Sondergaard says business intelligence, virtualization, and social media will carry over from 2009 and continue to dominate IT leaders' agendas. Emerging categories on the agenda include "context-aware computing," operational technology (sensors, etc., for real-time feedback/control), and pattern-based strategy (reacting to leading indicators.)
As Sondergaard suggests, cost cutting will stay a big mission for IT departments next year. IT spending alone won't necessarily tell people whether their employer is preparing for growth, though;IT pros need to hone in at what a company's spending on, as well as what it's cutting. During a networking session of our InformationWeek 500 conference last month, I talked with an IT leader who's under cost-cutting pressure, but also investing in customer-facing infrastructure. The leadership's convinced that any recovery will place entirely new demands on IT given how integral the Web--and increasingly the mobile Web--has become to the research-buy-own cycle. If anything, this year will put CIOs under more pressure to both cut costs and drive growth.