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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

For its part, Cognos is putting a positive spin on the news. In a statement, Cognos spokesperson Les Rechan called the Hyperion acquisition “a game-changing event for our market” that he said opens up new opportunities for the company.

As one of the few “pure-play” BI vendors remaining in the market, Rechan argues Cognos’ platform independence and performance management focus will allow it to be more innovative and responsive to market change.

While a large part of the acquisition is about adding seats, Info-Tech’s Goodall said Hyperion also shores up what has traditionally been a weak area for Hyperion: business process management.

As for Hyperion users concerned about the future of their platforms, Goodall said Oracle has learned from earlier acquisitions such as PeopleSoft and has become better at managing user concerns.

With Oracle’s Fusion integration project slowing, Goodall projects it will be some four to five years before Hyperion is integrated into the Oracle platform.

One of Oracle’s larger competitors in the space, SAP AG, said in a statement that the Hyperion acquisition shows that Oracle, unable to grow its market share on its own, continues to “resort to” buying customers.

“This latest acquisition only further muddies Oracle’s already cluttered application landscape,” said Steve Bauer, SAP’s vice-president, global communications.

“The question that needs to be asked is: Has Oracle’s acquisition strategy actually benefited the user?”

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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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