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SAP moves away from ERP vendor image

SAP moves away from ERP vendor image

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 08 Dec 2009 For: Computing Canada Creator
 

At the SAP Influencer Summit 2009, the focus was on the company’s shift to on-demand offerings, small-to-medium enterprises, and monolithic enterprise resource planning implementations

BOSTON – SAP AG doesn’t want to be known as solely an enterprise resource planning (ERP) technology vendor anymore. Its broadened focus is on helping organizations create a flexible network of on-demand tools and connected business processes in a world that has proven itself highly connected, said a company exec.

John Schwarz, SAP executive board member, said the reality is that large enterprises are a difficult market right now and the company is starting to focus on selling specialized on-demand and analytical offerings besides ERP.

SAP will still continue to serve its traditional ERP customer as before, as well as meet the varied needs of other types of companies, said Schwarz. ERP offerings have been modularized into easily consumed segments for customers who need that, and hybrid applications can be deployed on-premise or on-demand.

Schwarz spoke during the half-day of keynotes at the SAP Influencer Summit 2009. The theme of this year’s event is clarity to reflect the new business environment and reality in which SAP, its customers and partners toil in today.

While SAP has been all about three-letter acronyms like ERP, CRM (Customer Relationship Management), SCM (supply chain management), that doesn’t mean much for the end user who just wants end-to-end processes, said Jim Hagemann Snabe, SAP executive board member, told the audience. The three-letter acronym will disappear, said Snabe.

SAP’s Business Suite 7, launched earlier this year, was designed precisely to take away the pain of integrating three-letter acronyms, by lowering the total cost of ownership and allowing application enhancements without forcing an upgrade, said Snabe.

SAP will invest heavily in providing tools for end users to interact with back-end standardized processes and get the information they need while also being collaborative on social networking platforms, said Snabe. “That interaction point between structured and unstructured is a huge opportunity for SAP,” he said.

SAP has identified three technology trends driving its offerings: in-memory analytics, mobile and on-demand. With in-memory analytic technology the company can build applications to do on-the-fly calculations that are markedly different from the traditional applications seen yet. Building on-demand technologies with narrow industry focus atop SAP’s Business Suite will give users a seamless experience. Mobile device integration with SAP tools will allow business efficiency because users don’t have to change underlying application.


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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