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Worksoft expands in Canada to attract SAP users

Worksoft expands in Canada to attract SAP users

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 03 Sep 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

A company that specializes in the testing and validation of complex enterprise resource planning software opens a local office. IDS-Scheer explains how Certify could work with its own product line

Dallas, Tx.-based Worksoft, a testing solution provider for SAP applications, has announced its launching operations in Canada in order to better serve and expand on its local customer base.

Worksoft is best known for Worksoft Certify, whose chief selling point is that it automates and allows optimization testing for the deployment of SAP applications. The product can be adapted to each client’s configuration to provide validation for a company’s business processes.

“The timing was ideal because the traction we’re seeing right now from the customer base in Canada is ever-growing,” David Milette, Canadian general manager at Worksoft, said. “It was just becoming a challenge to cover everything out of the U.S. We wanted better support for our customer base in Canada and better capacity to expand that market share and grow.”

Milette said the Worksoft’s testing technology has already been well received by Canadian companies like Bell Canada, which is using the solution to functional test and validate its SAP applications.

As opposed to a code-based automation system, Certify stores the data so that it can be easily analyzed and interpreted without the need for strong technical skills.

“The only folks that understand what should happen when you go down a specific flow are the functional users or the business analysts,” Brian Anderson, director of product management at Worksoft, said. “And those are the exact guys that aren’t comfortable writing loops and different constructs within test scripts. So, the use of objects without any lines of code being generated means you can simply drag and drop what you want to test onto a palette.”

Milette, who served as Canadian presales manager at HP prior to joining Worksoft, said the different approach to testing and automation was the determining factor in his move.

“If automated testing was easy, everybody would be doing it right now and getting tremendous success, but the reality is that the market is maybe 10 to 15 per cent that are doing automated testing versus 80 to 85 per cent doing it manually,” Milette said. “The reason for that is the traditional approach to automated testing which has been based on code and scripting. Worksoft’s approach basically eliminates all need for creating custom scripts, code, loops and all that is compelling to customers.”

Warren Shiau, senior IT analyst at the Strategic Counsel, said Worksoft’s move to Canada could be a really good opportunity for the company in an important and growing market. He said the biggest issue enterprises face when deploying new applications is making sure they run smoothly, so a product which tests these business processes meets a strong need.

“This is where you’ll find market development – companies specifically targeting specific application suites to provide a higher level of functionality,” Shiau said. “So, a company like Worksoft is demonstrating that sort of market evolution.”


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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