IaaS and PaaS Workloads to Reach Revenue of $400 Billion in 2025

IaaS and PaaS Workloads to Reach Revenue of $400 Billion in 2025
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IDC recently published a new forecast for the Worldwide Public Cloud Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) and Platform as a Service (PaaS) markets, which includes revenue segmentation across IDC's 18 enterprise workload categories. The combined market is forecast to have revenues of $400 billion in 2025 with a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 28.8% during the 2021-2025 forecast period.

Application development and testing, structured data management, and structured data analytics will be the largest workload segments by revenue share. Unstructured data analytics/data management and media streaming are forecast to be the fastest growing segments with CAGRs of 41.9% and 41.2%, respectively. Other business applications, file and print, and content applications will grow slower than the overall market average while still delivering double-digit growth throughout the forecast period.

"Enterprise spending on public cloud infrastructure continues to grow faster than traditional IT infrastructure segments," said Andrew Smith, research manager Cloud Infrastructure Services. "We expect all workload segments to grow in the double digits, some slightly faster than others, as enterprises emerge from 2020 and continue to prioritize workload migration and modernization using public cloud infrastructure.

Cloud IaaS and PaaS is a critical, enabling component for the future of digital infrastructure. The future of digital infrastructure is highly dependent on the ability of complex, connected cloud infrastructure to self-regulate and dynamically optimize itself in response to real-time changes in resource demand, application performance, and end-user experience. By 2022, IDC anticipates that almost half of an enterprise's products and services will be digital or digitally delivered, increasing the business' reliance on infrastructure (compute, storage, networking) to support more than traditional business applications. Timely access to innovative infrastructure resources, both shared and dedicated, will be imperative to sustain the adaptive, resilient, secure, and compliant digital business models of the future.