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

Star analysts are so 90’s. Let’s drop the self-delusion.

There has been much discussion across the global industry analyst relations sites of late about what makes a great boutique analyst firm. While I agree with much of the discussion I couldn’t disagree more about the role of the star analyst. I actually believe that star analysts gave the industry a bad name and are a poor substitute for the long-term sustainable management of any professional advisory company. 

However, I do believe the cultural influence that great analysts can add to a company is unassailable. I’ll be the first to admit that I hired the guy with the highest standards in the industry and that working hard to keep him happy in terms of IP, customer standards, and culture has been a driving force in our success. But let’s drop the self-delusion. Not all star analysts think alike, and I think the best of them realise that they are ultimately a cog in the wheel.

There are basic things that simply constitute a ticket-to-play in the analyst industry and I don’t know why we continue to get caught up talking about stars. I think it is because, as Kevin McIsaac recently pointed out, that analysts haven’t always had a depth of experience in management and ironically find it difficult to not take an over-simplified view of it. 

Companies need great people, a great brand, great products and services, great management, great processes, and a great customer-focused culture. In that regard every boutique firm should have people that customers consider a star with an amazing catalogue, but should those stars define the record label or movie studio? The answer is no.

Outside of a farmer’s co-op, a firm built simply of star analysts sounds like the flimsiest of business models to me. It has actually been written about in-depth as a key inflection point in McKinsey’s history at the point-in-time it parted ways with Tom Peters in the 80’s. Great firms and stars can only operate for so long together when the latter out-thinks the formers approach to culture, collaboration and most importantly teamwork.  

Decisions regarding analyst relationships have actually got easier as more boutiques come into the market. They tend to be either co-ops of sole trader individuals, or stand-alone brands with employees. The distinction is easy. One can stand without the other.

But even in traditional co-operative models of primary production such as wheat, sugar, milk or any other produce, the Dairy Board, or Wheat Board demands a strict code of conduct and unity within ranks. Co-opted analyst boutiques seem more to be temporary refuges for individuals rather than genuine advisory brands which may cause some concern for end-users seeking decision support.

The great wonder of ICT industry analysts is not the product or the people but the context defined by the customer’s market. I actually think that customer demand has hardly changed at all. They want data, advisory, analysts, events, and support. They just want it on a more personalised, geo-targeted market basis.

For years while at META Group and Forrester all that the customers wanted in this region was the same thing delivered by the US firms but targeted for the geography in which they operated. I had that chat with George Colony shortly before leaving Forrester and would still be there today (god willing) if there was scope within the business model and share-holder responsibility to deliver it. But there wasn’t and I still don’t consider that a failing of the Forrester or Gartner business model. It is too hard and pointless to argue with success on that scale. So ultimately with boutiques, the question is whether brand is better than an A-list star or a few co-opted B-list support stars?

In pure management practice the well managed brand (the model we have chosen) that is not beholden to stars simply provides more surety for a company director’s legal responsibility to annual corporate regulator checklists as well as for the customer and resource structure of everyone else in the firm.

What is wrong then with a traditional analyst firm delivered with renewed vigour and focus? From where we stand, there is very little other than patience, good strategy, great product and a little bit of luck. While star analysts given free reign will continue to do well, they are not an innovation, nor ultimately the sustainable future of our industry.

 

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