

The following can be attributed to Omdia’s Tim Banting, Practice Leader, Digital Workplace, an author of the report: The tendency of government buyers to choose products or services that maintain the status quo.Compliance regimes that favor incumbents and discourage adoption of newer, more innovative technologies.Overemphasis on ease-of-procurement vs.In addition to outlining the risks of dependence on a single vendor, the report also outlines a number of factors that have contributed to Microsoft’s dominant market share: Government.” Omdia used publicly available historical and current data, demand- and supply-side research, and other statistical modelling. The Computer & Communications Industry Association and Google commissioned Omdia’s report, “Monoculture and Market Share: The State of Communications & Collaboration Software in the U.S. government for future cyber attacks and national security incidents-particularly in the wake of SolarWinds and Hafnium. government’s overreliance on a single vendor, including higher costs to taxpayers, less innovation than the private sector and, most importantly, greater risk to the U.S. The research report outlines a number of consequences to the U.S. government office productivity software market to be approximately 85 percent, more than seven times the share of the next largest competitor. Washington - A new study conducted by Omdia has found Microsoft’s share in the U.S.
