By Kimberly Hill
CRM Buyer Part of the ECT News Network
01/27/03 11:52 AM PT
"Our platform is a kind of neutral ground," SAP vice president Peter Graf said. "We are providing customers with a way to be on the safe side, no matter who wins the
confrontation over the implementation of Web services."
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Enterprise software maker SAP (NYSE: SAP) is following the revenue trail toward the
integration niche. Rather than extending its product family of large, comprehensive applications, the company is focusing on "snap-on" modules that automate particular business processes, according to vice
president of market strategy Peter Graf.
Enterprises are looking to
make the most of system investments they have already made, he said,
and SAP is counting on its reputation as one of the top ERP (enterprise
resource planning) software vendors to lend credibility to its new
integration platform.
"When you play golf," Graf said, "you want to play on a course designed
by Tiger Woods -- not by Peter Graf. SAP has extensive knowledge in the
application and integration game, so we knew what was needed."
MySAP Becomes NetWeaver
Last week, SAP renamed its mySAP technology platform "NetWeaver," announcing
a new type of application it calls "xApps." An xApp automates a specific
business process from end to end, Graf said,
crossing departmental and business unit boundaries and probably
spanning several enterprise applications as well.
SAP recently released the first XApp, its resource and program management module.
Others will be developed by both SAP and third-party partners. In the works are mergers and acquisitions, employee productivity and product definition.
"A lot of our customers understand that they need to prepare for new
sets of processes," Graf explained, "and also to drive more value out
of existing applications. Processes like post-merger integration,
advanced product portfolio management and corporate efficiency
activities go across the organization, touch each and every employee
most of the time, and have a significant impact on the make-or-break of
a company."
Natural Evolution
SAP's move toward the middleware space is a natural extension
of the evolution of information technology in the broadest sense. "In
the past 20 years," Graf said, "business has changed from a centralized
view of the enterprise through mainframes to the business process
redesign approach of the 1990s to, now, the support of a distributed,
global workforce and the introduction of specialized applications like
CRM and supply chain."
Companies are interested in optimizing business
processes that received little attention previously, Graf added, and that means
establishing some sort of integration and application core through
which data and process steps can be exchanged. NetWeaver is targeted
toward exactly that need.
Playing It Safe
The first advantage of NetWeaver, said Graf, is that it delivers an
integrated set of technologies. If a customer wants to deploy an
enterprise portal and a business intelligence application at the same
time, for example -- even if they are not SAP applications -- SAP has
done the work of integrating them. "You don't have to make those two
work together first," he said.
If customers do choose SAP modules -- an enterprise portal, for
instance -- they come preconfigured with integrated business content.
Using role-based views, SAP has designed screens that include links to
both SAP and non-SAP enterprise systems.
SAP has committed to working with both Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) and IBM (NYSE: IBM) to incorporate both .NET and J2EE technologies and standards, Graf explained. "Our
platform is a kind of neutral ground," he said. "We are providing
customers with a way to be on the safe side, no matter who wins the
confrontation over the implementation of Web services."
IBM Decentralizes Data Management January 17, 2003
"IBM believes integrating information using a federated approach is best suited to enterprises' needs today," said Nelson Mattos, distinguished engineer and director of information integration at IBM.
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