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Mixed reaction greets Oracle’s Hyperion buy

Mixed reaction greets Oracle’s Hyperion buy

By:  Jeff Jedras  On: 15 Mar 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

While analysts say a large part of Oracle’s US$3.3-billion acquisition of business intelligence (BI) vendor Hyperion Solutions earlier this month was about building market share, at least one Hyperion customer has no desire to be fused into Oracle’s world

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While analysts say a large part of Oracle’s US$3.3-billion acquisition of business intelligence (BI) vendor Hyperion Solutions earlier this month was about building market share, at least one Hyperion customer has no desire to be fused into Oracle’s world.

Hyperion’s products, which include financial planning tools and a powerful online analytical processing (OLAP) engine, will complement Oracle’s family of BI software, which it began to build out early last year, Oracle said.

The deal is Oracle’s latest in a spree of acquisitions that have included business applications vendors PeopleSoft Inc. and Siebel Systems Inc. The vendor will extend its portfolio of database, applications and middleware products to include one of the broadest sets of business intelligence tools in the industry, company executives said.

The acquisition news was “quite shocking” for Gary Calcutta, a business analyst with SaskTel. The Saskatchewan-based telecommunications company has used Hyperion’s BI platform for more than 10 years.

At this point, Calcutta said there just isn’t enough information, but he wants to know what Oracle’s plans are for the Hyperion product line, and specifically the BI tools that SaskTel has been using for everything from reporting and analysis to operational monitoring and dashboarding.

“It’s a feeling I get that they wanted [Hyperion] more for the financial products,” said Calcutta. “It looks like the BI products were more secondary.”

Calcutta said that as SaskTel has expanded its BI platform over the years, they have looked at Oracle’s offerings and weren’t too impressed.

“[Oracle] didn’t fare well at all, unfortunately,” said Calcutta. “They’ve got not-bad functionality but ease-of-use was really poor. It was not an easy tool to use.”

SaskTel will be sending a staffer to Hyperion’s annual user conference in April and Calcutta said they’ll be looking for more information on the future of the toolset. He added, though, that he has no interest in moving to Oracle’s Fusion platform.

The Hyperion purchase was no surprise to George Goodall, a senior research analyst with the London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group. He said it’s no secret that Oracle is on an acquisition spree to grow market share, and the BI market is particularly ripe for consolidation.

“This is really the first strike in what is going to be a wave of consolidation in BI,” said Goodall.

He said the Oracle move will put pressure on other players in the BI space, particularly remaining pure-play BI companies like Micro Strategy and Ottawa’s Cognos.

“The concern, when you look at this kind of consolidation wave, is that Cognos may be the ugly girl at the dance,” said Goodall. “We’re really not too sure what Cognos can do in this space, although it’s still very early days.”


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Jeff Jedras Jeff Jedras joined CDN as a senior writer in 2007. While he was new to the channel he was no stranger to technology journalism, beginning his career in Ottawa with Silicon Valley NORTH in 1998, where he... more

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