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The Shake-Up Continues Among the World-s Top Technology Companies: IBM Claims the Top Ranking; Dell Takes the Biggest Fall

NEW YORK, NY — (Marketwired) — 07/18/13 — The world-s top technology companies continue to jostle for position in the rapidly evolving digital landscape. Today, global management consulting firm Booz & Company released its second annual ranking of the world-s top 50 Information and Communications Technology (ICT) companies that provide the building blocks to increasingly digital businesses. There was a shake-up at the top of the rankings: Microsoft was bumped out of the top spot, dropping to #3, Oracle held fast at #2, while IBM leapfrogged from #3 to claim the top spot, fuelled by its strong product and service portfolio and global presence.

“This volatility is not surprising given the vast changes sweeping this sector. Digitization is a business imperative and these companies are being forced to rapidly transform their business models, product portfolios, service offerings and global footprints in order to stay one step ahead of their clients- needs. Add to this financial pressures in an uncertain economy, and the fact that boundaries are gone and more players are competing for overlapping, converged markets, and it-s no wonder new winners are emerging,” says Henning Hagen, partner at Booz & Company.

Software and Internet companies and hardware and infrastructure providers are dominating the ICT industry, claiming the majority of spots in the top 20

Integrated solution models are continuing to gain ground over IT services, especially those IT service providers with more traditional outsourcing and managed services businesses

Several software and Internet businesses are making big advances, including , which jumped three spots, to #4, , which moved up to #8, and which debuted in the top 50 for the first time at #13, driven by its rapidly growing cloud services business

and took the biggest falls, each dropping five spots, to #20 and #18, respectively

“This market is going through dynamic changes; primarily because so many companies are expanding and reshaping their portfolios and pushing for global scale and reach at the same time. As a result, many smaller IT service providers are under pressure, being acquired or disappearing completely. On the other hand, -digital first- players like Amazon are coming in with integrated solutions or compelling cloud offerings. We will see even more convergence in the future, and the winners will be those who can build integrated solution ecosystems around an innovative software or hardware core,” says Florian Groene, a principal at Booz & Company.

This year-s Global ICT 50 companies took in total revenues of US$2.07 trillion, a 3 percent increase over the prior year-s US$2.01 trillion, and a slight slowdown in growth compared to the previous year. Average margins remained steady at 15 percent. Software and Internet companies (e.g., Adobe, Google, Microsoft, SAP) and offshore IT service companies (e.g., TCS, Infosys, HCL, Cognizant) were the only two groups to achieve double-digit revenue growth for the fifth straight year

The same two groups saw stagnating to declining EBIT margins, albeit on a very healthy >20% level, which suggests early signs of business model maturity and increasing competition

Hardware and infrastructure companies claimed the middle ground in financial performance, achieving continuous margin improvement and stable growth over the past five years

Global IT service providers and telecom companies were the weakest performers and the only groups whose growth and profitability remained almost flat in 2013, although they did manage to stabilize their margins

In addition to assessing financial performance, portfolio strength, go-to-market footprint, and innovation and branding for company rankings, the study also identifies six business models to create value in the ICT industry. This analysis reveals that players that base their value creation approach on innovation (like Apple and Google), global sourcing (such as Infosys), and digitization models (including SAP) are the most successful financially, followed by large market consolidators such as Oracle.

Read the full study here: .

For the Booz & Company examined the four sectors that participate in the digital provider market (hardware, software, telecommunications and IT services, which we broke down further into global, regional and offshore IT services). The results of the study and the Global ICT 50 rankings are based on an analysis of publicly available data sources for financial performance, product and services portfolio, go-to-market footprint and strength of innovation and brand. These core areas were then evaluated using both quantitative and qualitative criteria to produce a consolidated point score for each company, which we used to generate the results.

Booz & Company is a leading global management consulting firm focused on serving and shaping the senior agenda of the world-s leading institutions. Drawing on the talents and insights of more than 3,000 people in 58 offices around the world, we help our clients achieve essential advantage by working with them to identify and build the differentiating capabilities they need to outperform.

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Siobhan Ford
Tel: +1 212-551-6234

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