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Open source ERP, BI firms take tag-team approach

Open source ERP, BI firms take tag-team approach By:  Kathleen Lau On: 07 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

OpenBravo and Pentaho are offering an alternative to traditional proprietary products that handle enterprise resource planning and business intelligence. Inside the OEM agreement



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Two open source companies have partnered to provide an integrated enterprise resource planning and business intelligence offering that should minimize the complexity that an open source deployment typically renders.

Ease of deployment is the goal for organizations looking to deploy an ERP and BI component in their IT infrastructure because “in general, [open source] is great technology but sometimes it’s a little bit too techie,” said Josep Mitjà, chief operating officer with Openbravo S.L., a Pamplona, Spain-based vendor of open source ERP and point-of-sale systems.

The other vendor, Orlando, Florida-based Pentaho Corp. offers open source business intelligence systems.

In the end, continued Mitjà, technologies from Openbravo and Pentaho are business applications designed to solve business problems “so we want to simplify and hide the complexity as much as possible so people can really focus on business problems than technology configuration problems.”

Lance Walter, Pentaho’s vice-president of marketing, said he’s observed many organizations experience huge success with open source, be it the Linux operating system or the MySQL database, and that going to market with an integrated offering will especially target “those companies that have already experienced the open source benefit, [therefore] it’s very familiar for them and very easy to fit into their existing processes.”

But while experienced open source organizations will likely be the fastest adopters of the integrated offering, Walter said all businesses are increasingly realizing “that the future IT infrastructure is a combination of open source and traditional technologies working together.”

Although Openbravo has a midmarket focus, said Mitjà, the company does cater to diverse clients as the reality is “with open source the product goes ahead of you because sometimes you learn people are using it in unexpected places.”

George Goodall, senior research analyst with London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group Ltd., said he anticipates adoption of the integrated offering will happen primarily among smaller companies or at the divisional level of larger companies, given ERP is a “tremendously complicated” technology by virtue of the fact that it deals with many different business processes and legislation. Commercial ERP providers, he continued, provide valuable industry experience, deployment processes, and industry models above just the rudimentary modules. And cost-wise, open source still brings service costs.

“But that said, it’s very early days for open source ERP. The issue for companies like Openbravo is to develop that experience, develop those industry modules, expand their platforms,” he said. “And that’s a similar story to what we were hearing from ERP vendors 15 years ago.”

However, Mitjà doesn’t agree that enterprises won’t tread in open source technologies. While it’s true that the penetration of open source in larger established companies tends to occur more at the infrastructure layer than at the enterprise application layer, he said, “there is a trend there, so in large companies after understanding how to deal with open source… they feel more and more comfortable.”


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau is a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada since December 2006.In her role as senior writer, she covers broadly technology news and issues relevant to the Canadian en... more

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Comments (1)

ERP with BI
9/9/2008 12:00:00 AM Ofcourse it gives an edge. But basic ERP should strong and competitive in the market.
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