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Ballmer outlines Microsoft's business apps agenda

Ballmer outlines Microsoft's business apps agenda

By:  Briony Smith  On: 12 Mar 2008 For: IT World Canada Creator

The Redmond firm's CEO discusses changes to its Dynamics-CRM product, announces a partnership with EDS and evaluates his competitors, including Oracle, SAP and IBM. Plus: The software-plus-services plan

ORLANDO— “The biggest decision we’ve made is to push into business applications,” Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer thundered from the keynote stage at the Dynamics-based Convergence conference in Orlando Wednesday, where he discussed the company’s focus on integration with other Microsoft programs, spreading CRM everywhere via a new EDS partnership, and its recent software-plus-service offerings.

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“We’re still concentrating on the small to mid-market businesses, specialty and vertical businesses, subsidiaries and departments, take CRM everywhere, and make sure it’s all really usable,” he said.

He also discussed how Microsoft stacks up against the old hands in the business application market. Said Ballmer: “We are the leading provider of enterprise software in terms of total dollar volume. SAP is sometimes a collaborator, sometimes competition. Oracle is competitive. IBM is the most interesting, as they have none of the software (power) we have. DB2, Notes, WebSphere, Tivoli—not that strong. They’re more about enterprise services,” he said.

Forrester principal analyst Ray Wang said that these statements are in line with what he has seen in the market lately. Oracle and SAP still have a stranglehold on the mass-deployment enterprise-level ERP market, while Microsoft wisely sticks to the mid-market space due to the scalability of the Dynamics suite and the lack of certain large-enterprise ERP functionality such as HR plug-ins, said Wang. However, he pointed out, while it is too early to speculate, Outlook and SharePoint were once positioned as somewhat segment-specific and are now pervasive in the enterprise, both big and small.

To increase its market share within the business applications space, Microsoft announced a partnership with Plano, Tex.-based EDS to resell its Dynamics-CRM software. This, said Info-Tech Research Group senior associate analyst Tim Hickernell, could signal EDS’s abandoning of Siebel, the CRM software it has been shilling for years. Oracle bought Siebel two years ago.

Microsoft itself is heading into the service market with its new “software plus services.” One of the first forays into this arena (Ballmer said it’s “still early”) is the previously announced Microsoft Dynamics CRM Live, which is expected to hit in the second quarter of 2008. The product was demoed during the keynote, which showed a call centre scenario where the operator could tap in immediately to the case file of the customer but also connect to related messages in Outlook. These records can be exported to Dynamics programs. Word is also connected to the application, allowing the user to use response templates, as well as Messenger, which can connect the operator to another party who might need to consult on the call (who can also patch in to see the CRM info).


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Briony Smith Briony Smith is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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