The Canadian market for industrial equipment is a relatively small part of the country’s overall software market.
While the value of Canadian software has grown over the past decade, the value for industrial parts has declined.
For example, the software market for computer parts is estimated to be worth $1.4 billion, according to the U.S. market research firm IDC.
Canadian manufacturers have largely relied on the United States for manufacturing software and hardware.
However, there are signs that the U:S.
is starting to shift away from the U and Canadian software.
According to a new report by the software industry association (SAIA), the market for commercial software has become less competitive with that of non-Canadian software, and has become smaller and less diversified.
A more diversified market The SAIA is a trade association of more than 3,000 companies and has been collecting data on software market share in Canada since 2009.
According the report, the average value of software in Canada in the year that ended in June 2016 was $15.1 billion.
The SAIS report says that while this is a large number, it is far from the largest.
For instance, software was valued at $16.2 billion in the first nine months of 2017.
The value for the non-software sector was $14.1 bn, or 13.3%.
The SAIA report says this is in line with other research from the organization.
“We expect the value per dollar of software to grow by at least 3% annually over the next three years, as a result of a combination of technological innovations, including cloud computing and a number of third-party software, as well as increased use of digital content for training and education.”
There are a number other trends that could explain the value difference.
The biggest of these is the rise of the cloud.
In 2016, it was estimated that cloud computing represented a 21% share of the software-based services market in Canada.
The average value per employee in the country was $25,000, while the average for the US was $39,000.
There is also a growing demand for the ability to deploy and manage cloud-based applications on a local network, which makes it easier to deploy these applications on local networks.
However the SAIAs report says there is a significant gap between the market value of cloud-managed software and the value generated by the average Canadian software-owner.
According this new report, “while the value added from cloud-driven services is greater than the value from non-cloud-driven software, the combined market value for cloud- and non-federally owned software is not sufficient to justify the large additional investment required to address this market shift.”
While the SAIA says the market share of software has dropped in Canada, the report says the decline is more pronounced in the U.: “There is also evidence that the value impact from software for industrial applications has fallen as a share of overall software spending over the last decade.”
The report does note that there are many factors at play, such as the “high cost of software for manufacturers, and the fact that the software marketplace is highly fragmented.”
“There are many reasons why this market is moving away from software and toward cloud-powered applications,” the report states.
In addition, there is growing interest from companies to develop and deploy cloud-run applications.
“This is the first time that the SAIIA has identified a gap in the software economy, and its findings highlight the importance of addressing the current market opportunity,” the SAIAS report concludes.