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        Forrester: IE 9 Can Bring Companies $3 Million Over 3 Years
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- July 28, 2011
Upgrading from Internet Explorer 8 to IE 9 can represent a significant cost benefit to organizations -- more than $3 million over three years, in fact. 
That was the conclusion of a Microsoft-commissioned  study published  in June by Forrester Research. To compile its data,  Forrester interviewed representatives from six unidentified organizations -- which Microsoft chose -- that  upgraded from IE 8 to IE 9 as part of Microsoft's Technology Adoption Program (TAP). 
Forrester found  that moving to IE 9 represented a net present value (NPV) of $3.3  million over three years' time for the companies, with payback occurring after 15 months.
 
"The  three-year risk-adjusted total NPV of $3,349,000 represents the net costs and  benefits attributed to using Internet Explorer 9 versus Internet Explorer 8,"  the report explained.
 The report's author postulated a 60,000-employee  "composite organization," based on the six companies, to derive that  cost estimate. This IE 9 upgrade effort occurred in conjunction with the PC  refresh cycle as the composite organization transitioned from using Windows XP  and Vista on PCs to using the Windows 7  operating system. 
 The  time that it would take to deploy IE 9 was estimated by the organizations interviewed  to be about 12 to 18 months. That estimate included time for "testing,  application remediation, pilot, and distribution," according to the  report. The composite organization took an estimated 2,020 hours for the labor  associated with this IE 9 move.
 Various  tools were used to move to IE 9 by the six organizations interviewed. Those  tools included the "Internet Explorer Compatibility Test Tool, Internet  Explorer Administration Kit (IEAK), Configuration Manager, System Center  Essentials 2010 (Essentials), [System] Center Configuration Manager (SCCM),  Microsoft Deployment Toolkit 2010, Application Compatibility Toolkit, and  Windows Server Update Services (WSUS)."
 The  prep work to catalog the apps and determine if remediation was needed turned  out to be just a mental hurdle, according to the report.
 "Interviewed  customers reported that one of the biggest hurdles they had to overcome prior  to making a decision to upgrade the browser was gaining an inventory of  applications in their environment and determining the scope of application  remediation," the report said. "Companies frequently saw this as a  bigger problem than turned out to be the case."
 The  report cited a "historical" estimate that 80 percent of apps would  not require remediation after a move to IE 9. However, based on the interviews,  the experience was more positive than that rule of thumb.
 
The  top benefits of moving to IE 9, beyond the extended cost savings, were  described by interviewees as "malware protection and improved  security," as well as "some improvement in productivity for power  browser users."
 The  study, "The Total Economic Impact Of Windows Internet Explorer 9,"  can be downloaded here (PDF)  for free. Microsoft also offers a synopsis of the study at this  blog. 
 One TAP participant   was Siemens. During its test phase,  Siemens deployed IE 9 to "more than 2,100 global employees participating  in a pilot deployment of Windows 7 Enterprise," Microsoft explained in another  blog post. Siemens is now planning a broad rollout in the next year or two to  all of its employees. The rollout will include a mixture of both Microsoft  Office 2010 and Microsoft Office 2007, plus Windows 7 Enterprise. 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.