Survey Says SAP Users at Sapphire Concerned about Performance

 

Alex Goldman writing for InternetNews.com in his article Does SAP's Performance Fall Short reports on a survey conducted at SAP’s annual conference for SAP Professionals, SAP Sapphire ’09, held in Orlando, Florida. The study on SAP’s performance was sponsored by Precise Software, a transaction performance management (TPM) provider and was conducted by Dimensional Research. Dimensional Research based its findings from 695 SAP Professionals. The respondents were attendees at SAP’s Sapphire conference and answered questions at the Precise Software booth.   Some of the findings are as follows:

·         62% unhappy with the resolution of performance issues

·         8% reported daily problems

·         68% reported 1 to 5 incidents per month

As to the resolution and/or response times:

·         46% reported resolution in hours

·         22% reported resolution in minutes

·         30% reported resolution in days or weeks

·         2% reported resolution in seconds

Tracking of database transactions through the database and the application servers and into storage can be done for the SAP ERP software. Precise Software is now offering such tracking for SAP’s BI software as well. Zohar Gilad, executive vice president of Precise Software says:

“Traditionally in BI, companies take data from the production ERP system, extract it and scrub it, and load it into their data warehouse.  This can disrupt the production system, companies can fail to move the data in time, and it's tough to access.”

Precise Software is not the only TPM vendor involved in resolving these issues. Attivio and Fiorano are two other TPM vendors using different methods. SAP is also looking for a way to improve its BI and announced it is offering a new search engine to do just that.

SAP had no comment regarding the survey stating that they did not know how the data was gathered nor had they seen the survey.

 

Business Intelligence Will Be HOT in 2009

Nobby Akiha reports in SandHill.com on Gartner’s Top Ten “HOT” technologies for 2009. Included in this top 10 list is Business Intelligence (“BI”). Akiha lists the 10 predictions for BI and how BI will surge in 2009 and they include the usual suspects, “The Recession” and “Going Green”; however, the list also gives us some insight into the other salient issues that will cause the use of BI to swell in 2009. For the complete story read Nobby Akiha’s article 10 Predictions For Business Intelligence. Here is a short-hand version of the list:

1.       More Open Source Collaboration: Blogs, online communities, and social networking will help spur the development and use of BI tools.

2.       Rich Internet Applications (“RIA”) for consumers influence the Enterprise:  Workers start to demand the same web applications used at home for the workplace.

3.       The Cycle Goes from Applications – to – Users – to - Better Applications:  It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

4.       A Recession Fighter: BI provides the competitive advantage to analyze costs, margins, and channels to better gauge profitability.

5.       Green: BI assists in the allocation of resources. Plus, ‘going green’ fits with consumer sentiment and conserving resources conserves cash.

6.       Regulations are coming: In light of the financial melt-down on Wall Street, it is a foregone conclusion that the Feds will be writing more regulations and these regs will most assuredly require companies to retain and disclose data. BI will help with the data management.

7.       Globalization Increases Competition: BI makes it possible for business decisions to be more informed and in real time.

8.       Wider Access to the Analysis: Decision makers are enterprise wide and as BI gains wider adoption these decisions makers will have access to the informed analysis.

9.       Flexible Reporting: Siloed data isn’t much help to the enterprise at large. BI makes it possible for data to be scalable and viewable in various formats.

10.   More Open Source Deployments: These solutions will be customizable for business decisions.

 

SAP's Business ByDesign Aimed at SMB Market

 

Richard Adhikari reports in InternetNews.com that SAP plans to move aggressively forward with its SaaS offering, Business ByDesign, and is targeting the SMB customer in his article SAP to Innovate Heavily in SMB On-Demand Suite - updated - Business intelligence to pervade enterprise software giant's forthcoming products.  It appears from some of the comments quoted from the SAP executive suite that the word “aggressive” is only the tip of the iceberg:

Henning Kagermann, co-CEO stated:

“When you come to challenging times, you have to take risks. Business ByDesign is not just about product, we also want to focus on profitability, and in the volume business you have to do a lot of innovation to make the business profitable”

Jim Snabe, head of SAP's business solutions and technology, stated further:


“You can look at it from two angles. One is how to convert money into ideas; the other is how to convert ideas into money”


In addition to the predicted new innovation of this SaaS offering which includes CRM, SAP will integrate its Business Intelligence (“BI”) technology into the business suite as a direct result of its purchase of Business Objects last year.  This will bring the analytics portion into the new offering.  Customers will be able to analyze their historical projections as well as future projections.


So when should we expect this new business suite to be rolled out.  SAP says to look for it by next year.  Just exactly when next year isn’t quite clear.


In related SAP news:  In a move to emphasize its focus on profitability and a bid to match the pricing of Oracle, its chief competitor, SAP customers are none-too-happy with the recent price increase for its enhanced maintenance “Enterprise Support”.  For the full story see SAP CEO Defends Price Hikes as Customers Gripe - In its drive to become more profitable, has the enterprise software vendor stirred up a hornet's nest?  Kagermann defended his company’s actions by stating:


"We're offering a new service which is much larger than before, has a certain value and a certain price. The cost for us is higher, and so we believe it's a fair price."

SAP's Business Objects Partnership with Oco: Low-Cost Solutions for SMB's


Business Objects, an SAP Company, continues its strategy of partnering with innovative companies offering Business Intelligence (“BI”) in a SaaS approach with the blessing of its parent, SAP. Its latest association is with Oco. Although both companies are players in the SMB space and both offer BI in the SaaS mode, Oco is a much smaller company. Oco’s competitive advantage comes from its development of templates for various vertical niche markets such as analytical tools and reports in the retail, industrial manufacturing, and consumer packaged goods industries. This collaboration suits both companies. SAP furthers its desire to make its products work with other vendors’ products and Oco gains an entrée to the larger SMB customer that was not previously available to them.


The BI marketplace has become extremely competitive. The main distinguishing factor for vendors in this market is to provide the products that give the enterprise the ability to make decisions faster. Business Objects’ SaaS offering, Business OnDemand, provides a fast and accurate solution. Now with the added advantage of Oco’s data discovery and mapping tool, the solutions for the SMB will come faster and at a lower cost. These partners recognize that the much larger enterprises who want their intelligence customized might not be so receptive to the Oco data model. Richard Adhikari explains in his article Business Objects Teams Up With Oco the customer first accepts Oco’s data model and this data model then finds all the data in the enterprise and produces the BI in a low cost manner.


Adhikari cites Business Objects Vice President Mani Gill, who explains the enhanced OnDemand offering this way:


Oco will let us deliver hosted multi-source data warehouses in multiple industries and functional areas.


We use our enterprise information management tools to pull data from customers, host it ourselves and provide business intelligence on top.


For a fuller explanation see Adhikari’s article. He points out that the combination of these two vendors additionally benefits both by allowing Oco to become a reseller of Business Objects products and permitting Business Objects yet another opportunity to differentiate itself and gain a foothold in this market space.


IBM's Cognos BI and Baseball Contract Negotiations

Now this is the kind of story that not only makes good business sense it also discusses the application of new technology to something most of us find exciting and can understand, “high-stakes” Baseball contracts. The Major League Baseball Players Association (“MLBPA”) has decided to assist player agents get faster and deeper access to statistics and comparative analysis for their contract negotiations with Owners and General Managers. The MLBPA will be using IBM's Cognos BI software to analyze, compare and project player stats, and chart individual players' progress over the course of this year’s baseball season.

Doyle Pryor, assistant general counsel of the MLBPA, released a statement reported by InternetNews.com in its article Baseball Gets a New Data Cleanup Hitter stating, “Our analysis of player performance is as complex and dynamic as the work of high-powered business analysts in Fortune 500 companies, and we need to use the same robust, flexible interface to achieve reliable results."   Joseph Pusztai, IBM Cognos' director of product marketing added, "Once the agents become comfortable with this, they'll be able to leverage the information for their clients in the best way. The ultimate goal is to come up with statistics that shows a player's success. For example, the common stats will show you home runs, but now they'll be able to see how many were hit in the late innings, when it tends to matter more."

 

Phil Taylor, senior writer for Sports Illustrated, commented that, "The stats help both the players and owners make their case during contract negotiations. If a player hits .285 for the year, but he can show that he hit .350 from the 7th inning on in tie games, that'll help his case." Such availability to these kinds of stats can be a double edge sword and be used by the Owners and General Managers to show weak hitting in the later innings as well.

SAP Merges with Business Objects

SAP acquired business intelligence (“BI”) software developer, Business Objects, for $6.7 billion.  This is the latest of acquisitions in the BI space.  First there was Oracle’s purchase of Hyperion for $3.3 billion.  This was countered by Business Objects own $300 million purchase of Cartesis S.A.  Business Objects’ software provides the means for companies to analyze their competitors decisions as well as their own.

SAP’s CEO, Henning Kagermann, emphasized during a press conference that the value added to its customers will come through its real-time BI which will strengthen the decision process.

Ovum Research's David Bradshaw and Helena Schwenk commented:

"Another factor is the business growth that SAP can get from the combination. Large suppliers are attracting an ever-larger share of customer spend, as customers try to reduce the number of suppliers to bring some order to their IT buying. In some accounts, the purchase might turn SAP from being an 'also ran' into a strategic supplier."

In addition, they noted, the acquisition "will bring both data extraction capabilities and market-leading front-end query and reporting tools, complementing parts of the NetWeaver BI stack," referring to SAP's cornerstone platform that it recently opened up to developers.

To read the full details of the merger read Larry Barrett's article in Internetnews.com.