By
Tony Hallett
Friday, September 29 2006 11:07 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,61956049,00.htm
Software isn't a straight choice between packaged and on-demand--at least
that's according to SAP, the giant software vendor which has recently been
saying how it will use service-oriented architecture (SOA)
to continually edge forward what its customers can do with technology.
At the German company's US TechEd conference two weeks ago, SAP
product and technology group president Shai Agassi talked
about building on a "stable core" of software that "drives the ability to innovate at your pace".
The key will be something called enhancement packages. These plug into that
core, thanks to SOA. And that's a big deal for a company whose far-reaching
software has a reputation for very large installs every few years.
Agassi told Silicon.com in an exclusive interview in London on Wednesday:
"Our customers are telling us 'don't touch the core, don't disrupt my core
business more than every five years--and by the way, I need innovation every
three months'.
"So think of SOA as a gearbox. We'll allow the customer to choose which gear
they want... by choosing which pack and which enhancement they want."
A survey of 1,500 people in both business and technical roles carried out
earlier this year by analysts Quocirca found a poor understanding of SOA by many in both camps, though
those that get this shift and are pushing ahead with SOA are seeing
benefits.
SAP has targeted 2010 as the next big upgrade year for its core software:
mySAP ERP 2005. ERP, or enterprise resource planning, can take care of
everything in an organization from payroll to HR to financials to manufacturing
and more - only it's costly and has a reputation for not always being easy to
implement.
Agassi said that, if anything, the importance of change in today's business
climate is "under-hyped". The idea is that an organization gets to concentrate
on the minority of processes that actually differentiate it from its
competitors.
How many of them understand their differentiators? According to Agassi:
"About 10 per cent."
As an example, he pointed to the way Apple was able to roll out its iTunes
music store in just three months, based on an SAP backbone, whereas one-time
digital music leader Napster took a year and was left behind.
On a flying visit to Europe--he is normally based on the U.S. west coast--the
executive talked positively about the company's partnership with Microsoft and
didn't miss the chance to disparage arch-rival Oracle. In recent years Oracle
bought PeopleSoft and Siebel, both major players in business software,
traditionally around HR and CRM respectively.
SAP will continue to look for smaller acquisition targets--once upon a time
that's how Agassi came into the fold--but he added: "We don't believe in buying
customers. We want to see benefit the day after [any acquisition], not the day
before," with a nod towards Oracle's approach.
He also said Oracle customers must be "confused" about where the former
PeopleSoft and Siebel products are being taken, saying "there is no real
road-map".
Oracle declined to respond to these comments when contacted.
As well as its enhancement packages, a road-map of which is due soon, SAP is
getting into enterprise search as well as launching Discovery Server--software
for IT departments and ISVs which allows those that build around SAP products to
test and get things right without having to use live systems or wait for new
builds.
SAP this week opened a research centre in Belfast which will collaborate
closely with the University of Ulster and Queen's University. It will focus on
grid
computing and is one of a number of such facilities around the world.
Tony Hallett of Silicon.com reported from London.