Archive for November, 2009

News Analysis: DSAG Project Team Members Resign Leadership of SUGEN KPI Working Group

DSAG project team and project leader departure could signal disagreement with methodology not SUGEN

SAP embarked on an ambitious program to prove value in its Enterprise Support fee hike last year.   As planned, SAP should announce the results for the first set of SUGEN KPI’s in early December.  However, two key SUGEN KPI project sponsors (revised 11/30/2009) team members have left from the German SAP user group (DSAG).  Confirmed by a spokeswoman to IDG News Service on November 27th, 2009, both project leader Andreas Oczko and project sponsor Otto Schell resigned from their roles on November 18th.  Several outcomes may potentially have led to this departure:

  1. The methodology used by the auditing firm (Gartner Consulting) could be quite inconsistent
  2. Teams may not have had enough time to review the data to check for statistical errors.
  3. The KPI’s measured were only the first set, not the complete set.
  4. A few months does not provide enough trending data
  5. SAP’s attempting to announce results prior to when 90%+ of its maintenance renewal occurs in Q4

To be clear, DSAG remains a SUGEN member and has not pulled out of the group or project.  The leadership members have just left the project and have been active with the SUGEN group on other projects and issues.

SAP Should Still Be Given Credit For Undertaking A Huge Endeavor

Despite attempting to raise get away with a large (revised 11/30/2009) maintenance fees hike in the middle of one of the worst global recessions, the SUGEN agreement with SAP is a good faith gesture and a step in the right direction.  While this is not a legally binding agreement, the deal calls for SAP to limit increases until demonstrable results from the KPI’s have been achieved.  This is not an easy challenge but a few props should go out to SAP because:

  1. SAP’s embarking on a risky but unique program to show value
  2. Benchmarking 100 global customers against 10/11 KPI’s creates data consistency challenges
  3. Agreeing to present results in the face of public opinion takes courage

The Bottom Line For Users -  Remain Vigilant And Compare SUGEN Results With Your Own

SAP customers should work with their user groups to understand the methodology used and gain access to the underlying data with these 100 customers.  Keep in mind SAP’s Value Academy already has benchmarking data for a broader set of customers.  The result – selection of the 100 customers by the user groups will significantly impact the outcome.  Users should see how their situation fares compared to the benchmarks to gauge their own potential value achieved from SAP’s Enterprise Support

The Bottom Line For Vendors – Provide Customers With Tiered Maintenance Plans

Pressures from SaaS deployments and mid-market competitors will erode the 70 to 80% margins in maintenance fees.  Customers will begin to demand third party maintenance options and include such protections in future contracts.  Those vendors who keep tiered maintenance based on the life of the product in production will engender the most loyalty by providing customers with the right balance between sustaining maintenance and incentives to upgrade.  At the end of the day, customers have to migrate on their own terms.  Maintenance fees should reflect the value that customers receive and not be an impediment in the client – vendor relationship.

Your POV.

If you get a chance, let us know:

  • Which SAP products do you use?
  • What do you think about the progress on SUGEN KPI’s?
  • Are you considering alternatives to SAP?
  • Do you feel SAP is innovating fast, ok, or slow enough?

Feel free to post your comments here or send me an email at rwang0 at gmail dot com or r at softwareinsider dot org.

Copyright © 2009 R Wang and Insider Associates, LLC. All rights reserved.

Speaker Notes: Keynote – SAP UK & Ireland User Group Conference 2009

Building Innovation With And Around Your SAP Environment

Location: Manchester CentralAuditorium
Date:23/11/2009
Start Time: 16:25
End Time: 17:00
Speaker: R “Ray” Wang
Company: Partner with Altimeter Group

Keynote summary:

  1. Pace of change continues to increase in market forces, work dynamics, business models, and pace of technology adoption.
  2. Innovation is essential in this market.
  3. There’s a tonne of innovation at SAP. Management and politics keep it from coming out.
  4. Users need to tap into innovations from SAP and also help SAP prioritize what should go to market.
  5. Users need to know what you want to do before you even talk to SAP.  Get your act together.
  6. Use the user group to build the linkages to SAP.  This is a better, more productive approach, especially if you are not a top 400 customer with private access.
  7. SAP isn’t bad or good. You can’t view them that way. Management is confused at the moment on leadership, direction, and innovation so figure out what you need from them early and fast.
  8. If SAP can’t do it, you don’t have time to wait for them, especially if there’s no commitment. SaaS is an option, other providers are out there.  Come back to them later when they figure it out.
  9. The pace of change is too fast. Technology adoption too slow. Companies need to keep moving in innovation.
  10. Invest in innovation even if it hurts. Find money to optimize and pay for this.  There are a number of vendors that can assist.

Members of the SAP UK &I user group who would like a copy of the presentation can contact David Stanley, Vice President of Business Development and Sales at david@altimetergroup.com for copies.   Your member number will be required for proof.

Video Highlights – Exposing SAP Innovation


Courtesy of Dennis Howlett

Video Highlights – On ESME vs Salesforce.com Chatter


Courtesy of Dennis Howlett.

Video Highlights – 5 Recent Failures of SAP


Courtesy of Dennis Howlett.

Copyright © 2009 R Wang and Insider Associates, LLC. All rights reserved.

Additional coverage and related links

Event Report: UK & Ireland User Group Conference 2009

Event Report: SAP UK & Ireland User Group Conference 2009

SAP users in UK and Ireland remain equally skeptical about SAP

(Photos by R Wang & Insider Associates, LLC.   Copyright © 2009 All rights reserved.)

The SAP user group hosted its annual event.  Conversations with 37 clients reflect the following broad trends in the UK and Ireland:

  • SAP users remain skeptical about benefits promised by SAP due to lack of delivery over the past 5 years (See Figure 1.)
  • SAP has spent more time reaching out to customers to understand pain points
  • Knowledge gaps continue to exist between what SAP users know about SAP and what SAP sales people communicate to clients
  • A show of hands in the audience validates conversations that SAP users have not adopted NetWeaver, Duet, ByD, Solution Manager, and Enterprise Support.
  • Many customers have budget but need trusted advice as to what is possible in including SAP in their future roadmaps
  • Customers seek innovation from SAP but find a difficult time understanding what SAP has to offer
  • Many customers have turned to other providers for innovations via SaaS or cost optimization

Figure 1. What SAP Customers Want

What SAP users want from SAP

The bottom line.

SAP users and their user groups have a unique opportunity to put in the right infrastructure to engage in productive partnership with SAP.  The management team has shifted their outlook.  Early signs indicate a more customer focused approach may be on the way.  Customers seeking to innovate within their SAP investment should ask hard questions about what is in the SAP Labs portfolio.  User groups will play a key role in helping to prioritize future SAP product road map investments.  Users and their user groups should push for frameworks that monitor customer reuqests and increase transparency in the prioritization process. Customers can not allow SAP to squander any more of the 10′s of billions in maintenance fee and license fees “invested” with SAP.

Your POV.

If you get a chance, let us know:

  • Which SAP products do you use?
  • When will you migrate to BS7 or ECC 6.0?
  • What do you think about the progress on SUGEN KPI’s
  • Are you considering alternatives to SAP
  • Do you feel SAP is innovating fast, ok, or slow enough?

Feel free to post your comments here or send me an email at rwang0 at gmail dot com or r at softwareinsider dot org.

Copyright © 2009 R Wang and Insider Associates, LLC. All rights reserved.

Additional coverage and related links

Quarterly Financial Tracker: Q3 CY 2009 SaaS Vendors Face Some Headwinds, On-Premise Still In The Tank

Purchasing in Q3 reflected both economic downturn and summer doldrums.  While on-premise vendors continued massive double digit declines in year-over-year new license revenue, SaaS vendors faced some pressures in keeping up with tremendous growth.  However, long term economic outlook still favor SaaS players and early indications on Q4 budget flush indicate that SaaS and Cloud are top of mind.  Major themes in the 2009 Calendar Year Q3 include:

  • On the SaaS front, Salesforce.com (19.55%) continues to lead the pack followed by Blackboard (18.44%) and Concur at (12.94%) (see Figure 1).  While SaaS vendors still experienced growth, Concur (12.94%), Ultimate Software (9.76%), and Taleo (8.77%), NetSuite (3.22%) experienced drops in rate of growth.  Taleo and NetSuite faced the biggest drops in Q3.
  • Tracked publicly traded SaaS vendors represented $756.2M in Q3 software revenues.
  • On-premise vendors showing gains in EPS despite revenue drops (see Figure 2).
  • Specialty on-premise vendors JDA Software (-2.63%) and IFS (-5.07%) reversed license growth and lost year-over-year quarterly gains.
  • Lawson Software reversed a license free fall showing growth in Q3 (22.77%). Healthcare and HCM continued to bolster its license growth and come back.
  • Maintenance revenues continue to float losses in license revenue for on-premise vendors.  Growth in maintenance continues to slow.

Figure 1. SaaS Vendors Face Q3 Headwinds And Growth Slows Vs Q2

2009 Q3 Calendar Year SaaS Revenues

screen-shot-2010-03-18-at-95239-pm

2009 Q3 Calendar Year SaaS Revenues - Copyright © 2009 R Wang and Insider Associates, LLC. All rights reserved.

2009 Q2 Calendar Year SaaS Revenues

screen-shot-2010-03-18-at-95444-pm

2009 Q2 Calendar Year SaaS Revenues - Copyright © 2009 R Wang and Insider Associates, LLC. All rights reserved.

Figure 2.  On-premise Vendors Face Continued Market Brutality

2009 Q3 Calendar Year On-Premise Revenues - Copyright © 2009 R Wang and Insider Associates, LLC. All rights reserved.

2009 Q3 Calendar Year On-Premise Revenues - Copyright © 2009 R Wang and Insider Associates, LLC. All rights reserved.

The Bottom Line For Users – Expect Continued Discounts in Q4

A poor Q3 will bring good news to buyers in Q4 as vendors will continue to heavily discount licenses and professional services while delivering more value to retain maintenance margins.  Conversations with 41 CIO’s indicate that a Q4 budget flush is in the works.  The conditions favor end users as poor economic conditions, realization by vendors, and need to invest will yield a great buying season.

The Bottom Line For Vendors – Start The Subscription Revenue Model Shift

It’s time to go on a SaaS offensive.  The train has left, but its not too late.  Expect hardware vendors, telecom providers, and other companies looking to gain software multiples to enter the market via SaaS.  2010 will bring significant acquisitions in this space as well as more proliferation of SaaS offerings and PaaS delivery models.  Best of breed solutions delivered via SaaS will cut into on-premise market share.  Cloud computing will not be an end all be all.  Hybrid deployment will continue to be the norm.

Your POV.

Ready for some great renewal conversations in Q4?  Feel free to post your comments here or send me an email at rwang0 at gmail dot com for any assistance in contract negotiations with your vendor or the development of a software licensing and pricing strategy for 2010.

* Not responsible for any math errors or erroneous revenue information.  Calendar year estimates based on the quarter nearest the calendar year.  Exchange rates as of November 189th, 2009.  Not responsible for currency flux.  Please read the quarterly filings yourself =)

Event Report: Epicor Perspectives 2009 – Continued Transformation Towards Next Gen Apps

Perspectives 2009 highlights continued market, corporate, and product transformation

Epicor Perspectives Hall of SolutionsEpicor's Community Managers James Norwood Vice President of Product Marketing on Epicor's Roadmpa
Pool at Caesar's PalaceA Night With Tom Papas At Epicor Perspectives 2009A Night With Tom Papas At Epicor Perspectives 2009A Night With Tom Papas At Epicor Perspectives 2009

(Photos by R Wang & Insider Associates, LLC.   Copyright © 2009 All rights reserved.)

Celebrating its 25th anniversary, Epicor hosted over 1500 partner, customer, and employee attendees at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas, NV.  Conference highlights include:

  • Update on Epicor 9 adoption. Epicor has (deployed 11/19/2009 ) shipped 30,000 seats to 60 customers since GA in December 2008.  More than 890 customers have purchased the product with 590 implementations in progress.   The company hopes to be in 50 countries and 30 languages by end of year.

    POV: With over 22,000 customers worldwide, product adoption may at first appear below average.  But given the recessionary factors, Epicor has done well in taking its time to ramp up and build customer references for this next generation app.  Epicor’s success will require a future specialization into verticals and indirect partner channels.

  • Shared benefits program. Epicor launched a new program to improve implementation outcomes with shared risks and benefits.  Vendor and customers will own project scope definition and agree on outcomes and ROI.  If the project is under budget, Epicor shares the savings with the customer.  If the project runs over budget, the customer pays for half the contracted professional services hourly rates.

    POV: Epicor builds on its previous program where it targeted a 1:1 license to implementation ratio.  While there may be open issues about unintended consequences (i.e. as raised by fellow Enterprise Advocate Frank Scavo), Epicor’s intent to change the relationship is a great step towards improving outcomes for clients in the enterprise software world.

  • New eCommerce solution. Epicor launched an all-in-one eCommerce solution that covers design to delivery.  Users of Epicor Commerce can synchronize master data elements such as products, pricing, customers, and inventory levels while managing website content and delivery.  Other features include support for payment options, merchant account/gateway integration, and tax calculations via Avalara.

    POV: Commerce customers at Perspectives were expressing interest in the new SaaS-ready options as well as hosted options.  Prospects should take a close look at the Order Hub integration from retail activities to the back end ERP systems as this will prove the greatest integration value.

Feedback from 37 customers remain mostly positive

Conversations with 17 Vantage, 12 Enterprise, 5 Avante, and 3 Vista customers showed quite positive customer sentiment.  Most (15/17) Vantage customers expected to move to Epicor 9 in 2010.  Key drivers:

  • Key functionality addressed in newer release
  • Better usability
  • Newer technology
  • Greater ROI

However, only 3 Enterprise customers, 2 Avante, and 1 Vista customers expected to make the move in the next 12 months.  Key drivers for not making the upgrade include

  • Economic recession
  • Waiting for functional parity
  • Over customization of existing product

Your POV.

If you get a chance, let us know:

  • Which Epicor products do you use?
  • When will you migrate?
  • What do you think about the shared benefits program?
  • Will you look more closely at Epicor as an alternative to SAP and Oracle?

Feel free to post your comments here or send me an email at rwang0 at gmail dot com or r at softwareinsider dot org.

Monday’s Musings: SaaS, SOA, Integration and How To Make A Peanut Butter And Jelly Sandwich In The Cloud

Rapid SaaS Adoption Will Lead To A Repeat Of 1990′s Best Of Breed Integration Challenges

The proliferation and rapid adoption of SaaS solutions stems from 7 key benefits: richer user experience, rapid implementation, frequent cycles of innovation, minimal upgrade hassles, always on deployment, subscription pricing, and scalability (see Figure 1). Despite these benefits, organizations head full circle towards the same best of breed dilemma they faced in the late 1990′s.  In that era, organizations sought innovation from more nimble and agile competitors.  The result – a concerted effort to deploy a number of on-premise, point solutions.  Willing to sacrifice not having a single instance for functionality, they invested heavily in integration.  Almost a decade later, organizations will encounter similar challenges with harmonizing a plethora of SaaS entry points in the next 2 to 3 years. Given the growing number of SaaS solutions at cost-effective price points and easy adoption, today’s organizations face problems in a geometrically larger scale.

Figure 1. Seven Benefits of SaaS Deployments

screen-shot-2009-11-08-at-22936-pm

Modeling How To Make A Peanut Butter And Jelly Provides Key Insights Into The Integration Challenge

Today’s integration challenges move beyond data integration to include process level and meta-data requirements that span across a range of business processes and relevant key performance indicators (KPI’s).  As more solutions are added, organizations will want to model their end to end business processes as web services and support synchronous and asynchronous communication protocols across hybrid deployments.   Organizations can expect canonical data models play a key role in harmonizing business objects.  To put this in real world terms, imagine describing how to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich using a hodgepodge of solutions.  Let’s take a look:

Example 1:  Modeling in a .NET application

  1. Bread: take 2 slices of bread
  2. Peanut butter: spread peanut butter on one slice
  3. Jelly: spread jelly on the other slice
  4. Assembly: put the bread together
  5. Assembly: slice down the middle
  6. Delivery: serve on plate

Example 2:  Modeling in Force.com

  1. Bread: take 2 slices of bread
  2. Bread: determine whether or not to toast the bread
  3. Peanut butter: choose chunky or creamy
  4. Peanut butter: spread peanut butter on one slice
  5. Jelly: choose type of jelly
  6. Jelly: spread jelly on the other slice
  7. Assembly: put the bread together
  8. Assembly: determine if the slices is in half or diagonal
  9. Assembly: slice down the middle
  10. Delivery: choose type of plate (e.g. paper or plastic)
  11. Deliver: serve on plate

Example 3:  Modeling in NetWeaver

  1. Bread: take 2 slices of bread
  2. Bread: determine if the bread is organic or not
  3. Bread: determine whether or not to toast the bread
  4. Bread: determine how light or dark the bread should be toasted
  5. Peanut butter: determine if the peanut butter is organic or not
  6. Peanut butter: choose chunky or creamy
  7. Peanut butter: spread peanut butter on one slice
  8. Peanut butter: determine thickness of spread
  9. Jelly: choose type of jelly
  10. Jelly: determine if the jelly is organic or not
  11. Jelly: spread jelly on one slice
  12. Jelly: determine thickness of spread
  13. Assembly: put the bread together
  14. Assembly: determine whether you want the crust or not
  15. Assembly: determine how to slice the bread (e.g. diagonal, half, 4 cubes, etc.)
  16. Delivery: choose type of plate (e.g. paper or plastic)
  17. Delivery: determine garnishes with the sandwich
  18. Delivery: serve on plate

In these examples, notice how they granularity of processes become deeper and deeper within more complex solutions.  How would you take the peanut butter web service from the .NET example and harmonize this with the NetWeaver example?  Now take this real-life example at a hypothetical global pharma:

  • SAP financials (on-premise)
  • Oracle JD Edwards manufacturing (on-premise)
  • Salesforce.com CRM (SaaS)
  • Workday HR and Payroll (SaaS)
  • Concur Expense Management (SaaS)
  • Xactly Incentive Comp (SaaS)
  • NetSuite OpenAir Project Management (SaaS)
  • Ariba Spend Management (SaaS)
  • Gmail and Google Docs(SaaS)
  • Jive Community Platforms (SaaS)
  • SocialText (SaaS)
  • WebEx (SaaS)

Recommendations

As organizations consider SaaS adoption they must put into place an integration framework to support the competing forces of innovation and harmonization.  These integration frameworks must consider not only data, but also process, metadata, and business intelligence.  Key suggestions include:

  • Begin with the end in mind. Identify the key performance indicators.  Determine how to measure business value
  • Understand your key business processes. Classify your business processes into 3 buckets: commoditized, mission critical, and innovative.  This way you’ll know which processes can be put into an outsource, shared service, or internal ownership.
  • Map the granularity of the business processes.  Group similar processes across different solutions and understand the levels of granularity.  Identify points for harmonization.
  • Determine the data integration requirements. Identify the key business objects associated with the business process.  Ensure that the right data arrives to the right process at the right time for the right person.  Map key meta data to process and business objects.  Build out your canonical data models.
  • Build loose frameworks for evaluation of SaaS solutions. Give line of business teams guidelines to determine how SaaS solutions fit into existing processes.  Use this to jump start integration and proactively identify integration challenges.
  • Determine approach and SaaS adoption policies. In some cases, point to point will make more sense. In others, greater levels of integration and control may be required.  Avoid a one-size fits all methodology in setting up policies.  Consider the business case first and foremost.

The Bottom Line – SOA’s Not Dead And Integration Is Key To Successful Hybrid Deployments

Given these scenarios, CIO’s and line of business apps will need to rely on stronger enterprise architecture and integration in hybrid deployments.  In fact, au contraire on the death of SOA!  Introduction of next generation social enterprise apps will only accelerate the need for good architecture and services design. Expect solutions from Boomi, Cast Iron, Informatica, Pervasive, SnapLogic, and Talend to play a key role going forward.

Your POV

Where are you with your SaaS deployment strategy?  Have you considered SaaS integration tools? What are you using and why?  Do these issues resonate with you?   Who owns the larger integration problem in your organization? Let us know how we can assist or please post or send on your comments to rwang0 (at) gmail (dot) com or r (at) altimetergroup (dot) com and we’ll keep your anonymity.

Copyright © 2009 R Wang & Insider Associates, LLC. All rights reserved.

Vendor Event: Tibco Tucon 2010

screen-shot-2009-10-03-at-73844-pm

Title: Vendor Event: Tibco Tucon 2010
Location: The Palazzo, Las Vegas, NV
Link out: Click here
Start Date: 2010-05-10
End Date: 2010-05-13
Description: TUCON® 2010 – Save the Date! May 10-13, 2010 – The Palazzo Las Vegas

We\’re excited to be taking TUCON® 2010 to Las Vegas! Registration formally opens in September, but you can sign up here to receive TUCON 2010 alerts.

Be sure to check back soon for the agenda and upcoming highlights of TUCON 2010!