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	<title>Paul Miller - The Cloud of Data &#187; SAP</title>
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	<description>Linked Data, Cloud Computing, Semantic Web, SaaS, PaaS, more</description>
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		<title>Paul Miller - The Cloud of Data &#187; SAP</title>
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	<itunes:subtitle>conversations with the executives shaping Cloud Computing and the Semantic Web.</itunes:subtitle>
	<itunes:summary>Linked Data, Cloud Computing, Semantic Web, SaaS, PaaS, more</itunes:summary>
	<itunes:keywords>Cloud Computing, Semantic Web, Linked Data, Open Data, SaaS, PaaS</itunes:keywords>
	<itunes:category text="Technology" />
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	<itunes:author>Paul Miller</itunes:author>
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		<itunes:name>Paul Miller</itunes:name>
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		<title>Semantic Universe tackles Semantics in the Enterprise</title>
		<link>http://cloudofdata.com/2009/04/semantic-universe-tackles-semantics-in-the-enterprise/</link>
		<comments>http://cloudofdata.com/2009/04/semantic-universe-tackles-semantics-in-the-enterprise/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Apr 2009 19:13:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Paul Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Enterprise Computing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Semantic Web]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Business Intelligence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Business Objects]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Knowledge Management]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Master Data Management]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Oracle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SAP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Semantic Technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Semantic Technology Conference]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Semantic Universe]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Silver Creek Systems]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://cloudofdata.com/?p=576</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;ve written and spoken before about the need to build some serious bridges between the semantic technology/ Semantic Web community and the multitudinous enterprises that rely for their livelihood upon the timely and appropriate exploitation of data. The annual Semantic Technology Conference in San Jose plays an important role here, with ever-more &#8216;proper&#8217; business people [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a title="semanticuniverse" href="http://www.semanticuniverse.com/"><img class="attachment wp-att-577 alignright" style="margin: 7px;" src="http://cloudofdata.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/semanticuniverse-logo.png" alt="semanticuniverse" width="267" height="126" /></a>I&#8217;ve written and spoken before about the need to build some serious bridges between the semantic technology/ <a class="zem_slink" title="Semantic Web" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantic_Web">Semantic Web</a> community and the multitudinous enterprises that rely for their livelihood upon the timely and appropriate exploitation of data.</p>
<p>The annual <a href="http://www.semantic-conference.com/">Semantic Technology Conference</a> in San Jose plays an important role here, with ever-more &#8216;proper&#8217; business people joining the semantic enthusiasts each year in order to understand the ways in which the Semantic Web and the diverse product offerings of exhibitors can help them to tackle real problems inside their business today.</p>
<p>Online, too, the team behind the conference has been working to build a portfolio of case studies and papers under the <a href="http://www.semanticuniverse.com/">Semantic Universe</a> banner. The latest iteration of this site sees it take &#8216;<a href="http://www.semanticuniverse.com/editorial-issue/997">Semantics in the Enterprise</a>&#8216; as an editorial focus, comprising a collection of more than twenty articles and media resources.</p>
<p>In amongst the various papers is one that I was invited to write, entitled &#8216;<a href="http://www.semanticuniverse.com/articles-bringing-semantic-technologies-enterprise-data.html">Bringing Semantic Technologies to Enterprise Data</a>.&#8217; I had great fun writing this, and am grateful to everyone who gave up their time to talk with me about their views on Enterprise Data. I spoke with executives from <a class="zem_slink" title="NASDAQ: ORCL" rel="stockexchange" href="http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=ORCL">Oracle</a>, <a class="zem_slink" title="NYSE: SAP" rel="stockexchange" href="http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=SAP">SAP</a> Business Objects, <a href="http://www.silvercreeksystems.com/">Silver Creek Systems</a> and other companies, and learned a lot from the different perspectives that they bring to bear. <a class="zem_slink" title="Master Data Management" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master_Data_Management">Master Data Management</a>, <a class="zem_slink" title="Business intelligence" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_intelligence">Business Intelligence</a>, regulatory &#8216;<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Separation_of_duties">segregation of duties</a>&#8216; and more receive the semantic technology treatment at the companies I spoke with, and there is plenty to unpick for those on the verge of making similar moves themselves.</p>
<p>The trick now, of course, is to carry these conversations to the enterprise data practitioners who don&#8217;t yet know that semantic technologies can help them, by sharing success stories and exemplars in <em>their</em> conferences and publications in order to draw them to &#8216;ours,&#8217; and the resources gathered on sites such as Semantic Universe.</p>
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		<title>Struggling in their mid-range move to the Cloud, SAP ask Wookey to succeed at the top</title>
		<link>http://cloudofdata.com/2008/11/struggling-in-their-mid-range-move-to-the-cloud-sap-ask-wookey-to-succeed-at-the-top/</link>
		<comments>http://cloudofdata.com/2008/11/struggling-in-their-mid-range-move-to-the-cloud-sap-ask-wookey-to-succeed-at-the-top/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Nov 2008 09:02:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Paul Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Cloud computing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Oracle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SAP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Software as a service]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://cloudofdata.com/?p=89</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Having published last night&#8217;s post on the difficulty of moving any traditional software business toward offering a SaaS solution and gone to bed, I wake this morning to see the Web a-buzz with news of SAP&#8216;s latest hire. See, for example, Ben Worthen, Joshua Greenbaum, Vinnie Mirchandani, and Maureen O&#8217;Gara. John Wookey, formerly an executive [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Having <a href="http://cloudofdata.com/2008/11/can-traditional-software-companies-embrace-saas-without-disruption/">published last night&#8217;s post</a> on the difficulty of moving <em>any</em> traditional software business toward offering a SaaS solution and gone to bed, I wake this morning to see the Web a-buzz with news of <a class="zem_slink" title="SAP AG" rel="homepage" href="http://www.sap.com/">SAP</a>&#8216;s latest hire. See, for example, <a href="http://blogs.wsj.com/biztech/2008/11/11/sap-gets-serious-about-online-software/">Ben Worthen</a>, <a href="http://blogs.zdnet.com/Greenbaum/?p=189">Joshua Greenbaum</a>, <a href="http://dealarchitect.typepad.com/deal_architect/2008/11/wookeys-back.html">Vinnie Mirchandani</a>, and <a href="http://cloudcomputing.sys-con.com/node/744633">Maureen O&#8217;Gara</a>.</p>
<p>John Wookey, formerly an executive at <a class="zem_slink" title="Oracle Corporation" rel="homepage" href="http://www.oracle.com">Oracle</a>, has been named as SAP&#8217;s new &#8216;Executive Vice President of Large Enterprise On Demand.&#8217; As Ben Worthen <a href="http://blogs.wsj.com/biztech/2008/11/11/sap-gets-serious-about-online-software/">notes</a> on the <em>Wall Street Journa</em>l&#8217;s Business Technology blog,</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;That title is tantalizing because it implies a major strategic shift for SAP that the company hasn’t so much as hinted at previously.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Wookey&#8217;s remit appears (strangely) to explicitly exclude SAP&#8217;s troubled mid-range SaaS offering, Business ByDesign, and he&#8217;ll be concentrating on taking a SaaS proposition to SAP&#8217;s core customer base of big corporates.</p>
<p><em>Everything</em> I wrote last night about the mid-range applies at the top of the game too, only more so. SAP are playing an extremely risky game here, and the cost of failure in front of their core customer base almost doesn&#8217;t bear thinking about.</p>
<p>I look forward to seeing whether Wookey can pull it off from inside SAP, or if the inertia and vested interests of an established company and its traditional processes will once again crush the innovative streak and quash the necessary disruption.</p>
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		<title>Can traditional software companies embrace SaaS without Disruption?</title>
		<link>http://cloudofdata.com/2008/11/can-traditional-software-companies-embrace-saas-without-disruption/</link>
		<comments>http://cloudofdata.com/2008/11/can-traditional-software-companies-embrace-saas-without-disruption/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Nov 2008 21:15:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Paul Miller</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Cloud computing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bob Warfield]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Business ByDesign]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dennis Howlett]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Enterprise software]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Larry Ellison]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NetSuite]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Oracle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Salesforce]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SAP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SAP AG]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Software as a service]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Bob Warfield is amongst those reopening the self-inflicted wounds of European software behemoth SAP AG with his latest post on the SmoothSpan blog this week. The central question, though, isn&#8217;t whether they messed up; but whether what they&#8217;re attempting is even possible. Facing the real prospect of significant disruption to the mid-range part of their business [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://commons.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ford_Modell_T_-_1914_-01-_19.08.07.jpg"><img title="Ford Modell T - 1914, in Herzogenrath" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b7/Ford_Modell_T_-_1914_-01-_19.08.07.jpg/202px-Ford_Modell_T_-_1914_-01-_19.08.07.jpg" alt="Ford Modell T - 1914, in Herzogenrath" width="202" height="152" align="right"></a><br />
<a class="zem_slink" title="Bob Warfield" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Warfield">Bob Warfield</a> is amongst those reopening the self-inflicted wounds of European software behemoth <a href="http://www.sap.com/">SAP AG</a> with <a href="http://smoothspan.wordpress.com/2008/11/10/sap-admits-that-saas-is-cheaper-for-you-too/">his latest post</a> on the SmoothSpan blog this week. The central question, though, isn&#8217;t whether they messed up; but whether what they&#8217;re attempting is even possible.</p>
<p>Facing the real prospect of significant disruption to the mid-range part of their business from the lower costs of relative newcomers <a class="zem_slink" title="Salesforce" rel="homepage" href="http://www.salesforce.com/">Salesforce</a>, <a href="http://www.netsuite.com/portal/home.shtml">NetSuite</a> and others, it certainly made sense for SAP to ape Salesforce&#8217;s success and pursue a strategy that would see the German company able to offer their smaller customers a cheaper hosted solution, rather than continuing to rely exclusively upon the expensive purchase, installation and upkeep of hardware at customer sites.</p>
<p>However, as ZDNet&#8217;s Larry Dignan <a href="http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=8658">reported</a> back in April, the company was forced to slow the roll-out of their Business ByDesign solution, and <a href="http://blogs.zdnet.com/SAAS/?p=511">Phil Wainewright was quick to spot the opportunity</a> that the company had handed to its competitors;</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;By <a href="http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=6316">announcing its own SaaS product for the midmarket</a> late last year, SAP put its stamp of approval on the on-demand model. Now that it has said customers will have to wait another year or more before they can buy it (<a href="http://blogs.zdnet.com/Greenbaum/?p=165">due to scaling problems</a>, no less), the company has created the worst of all worlds: it has validated a market and then vacated it, giving competitors a free run.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>So what went wrong, and are there broader lessons to learn from SAP&#8217;s mis-steps? As <a href="http://dealarchitect.typepad.com/deal_architect/2008/11/saps-new-friends.html">Vinnie Mirchandani notes</a>, both Salesforce and <a class="zem_slink" title="NetSuite" rel="homepage" href="http://www.netsuite.com/portal/home.shtml">NetSuite</a> have been characteristically swift in publicly rubbing salt into wounds, and most companies would naturally be keen to avoid handing the competition such an easy target.</p>
<p>In a tightening economic climate, and with Dennis Howlett <a href="http://blogs.zdnet.com/Howlett/?p=541">reporting customer disquiet</a> at rising maintenance costs for SAP&#8217;s existing installed product base, the company must surely regret not having a good news story to tell about a product that requires no hardware or upgrade investment on the part of their customers. Zoli Erdos at CloudAve <a href="http://www.cloudave.com/link/netsuite-goes-after-sap-%25e2%2580%2593-but-where-is-business-bydesign">reports</a> that NetSuite has jumped on this opportunity too, claiming a <a class="zem_slink" title="Total cost of ownership" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Total_cost_of_ownership">total cost of ownership</a> comparable to 50% of just the annual maintenance component of SAP ownership. It&#8217;s worth noting that Dennis responds to Zoli&#8217;s post in the comments, describing the premise as;</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;pure hubris and you know it.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Unfortunately, and as SAP are discovering to their cost, moving an existing deployed software solution toward on-demand hosting is not simply a matter of moving the application from one data centre to another. Costs rise rapidly at the provider&#8217;s end, too, as they take on previously delegated costs for networking, power, maintenance and more. Software designed for single tenancy installation is either expensive in wasteful under-utilisation of numerous single tenancy servers, or technologically inefficient in the way that it operates across multiple tenancies and virtual machines. In either case, these new &#8211; and rising with every &#8216;successful&#8217; sale &#8211; costs must be borne by the provider rather than the customer. Whilst SAP&#8217;s incremental costs in shipping each new software package to a customer site are very close to zero, every new SaaS tenancy brings costs that SAP must plan for and bear; space in a data centre, hardware, power, cooling, bandwidth, etc.  All too soon costs begin to spiral out of control, and if the economics are not carefully optimised &#8216;success&#8217; runs the risk of very quickly becoming self-defeating.</p>
<p>Purely in terms of the corporate balance sheet, the shift from installing software to deploying it can be too painful to endure. Rather than a sizeable up-front license payment supplemented each and every year by an up-front annual maintenance charge and intermittently by hefty upgrade fees, software companies transitioning to provision of SaaS face the prospect of no more than a monthly or quarterly subscription payment. The &#8216;upgrade&#8217; gravy train makes little sense in a SaaS environment, where customers have been led to expect continual incremental improvement. Even where customers could be persuaded of the value in some notional upgrade, the economics again become self-defeating as the software vendor rapidly finds themselves maintaining a plethora of legacy versions to their software and absorbing the resulting overheads in support, equipment partitioning and the rest.</p>
<p>That secret money machine of the enterprise software business &#8211; consultancy around implementation and customisation &#8211; is undermined by the Model T Ford plainness of much SaaS too, adding significantly to the woes of CFOs at traditional software companies who are trying to balance the books on a move to the Cloud. SaaS products today tend to target the low end, rather than competing head-to-head with the feature-bloated behemoths at the top of the software foodchain. The nature of SaaS products means that &#8216;trials&#8217; are a couple of mouse clicks away. Even signing up to take the full product tends to be quick, painless, and priced at a point well within the budgets of middle managers and even individual professionals. Salesforce was one company to make significant headway in this fashion, infiltrating the enterprise via individuals with just enough budgetary authority to close the contract without having to negotiate the complexities of an &#8216;enterprise sale&#8217; or compete directly with the incumbent system or the biases and politics of the C-suite.</p>
<p>Whilst perfectly capable of matching or exceeding the value of license and maintenance components over the long term, especially when the savings inherent in running a single version of the core software package in a controlled and manageable environment are taken into account, this retrospective trickle of utility rental funds requires a significant realignment of a company&#8217;s finances and metrics. All of an organisation&#8217;s carefully optimised profit and loss models need to be completely rethought, and tenets at the heart of the corporate DNA stand every chance of directly impeding any serious move toward a utility computing model where individual short-term margins will tend to be far tighter than before.</p>
<p>Although not directly addressing the utility computing market by name, the lessons in <a class="zem_slink" title="Clayton M. Christensen" rel="wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clayton_M._Christensen">Clayton Christensen</a>&#8216;s <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Innovators-Dilemma-Revolutionary-Business-Essentials/dp/0060521996">The Innovator&#8217;s Dilemma</a></em> and <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Innovators-Solution-Creating-Sustaining-Successful/dp/1578518520/">Innovator&#8217;s Solution</a></em> are writ large here for all to see. What traditional provider of locally installed software can successfully cannibalise their own business and reimagine themselves fundamentally enough to succeed in the Cloud? SAP are certainly trying, but it&#8217;s not clear that they&#8217;re even close to succeeding.</p>
<p>The SaaS success stories tend to be SaaS from their foundation. Marc Benniof could not have produced Salesforce whilst at Oracle, and even <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larry_Ellison" title="Larry Ellison" rel="wikipedia" class="zem_slink">Larry Ellison</a> had to facilitate NetSuite at arm&#8217;s length to his main business.</p>
<p>Can traditional software providers <em>ever</em> make the transition, and are the major obstacles standing in their way technological or financial?</p>
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