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Salesforce.com and Google execs blast Oracle, SAP, Microsoft over SaaS

Salesforce.com and Google execs blast Oracle, SAP, Microsoft over SaaS

By:  Juan Carlos Perez  On: 09 Nov 2008 For: IDG News Service (Miami Bureau)(NA) Creator

Getting sassy over SaaS. Marc Benioff, Salesforce.com CEO and Dave Girrouard, Google's Enterprise unit president chide Oracle, SAP and Microsoft for coming late to the Web-hosted software party

Salesforce.com and Google executives had fighting words for rivals Oracle, SAP and Microsoft, saying those vendors are late to the Web-hosted software party and will pay the price for it.

Speaking on the panel "Cloud: The Apps" on Thursday at Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco, Salesforce.com's CEO Marc Benioff and Google's Enterprise unit president Dave Girouard displayed a "bring it on" attitude towards their larger rivals' aspirations in the market for SaaS ((software as a service).

Asked by moderator Tim O'Reilly, CEO of O'Reilly Media, for his opinion about dismissive comments Oracle CEO Larry Ellison made recently about SaaS as little more than an empty buzzword, Benioff quoted ancient Chinese military strategist Sun Tzu, author of The Art of War.

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"'When weak, feign strength.' That's the right approach for him. [But it's not] the right approach for these companies that are strong and developing and have tremendous organic growth," Benioff said, referring to his company, partner Google and the other two represented on the panel, VMware and Adobe. "We've embraced these new technologies."

But Benioff wasn't finished, and a few minutes later hit out again at his former boss Ellison, saying that the SaaS approach can't be compared with "mature, dying models like Oracle and SAP, which is maybe already dead."

Girouard also had choice words for traditional enterprise software vendors, saying that they haven't learned from the successes of Web-based software for consumers, and are thus failing to meet the expectations of those same consumers when they go to work.

"There's an amazing disconnect between the innovation and user experiences delivered in the consumer world and the stagnant, unenlightened world of enterprise computing that puts the user experience far in the background and focuses on business process," he said.

The modus operandi of Google's Enterprise unit is to adapt the company's consumer Web applications for the enterprise market, so that their ease of use and friendly interfaces carries over to the workplace, thus meshing the best of both worlds, he said.


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Juan Carlos Perez Juan Carlos Perez 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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