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| [March 21, 2013] |
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SafeNet and SIIA Survey Reveals Where Software Publishers Are Losing Up to 50% of Revenue
BALTIMORE --(Business Wire)--
Software
monetization leader, SafeNet,
and the Software
& Information Industry Association (SIIA) today released the
results of a joint survey of more than 620 software developers and 194
enterprise software end users, revealing that developers continue to
struggle with how to secure their critical intellectual property (IP)
without disrupting their business. As a result of not implementing the
right licensing models and security as a foundational pillar of their
business, software developers are finding that they are losing revenue,
seeing diminishing profitability and increasing the risk to their brand
and overall reputation.
Participants cited inflexible licensing models, insufficient software
protection, and inadequate operational procedures as the main
impediments toward fully monetizing their software, protecting their
company's most critical intellectual property and fully integrating
software monetization into their business model.
Some of the highlights of the survey include:
-
One out of two (53 percent) software publishers surveyed said they
would have driven higher revenues for their software if they had more
licensing flexibility.
-
Nearly one out of two (48 percent) software publisher respondents
admitted that competitive IP theft had a significant impact on their
business.
-
In addition to licensing and piracy issues, nearly one out of two (46
percent) software publishers now report that dysfunction in their back
offices has had a significant impact on their business, with nearly
two out of three (60 percent) admitting that they struggle with
back-office licensing processes.
"These survey results highlight the tremendous need for a change in how
software developers approach and execute their software monetization
strategies," said SafeNet (News - Alert) Senior Vice President Prakash Panjwani.
"Developers need solutions that address the four key elements of
software monetization-effective packaging, access and compliance
control, back-office automation and management, and usage monitoring. By
adopting a comprehensive approach to software monetization,
organizations can not only protect their critical IP from piracy and
reverse-engineering, but help drive revenue and profitability as well."
Tipping Point for Licensing Models
More than half (53 percent) of software publishers surveyed said they
lost revenue opportunities due to the limited flexibility of licensing
models, which negatively impacted their business. In addition, 61
percent of publishers admit that they struggle with the ability to price
and package their applications at the feature level. Almost half (49
percent) of respondents admit that re-packaging offerings without
engineering involvement is a challenge, and that they struggle to
support the license models their customers are demanding. Given the
issues faced by software providers, it is not surprising that inflexible
licenses were cited as the biggest software
licensing headache by more than a third (35 percent) of end-user
respondents.
Revenue and Brand Reputation Increasingly at Risk
Beyond licensing flexibility problems, nearly half of all respondents
also reported that lack of control over their software was a major
contributor to revenue loss-48 percent of software publisher respondents
thought that competitive IP theft had a significant impact on their
business, and 42 percent thought that lost revenue due to software
piracy had a significant impact. This result is not unexpected,
considering that 70 percent of respondents reported challenges with
piracy prevention, 63 percent reported challenges with
reverse-engineering protection, and 51 percent reported challenges with
code-tampering prevention.
The responses from software end users justify concerns about the
business impact of software misuse-more than 60 percent report having
some unlicensed software in use within their organization last year.
This behavior seems to be reinforced by software publishers; while 74
percent worry that their software may become compromised, only 58
percent employ license
compliance enforcement mechanisms and only 46 percent employ IP
protection tools.
Back-Office Dysfunction Leading to Operational Inefficiencies and
Revenue Loss
In the past, when the software industry discussed revenue leakage, the
focus was on piracy. As the industry has progressed, software publishers
increasingly recognize other revenue barriers. Forty-six percent of
software publishers now report that dysfunction in their back offices
has had a significant impact on their business. This is consistent with
the finding that nearly 60 percent also admitted they struggle with
back-office licensing processes, and only 31 percent of respondents said
they have integrated entitlement management processes. More than half of
publishers said they face the following operational challenges-entitlement
management generation, delivery, and/or activation (55 percent);
end-user support and/or self-service (54 percent), and end-user
provisioning (50 percent). End users are also feeling the back-office
pain; nearly one-third (32 percent) say that the process associated with
lost license keys is their biggest licensing headache, and only 28
percent of the vendors offer customer self-service tools.
Lack of Usage Visibility Restricting Business Intelligence
Business intelligence is critical for decisions related to new markets,
product packaging, and efficient internal resource management.
Therefore, software publishers' ability to track who is using their
software-as well as when, how, and to what extent-is critically
important. However, there is a struggle for most publishers (68 percent)
with usage visibility. More specifically, more than half of all
respondents reported challenges with tracking feature usage (60
percent), information about end users (52 percent), and entitlement
status (51 percent). Without this information, executive management
lacks the insight they need to effectively drive product investment
plans, packaging strategies, and other critical business decisions.
An Effective Software Monetization Strategy is Needed for Maximizing
Value
Despite the challenges software publishers face, they recognize that an
effective software monetization strategy can help them maximize the
value of their IP. In fact, more than 84 percent of respondents say that
an effective software monetization strategy could boost their revenue by
up to 50 percent.
Software developers are experiencing the evolution of software
monetization. While strong security still tops the list of important
software monetization solution features (63 percent of respondents), it
is followed closely by other key features, including flexible
packaging/bundling functionality (52 percent), automated provisioning
and enforcement (51 percent), and minimizing the burden on engineering
(49 percent).
"The industry finds itself at a critical tipping point as software
publishers look for more innovative and effective ways to maximize the
value of their IP," said Rhianna Collier, Vice President of the SIIA's
Software Division. "They need to better align their software
monetization strategy with their business objectives and drive those
strategies very early in the product development cycle. That way, they
can develop software packages to meet their customers' current and
future needs, and build licensing into their software and back-office
systems."
Supporting Resources:
About SafeNet Software Monetization Solutions
SafeNet has more than 25 years of experience in delivering innovative
and reliable software licensing and entitlement management solutions to
software publishers, technology vendors, and cloud service providers
worldwide.
Easy to integrate and use, innovative, and feature focused, the
company's family of Sentinel®
Software Monetization Solutions are designed to meet the unique
license enablement, enforcement, and management requirements of any
organization, regardless of size, technical requirements, or
organizational structure. SafeNet clients are able to address each and
every aspect of the software monetization lifecycle-from copy and intellectual
property protection to product catalog management and ongoing
end-user experience improvement. With a proven history of adapting to
new requirements and introducing new technologies to address evolving
market conditions, SafeNet's more than 25,000 customers around the globe
know that by choosing Sentinel, they choose the freedom to evolve how
they do business today, tomorrow, and beyond.
About SIIA
The Software & Information Industry Association (SIIA) is the principal
trade association for the software and digital content industry. SIIA
provides global services in government relations, business development,
corporate education and intellectual property protection to more than
700 leading software and information companies. For further information,
visit www.siia.net.
About SafeNet, Inc.
Founded in 1983, SafeNet,
Inc. is one of the largest information security companies in the
world, and is trusted to protect the most sensitive data for
market-leading organizations around the globe. SafeNet's data-centric
approach focuses on the protection of high-value information throughout
its lifecycle, from the data center to the cloud. More than 25,000
customers across commercial enterprises and government agencies trust
SafeNet to protect and control
access to sensitive data, manage risk, ensure
compliance, and secure
virtual and cloud environments.
Sentinel is a registered trademark or trademark of SafeNet in the U.S.
and certain other countries.

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