IDC estimates that worldwide revenues in the collaboration applications market grew 28.4% year over year in 2021 to $29.1 billion. This growth was driven by a series of factors including companies expanding collaboration to more people, the purchase and integration of multiple solutions to better meet corporate needs, and price increases and/or feature upgrades.
And the growth extended across all the collaboration markets and submarkets identified by IDC, including team collaboration applications, conferencing, virtual events, enterprise communities, and email applications.
Drivers of collaboration
Collaborative applications enable people to work from anywhere, create a more productive and inclusive work community, and are key to digitally transforming a business. And the growth of more connected frontline workers — and every other type of worker — will continue over the forecast period.
"The expectation and adoption of these applications inside and outside the workplace is now a given," said Wayne Kurtzman, research vice president, Social, Communities, and Collaboration at IDC.
He opines that in the years ahead, collaboration platforms will become more engaging, visual, functional, and community-powered.
"These features, aided by intelligence, will rapidly evolve and support working from anywhere. A new array of metrics will also develop that tie activity to customer outcomes. IDC estimates that the collaborative applications market will grow to $63.8 billion by 2026," he continued.
Highlights from the IDC forecast include:
The increase in partners and customers wanting to collaborate with any given business is significant and continues to grow. Yet many businesses remain slow to accept the offer to collaborate.
Enterprise communities will be a market to watch. Companies that do not provide a well-moderated community will have users, even for business-to-business (B2B) companies, quickly form communities where the enterprise cannot leverage it.
Virtual events, or perhaps better called digital events, represent a great opportunity to engage audiences who may not be able to travel to key events. Supported by communities, this creates ongoing engagements at the pace of the individual.
A fully connected enterprise, augmented with collaboration and intelligence, is already starting to create a new era of metrics. Newer KPIs will include key behavioural indicators (KBIs) that look at the effects of situational management, creativity, collaboration, and problem-solving and will be tied to actual customer outcomes. Integrations are key to this evolution.