By
Dawn Kawamoto
Tuesday, October 25 2005 09:58 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39284791,00.htm
Oracle is taking a two-prong approach to battling the competition,
focusing on its Fusion Middleware and growing its presence in the niche
applications arena that targets specific industries, said Charles Phillips, the
company's co-president.
Oracle has been on a acquisition spree, buying niche players such as logistics
and transportation software maker G-Log and retail
software vendor Retek. The focus on niche applications, or vertical silos,
comes as the enterprise resource planning market has matured and customers say
they are more concerned with the actual applications that run the critical
segments of their business, said Phillips, who made the remarks Monday during a
New York luncheon address to Wall Street analysts.
"This is where the game will be played and the battles will be fought," he said.
While Oracle has the capability to take on yet another large merger beyond
its pending multibillion-dollar deal
with Siebel Systems, Phillips said his company envisions more deals with
small to medium-size companies.
At the same time, Oracle is also concentrating on its Fusion
Middleware, comprised of several Java and Web services components that allow
applications to interoperate. These components range from a Java application
server to a Web portal. Fusion Middleware is designed to enable customers to
share information with non-Oracle-based systems and to modify Oracle programs.
Oracle's middleware revenues grew to US$853 million in the past four years. The
last three quarters posted the largest year-over-year gains, said Phillips, who
previously noted that some people inside Oracle
predicted middleware sales may one day surpass the company's core database
business.
Oracle, which recently announced a partnership with IBM to run its packaged
applications on Big Blue's WebSphere middleware, is relying on its "hot
pluggable" middleware technology to compete with BEA Systems and SAP.
"Oracle's Fusion Middleware is our fastest growing business and it's a great
business for us," Phillips said. "Our entire middleware suite is hot and
pluggable...the fact that it's a lower price (than competitors) and doesn't
require you to rip everything out has helped our sales."
Oracle currently has more than 27,000 Fusion Middleware customers and has
landed more than 3,000 deals per quarter, he added.