Index Insider: How Will a Data-First Approach Drive IT Services Demand?

Friday, June 6, 2025

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Hello. This is Michael Dornan stepping in for Stanton Jones with what’s important in the IT and business services industry this week. 

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IT Spending Patterns Are Changing 

As we entered 2025, we discussed how IT budgets were likely to change in the coming year. We also looked at the drivers behind those changes. Since then, AI and applications remain two of the growth areas for IT spending. The question now is: is it the applications that drive decision-making or is it the data that run the applications that drive decision making? In our latest ISG Market Lens™ study on data programs, we went looking for an answer. 

Data Watch 

is data the new it growth areas - expected changes for enterprises in the next 2 years

Background 

We interviewed 281 mostly C-level decision-makers and found that spending and resourcing for data initiatives was accelerating at a time when overall IT spending and resourcing was largely flat. Data has become critical to enterprise priorities for productivity and cost optimization and is seen as a key driver for both revenue growth and profitability. 

The Details 

  • Enterprises report an average budget increase of 7.5% over two years for data initiatives.
  • The volume of data that enterprises will need is expected to increase by nearly 5% to support the number of data users, which is growing at twice this pace.
  • Enterprises say they are spending the most on business value from insights. They expect the business value from these investments to increase by almost 15% over two years.
  • Despite growing business involvement in data initiatives, the CIO is most commonly the decision-maker for all aspects of the data portfolio, from strategy and governance to outsourcing decisions.

What It Means for IT Services 

While data presents a massive opportunity to improve business performance, most agree that the complexity of managing data is the main barrier to success. As a result, enterprises are planning to increase their spending on outsourced data services by an average of 7% over the next two years, with 60% of enterprises engaging new providers as part of these data programs.

Organizations are seeking help in the following areas: 

  • Data organization: Most respondents agree that centralized data governance allowed for greater efficiency in delivering business insights, but less than a half feel they have achieved this in their organization.
  • Data design: Application data structure is the leading inhibitor to enterprise data usage. Inflexible design and ineffective tools to expose or share data are holding enterprises back.
  • Drive for productivity: 45% of respondents say that AI and data productivity investments are falling below business expectations despite being among their top four investment priorities.
  • Access to talent: Talent is identified as the biggest hurdle to data and AI initiatives reaching production status. Enterprises struggle to recruit multidisciplinary talent that combines technical expertise with business understanding.
In the era of AI, enterprises need a business and data-first approach to solve many of these complexity challenges, which is reframing how they are engaging managed service providers. Read our latest research on how agentic AI is impacting the IT services market here
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About the author

Michael Dornan

Michael Dornan

Michael Dornan is a Principal Analyst in Provider Services based in the UK. He is responsible for ISG’s Buyer Behavior research program, helping providers navigate changing market dynamics, identify unmet enterprise demand, and position services and solutions that align to client needs.