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SAP introduces business process certification

SAP introduces business process certification

By:  Briony Smith  On: 08 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The company offers a way to validate the expertise of those who know sales, marketing and Business Objects products. Plus: Metadata Management XI 3.0

In addition, SAP's and Oracle's missteps and their ecosystems' inability to serve new customers opens the door for Microsoft's Dynamics ERP product set. "I think [SAP and Oracle] are really vulnerable in attacking the midmarket," Stiffler says, "and it makes Microsoft look much more attractive relative to Oracle and SAP, if there's this big skills gap."

SAP is hoping to lure in more allies via its new partnership with the global online open innovation marketplace, InnoCentive. The company manages a platform where businesses can post their R&D challenges to be solved by engineers, scientists, inventors, and research organizations. InnoCentive will receive a SAP NetWeaver Fund investment from SAP, which will result in increased application scaelability, and a platform where vendors can offer up solutions to business problems for cash. To kickstart the new partnership, TechEd Las Vegas will feature a pavilion where participants can try their hand at solving three tech challenges (around social networking, Web servers, and video creation for a combined prize of $25,000.

This forum will add on to SAP’s other collaborative SAP Community Network platforms like the SAP Developer Network and the afore-mentioned SAP Business Process Expert Community, which total 1.3 million members.

Also announced at TechEd is the availability of the newest iteration of Business Objects Metadata Management XI 3.0. Said Business Objects CEO John Schwartz: “Metadata is increasingly unstructured and is often contextual or media in nature. We wanted to communicate better with NetWeaver, so the master data management for NetWeaver takes advantage of Business Objects’ master data management capabilities and keep data linked, current, and trusted.”

It provides a central administration point for a variety of metadata sources, and allows IT managers to get a handle on their metadata and the relationship between them by sticking it into a unified repository.

The program includes a “metapedia,” which can translate metadata into business definitions, and improve ease navigation and data discovery. It is also fully integrated with Business Objects XI 3.0 and is generally available as of Tuesday.

--With files from Thomas Wailgum, CIO.com










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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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