local support for their security services.

Author: Naila Govan-Vassen

Table of Contents

Key Findings

Research Scope

Definitions—Cloud Computing Value Chain

Definitions—Cloud Computing Services

Market Definitions

Market Definitions (continued)

Hot Spots and Emerging Geographies

Characteristics of the Cloud

Cloud Computing Trends—Global Vs West Africa

Role of International Cloud Providers

Role of Telecommunications Providers

Market Drivers

Drivers Explained

Drivers Explained (continued)

Market Restraints

Restraints Explained

Restraints Explained (continued)

Cloud Services Market Overview

Commercial Context

Cloud Ecosystem

Cloud Computing Requirements

Cloud Computing Requirements (continued)

Cloud Services—Competitor Analysis

Competitive Landscape Analysis

Summary of Competitor Landscape Across West Africa

Demand Analysis

Demand Analysis (continued)

Cloud Services Market Development

Demand Analysis

Cloud Services Value Chain

Cloud Services Market Structure

Cloud Services Market Development

Demand Analysis

Cloud Services Value Chain

Cloud Services Market Structure

Growth Opportunity 1—Broadband Infrastructure

Growth Opportunity 2—Software as a Service

Strategic Imperatives for Success and Growth

The Last Word—3 Big Predictions

Legal Disclaimer

List of Exhibits

List of Exhibits (continued)

The Frost & Sullivan Story

Value Proposition—Future of Your Company & Career

Global Perspective

Industry Convergence

360º Research Perspective

Implementation Excellence

Our Blue Ocean Strategy

The study provides information about the cloud market in West Africa. Ghana and Nigeria are the countries that have been analyzed in great detail. According to Frost & Sullivan, the cloud services market in West Africa is in the early stages of development, with international brands dominating the supply side. Local ICT providers are positioning themselves as intermediaries for global providers. Operators are leveraging their infrastructure to offer reliable cloud services, thus intensifying competition for cloud service providers. While the global cloud market is more established because of the rise in the adoption of hybrid cloud, West African markets are in need of regulatory policies to boost the use of cloud services. Key concerns for cloud and data centre providers are lack of access to electricity and trade policy issues. Mature cloud markets have shifted their focus to SaaS, while West Africa is still developing IaaS. Cloud customers prefer local cloud providers to international providers, as they are more familiar with local data sovereignty issues. As economic growth is relatively low, the demand for cost-saving applications will increase. While the global cloud market is more established because of the rise in the adoption of hybrid cloud models, the West African market is in need of regulatory clarity to boost the use of cloud services, along with increased awareness of cloud service benefits. Telecommunications providers are leveraging their existing infrastructure to deliver cloud services and diversify their revenue base away from traditional voice and messaging revenues. To promote the adoption of cloud services in West Africa, changes from economic to the regulatory side are required, as well as increased reach of the Internet that is affordable. Infrastructure, legislation, and human resources have been identified to be the 3 enablers of cloud services impacting growth and the competitive landscape. To conclude, reliability and stability of so
More Information
No Index No
Podcast No
Author Naila Govan-Vassen
Industries Information Technology
WIP Number 9ABE-00-45-00-00
Is Prebook No
GPS Codes 9705-C1,9820-C1,9657,99D9-C1,9838-C1