Welcome to Longhaus

Welcome to Longhaus

Longhaus is globally recognised as one of Australia's leading boutique ICT research and advisory companies offering local research and analysis to assist major organisations overcome the challenges presented by the adoption of global ICT solutions. 

A backstage pass to Australian ICT research and analysis

A backstage pass to Australian ICT research and analysis

Information without context is like organisational quick-sand. The more you talk about it, and struggle against it the deeper you sink. Access All Areas is the "Thank-God you're here!" ICT research and advisory service the local industry has been looking for.

The benchmark in Australian public sector ICT research

The benchmark in Australian public sector ICT research

Detailed information on 1000's of individual ICT assets collected directly from core budget-funded government departments. This critical information enables business, sales, and marketing planning, or assists public sector agencies make more effective ICT strategy and procurement decisions.

Monitoring the health of the Australian ICT economy

Monitoring the health of the Australian ICT economy

The Australian Tech Index is a quarterly service developed to provide unique and important insights into the current and future state of the Australian technology economy. The index incorporates up to 13 indicators including quarterly measurements of local CIO confidence.

Avoid the ivory tower of global industry analysis

Avoid the ivory tower of global industry analysis

Engage an in-region perspective for analysis and decision support for major ICT purchases, pre-tender reviews, or marketing and strategy development. Our service provides coverage for each side of the ICT economy through research into both demand-side markets and supporting supply-side industries.

The data service for ICT marketing professionals

The data service for ICT marketing professionals

Longhaus delivers fast turn-around, customised responses to questions involving the business impact of technology. All responses include quantitative analysis undertaken with statistically significant data, and geographically relevant research projects.

Markets, brands and business performance

Markets, brands and business performance

Longhaus events deliver industry-leading insights on technology and its impact on IT and business performance. They deliver pragmatic, actionable advice to a wide audience including best practices and networking for end-users, and a high-quality C-level audience for ICT vendors.  

Trusted advice through digital video content

Trusted advice through digital video content

In 2010 Longhaus released LTV as the pre-eminent provider of Australian and near-shore digital video content for the ICT industry. Whether it be research, white-label content or specialty analysis, www.longhaus.tv is the true regional home of trusted ICT advice and insights.

Australian Tech Index

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The Longhaus Australian Tech Index is a quarterly index based on a proprietary model developed to measure the health of the Australian ICT industry. Read more

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LTV Research Channel

Programs
Latest

Contracts for Cloud Computing 01/2012

Tune in to learn how contractual agreements for cloud computing supply are evolving as CIO's decide whether to use contracts based on traditional managed hosting or make the contract specific to the cloud...

The Privacy Act with Bill Singleton 01/2012

What are some of the risks and what do Australian companies need to do under the Commonwealth Privacy Act? Tune in for a discussion with Bill Singleton, Partner at Hynes Lawyers and specialist in intellectual...

SOA Software 01/2012

Longhaus Analyst's Scott and Peter review current trends in API library management towards user based customisation and development of software based on the provision of API's. The huge expense of customisation...

Telstra Analyst Summit I&T 12/2011

Longhaus connects with Telstra, tune in to a discussion and learn a little more about Telstra's product offerings; as well as popular entry points into the product catalogue and their goal to leverage...

Juniper QFabric I&T 12/2011

Longhaus' Scott talks to Andy Ingram, VP Marketing and Business Development at Juniper Networks and discusses what Juniper's recently released system called QFabric is, some performance advantages, issues...

Unisys Analyst Event 2011 I&T 11/2011

CA World 2011 I&T 11/2011

Hitachi Data Systems Influencer Summit I&T 11/2011

The 9th International Cloud Expo I&T 11/2011

Speedwell & Blink Mobile Driving Mobile PaaS Innovation I&T 11/2011

IBM Information on Demand 2011 I&T 11/2011

The Cloud Broker Model I&T 10/2011

The Legacy of Steve Jobs I&T 10/2011

HP and the trusted Infrastructure as a Service Market I&T 08/2011

CA World 2011 I&T 08/2011

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Research and Advisory

Categories
Latest

DBA roles are the safest but most ignored by the CIO

In the latest Q1, 2012 CIO Confidence Poll Longhaus found that there is a median of 7.5 DBAs working away inside Australian enterprises doing such a good job that no latent demand exists...

Digital fluency fuels a new economy

Longhaus believes that an expanding API economy represents one of the significant trends of 2012. Enterprises with established and mature processes will be compelled...

Longhaus Australian Tech Index: Q4 2011 Outlook

By the end of the third quarter of 2011 the Longhaus Australian Tech Index had seen a dip of 2.2% (or 3.6 points) to finish at 155.9. This is the first drop in the index since the same quarter period in...

Cabinet Mobility in the Smart State

In being asked for tablet access to board papers, CIOs face seemingly conflicting goals: one for improving access to the most sensitive corporate information, and the other for improving its security....

The four laws of cloud computing

Reports of the cloud computing market measuring $160 billion by 2015 were extremely well received by vendors following the global financial crisis. These market sizing estimations not only included end-user...

It's time to undertake a BI and Analytics Solution Audit

Full service cloud is not about workloads

Baby Boomer IT - an unfunded liability

Australian SMB's need better ICT Support

AGIMO leads enterprise concerns for IPv6 changeover

A snapshot of the ICT labour market

Enterprise preparedness for street commerce

Australia’s Business Intelligence & Analytics Market 2011-12

Enterprise risk in failed ICT projects

Enterprise must embrace social strategies - now

Re: The analyst firm of the future

This blog is written in response to Gideon Gartner's blog "Advisory Industry, a future redesign: the “Payment” Model". As I called out in two blogs in 2007 Gartner is now a small fish in a big pond as it attempts to compete in the larger management consulting market.

As such neither it nor Forrester or IDC can achieve organic growth and catapult themselves into the 10’s of billions of dollars of revenues (and higher profit margins) that the wider industry commands. For that reason I completely agree with Gideon that the required changes to existing pricing models in the ICT analyst advisory market are unrealistic in today’s environment. However, the “king of change” as Gideon called it in one response is well within reach of the firms that stand capable of changing and re-educating the industry.

I believe that the future of the large ICT analyst houses is inextricably tied to the innumerable boutiques that exist in every market that is geographically and economically relevant to the ICT industry. To maintain relevance as the global benchmarks, Gartner and Forrester must follow the lead of major banks and airlines and address a different business model that will include the addition of lower cost subsidiaries that offer either changes in service, pricing and delivery structures to companies that represent a larger and more diverse demogrpahics. Let me elaborate.

The advantage of a low cost subsidiary is that the “master” brand can continue along its traditional path, offering the same services and style of operation that brought it market success, while at the same time using an associated brand to initiate and drive change over a long period of time. This approach delivers immediate change to the market through a new innovative service without cannibalising existing revenues (in this case the 100’s millions of dollars in annuity subscriptions).

For the airlines, their lower cost subsidiaries meant that they could bring lower cost labour arbitrage to their high-cost pilot workforce. It also included changes to refreshment services, baggage services, checking services, valet services, rewards programs and even branding. All this accumulates in lower pricing with increased options. But despite all these significant changes the low cost airlines and their master brand owners have continued to thrive.

The immediate challenge to overcome is that low cost is perceived as lower value when in fact low cost simply refers to the operational model of the business. Airlines such as Jetstar and Virgin Blue in Australia command a strong loyal brand following as do the regional banks such as Bendigo and Bank of Queensland which succeeded when they opened their doors in places that the major banks decided they no longer wanted to operate.

The boutique analyst firms that have developed over the past decade, including ours, arose due to market demand. And that market demand was not based on library services but rather on the basis of trusted advisory relationships. Boutiques generally operate with lower overheads than a multi-national and it is not uncommon to find that the advisory service fees for such firms being as much as 3 or 4 or 5 times cheaper. Much of this is cost-base related and has nothing at all to do with brand and output quality.

So rather than acquiring a company such as Burton and AMR and totally rebranding them into the Gartner fold, it would set a far more lucrative precendent to acquire on the basis of being a brand subsidiary, such as “Longhaus – a Gartner Company” or “Longhaus – a Forrester Company”. 

The benefits of that to the mother brand is the brand traction and awareness that has brought those boutique company’s market trust, solid client relationships and millions of dollars in revenue. The issue of cannibalisation is less a problem as the end-user organisations (what Gideon called buy-side) would acquire different levels of service depending on their requirements in the same way that a traveller today would choose between a Qantas and a Virgin Blue or an American Airlines and a South West.

The boutique subsidiary that retains its brand would also allow the mother company to introduce new pricing models such as the "per user per month" (PUPM) model so familiar with end-user organisations thanks to SaaS. It could even extend to new business models - such as internet television based research. Staking a boutique business model on a PUPM pricing model in order to test future strategies is a clear claim to value-based pricing and such a move comes without the risk to the mother brands of jeopardising existing retainer revenues.

For example, the long discussed move towards free research and paid advisory could be explored ad nauseam within the confines of a boutique with little impact on the mother company. If the services proved successful then a wider rollout across other subsidiaries and over time to the master brand would follow.

 

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