1.8.07

Oracle expands SaaS offering

Oracle Corporation has launched Siebel on Demand, Release 14, its latest customer relationship management (CRM) solution to take advantage of the tremendous growth in Software as a Service (SaaS) in Thailand in a move that promises more flexibility and rapid deployment while at the same time taking advantage of integration with Oracle's strength in the enterprise back office.

Speaking to journalists here, Oracle Asia-Pacific Vice-President for CRM Will Bosma explained how in the last earnings call, Oracle president Charles Philips had noted that demand for CRM on demand as well as traffic to the Oracle's website for on-demand software, or Software as a Service, was growing, year on year at 74 percent.

While Oracle does not break out figures on a regional- or country-basis, Bosma said that the trend was similar across the Asia-Pacific region.

A number of factors have contributed to this rise.

Today's organisations need to think big, while starting off small. CRM in particular is important as sales and marketing is usually the most dynamic part of an organisation. With companies interacting with customers in more and more ways, through the telephone, call centres, chat, it is important to have a single view during the moment of truth that is the point of contact with the customer.Today, more and more organisations are also looking at business analytics to drive the business, going beyond transactional reports and trend analysis.

One further point Bosma that raised was the need for quick results to win over the usually reluctant sales and marketing staff.

"CRM on demand and SaaS directly address these four points. Typical implementation time is around three to six weeks," he explained.

He said that the reason for picking Siebel on demand was varied. Some wanted the standardisation of sales processes and access to the best practices, in other words, tapping into the experience that Oracle Siebel had in CRM.

Others wanted to be able to roll out CRM at a fraction of the cost of doing the solution in-house. Many needed the quick time to implementation in new markets before they graduated to their own on-premise solution, he said.

He also claimed that Oracle was the only on-demand CRM vendor that had pre-built customisations for many industry-specific verticals such as life sciences, medical, automotive and high tech.

According to Gartner, by 2011, one quarter of all CRM installations will be of an on-demand, SaaS nature. IDC is also similarly bullish and has noted that in the region, half of all new CRM project roll outs were of an on-demand nature.

With the new, more-affordable pricing structure and ease of roll-out, Oracle today is seeing new opportunities in CRM such as for organisations or even simple clubs that need to attract and maintain members.

The latest Release 14 of Siebel on demand features improved usability, ease of administration and customisation through wizards without the need for programming expertise.

It also adds integration into Oracle's enterprise-class e-Business suite so that not only can they share data, but an event in Siebel on-demand can trigger a business process and vice versa. It also features a richer user interface through the latest web 2.0 technologies and Ajax.

As for licensing, two new options are available in addition to the existing US$70 per seat per month option. Companies or organisations that cannot or will not use a multi-tenanted infrastructure (shared server) can opt for R14 private edition, in which the software runs on a dedicated server and database situated within the Oracle data centre.

At the other end of the scale is the partner licensing option at just US$20 per user per month which allows an external partner, dealer or franchisee to share some functionality, and is the one used by the Ford Motor Company for its dealers here in Thailand.

As for Thai language support, Oracle Thailand has delivered this as field customisation to many local customers, including Ford, but Bosma said he hoped to make an announcement as to when Thai would be an officially-supported language within the next couple of weeks.

Author: Don Sambandaraksa


Read more ...

31.7.07

Uniloc Leverages Power of Oracle® Database 11g to Help Increase Performance and Business Analytics

Uniloc USA Inc., the technology leader in physical device recognition for protecting intellectual property, networks and personal data, today announced interoperability of the company’s flagship product lines, softANCHOR™ and netANCHOR™, with Oracle® Database 11g. Leveraging Oracle, the number one provider of secure and reliable database technologies, Uniloc now brings powerful business analytics and new features, including Oracle Fast Files, Oracle Audit Vault and enhanced passwords, to customers demanding the industry’s best network security and software copy protection solutions available.

Uniloc softANCHOR and netANCHOR allow organizations to use Oracle Database 11g as the backend database, raising the business intelligence bar for Uniloc users in need of strong analytics to drive powerful reporting from the data available through Uniloc security solutions. The enhanced developer productivity tools allow Uniloc to rapidly port the company’s existing data infrastructures from Oracle Database 10g to Oracle Database 11g. The power and security of Oracle Database 11g not only helps increase the speed and reliability of the Uniloc platforms, but also provides Uniloc customers with greater integration opportunities for a better overall picture of the environments they are managing.

Oracle’s tradition of excellence continues with Oracle Database 11g, helping independent software vendors like Uniloc provide its users with technology that satisfies the critical need for detailed and timely business analytics. With Uniloc softANCHOR and netANCHOR now compatible with Oracle Database 11g, the combined solution also enables substantially increased overall performance and provides support for Web2.0 and integrated XML processing, which should result in greater adoption of Uniloc softANCHOR and netANCHOR within customer infrastructures. As a member of the Oracle PartnerNetwork and the Oracle Database 11g beta program, Uniloc successfully tested both softANCHOR and netANCHOR software and network security suites on Oracle Database 11g. The new and enhanced capabilities of Oracle Database 11g provide Uniloc’s software packages with significant efficiencies in terms of deployment, integration and performance, delivering a variety of enhancements and support that will result in greater interoperability with technologies in any environment Uniloc’s products are used in.

"We are excited to bring the industry’s strongest database platform to our customers as part of a complete product offering. The synergy between Oracle and Uniloc provides users with the most innovative security solutions in the industry," said Casey Potenzone, chief information officer for Uniloc. "The power of Oracle helps increase the performance and reliability of our security platforms, but also gives our customers the ability to deploy softANCHOR or netANCHOR into new areas of their IT infrastructure to provide greater insight into secure business processes."

Availability

Uniloc softANCHOR and netANCHOR product suites with Oracle Database 11g will be available through Uniloc.

About Oracle Database 11g

Oracle Database is the only database designed for grid computing. With the release of Oracle Database 11g, Oracle is making the management of enterprise information easier than ever; enabling customers to know more about their business and innovate more quickly. Oracle Database 11g delivers superior performance, scalability, availability, security and ease of management on a low-cost grid of industry standard storage and servers. Oracle Database 11g is designed to be effectively deployed on everything from small blade servers to the biggest SMP servers and clusters of all sizes. It features automated management capabilities for easy, cost-effective operation. Oracle Database 11g’s unique ability to manage all data from traditional business information to XML and 3D spatial information makes it the ideal choice to power transaction processing, data warehousing, and content management applications.

About the Oracle PartnerNetwork

Oracle PartnerNetwork is a global business network of more than 19,500 companies who deliver innovative software solutions based on Oracle software. Through access to Oracle's premier products, education, technical services, marketing and sales support, the Oracle PartnerNetwork program provides partners with the resources they need to be successful in today's global economy. Oracle partners are able to offer to their customers, leading-edge solutions backed by Oracle's position as the world's largest enterprise software company. http://oraclepartnernetwork.oracle.com

About Uniloc USA

Uniloc USA is the technology leader in electronic physical device recognition for software copy control and information security. The core technology driving Uniloc innovation is Physical Device Fingerprinting, the company’s patented method of uniquely identifying a user device, such as a PC, game console, smart phone or cell phone, by the naturally occurring, inherent physical imperfections of that device, and then incorporating that physical device fingerprint into licenses or access credentials. Uniloc’s technologies can identify devices with more comparable accuracy than human DNA. Uniloc is the inventor and holder of the seminal physical device locking patent (U.S. 5,490,216) and has 15 related patents pending. Uniloc has applied its Physical Device Fingerprinting technical expertise to several vertical markets, including software publishing, government network access control, online banking and trading, and CD/DVD anti-theft. For more detailed information, please visit www.unilocusa.com.

Uniloc, softANCHOR, My License Manager and LicenseAUDIT are trademarks of Uniloc USA Inc. All other brand and product names are, or may be trademarks of their respective owners.

Oracle is a registered trademark of Oracle Corporation and/or its affiliates.

Source: www.oracle.com


Read more ...

30.7.07

Q&A: Oracle's President Charles Phillips

From acquisitions to Web 2.0, Phillips shares his vision for Oracle's strategy. And he's not shy about sharing his thoughts on the competition. One of the most influential people in the software industry these days, Phillips is a hard man to pin down, due to the demands of a hectic travel schedule meeting with customers, startups, and potential acquisition candidates. Editor-at-large Mary Hayes Weier got him to sit still long enough to answer an e-mail enquiry on several facets of Oracle's acquisition strategy, the company's upcoming Fusion technology, its Web 2.0 push, and its competition with archrival SAP.

InformationWeek: As a result of Oracle's acquisition strategy, you've helped turn the company into a Wall Street darling and greatly improved its market cap. But is it good for customers?

Phillips: Customers now recognize that Oracle acquiring a product is a very good thing for them. The product will be quickly enhanced and tested more thoroughly, supported globally, and integrated into the Oracle stack. Our strategy is consistent with the decisions customers are already making: They want fewer software suppliers and more accountability, more standardization and pre-integration, and less complexity. We are removing the complexity from their environments by taking responsibility for integration, certification, and testing across all these products. We can do it once instead of each customer doing this on their own.

Our renewals on support agreements reached an all-time high last quarter. We have to earn the renewals each month, and customers generally don't spend money with vendors that aren't providing value. Our customer satisfaction ratings are also at an all-time high. We've shipped more updates to the products we've acquired than anyone anticipated. Call any of our user groups and they'll register their satisfaction on the product improvements. We've improved the quality, broadened the language support, integrated the products where appropriate, expanded support to more countries with more localizations, and updated the underlying tech stack with modern middleware. We've done what we said we would do, and customers are rewarding us for providing value.

InformationWeek: Oracle can't possibly replace the majority of SAP ERP deployments since companies have gone through so much time and expense putting them in place. So what exactly is Oracle's endgame in business software?

Phillips: We've been trying to educate the press and analysts that ERP is but one component of the enterprise applications market. It's the one people know the best, but things are changing and that's an opportunity for us. We're going well beyond ERP to CRM where we are the leader, and the extremely large opportunity for industry applications.

The industry applications are line-of-business applications such as communications billing, utility billing, core banking, and retail merchandising. These applications are a higher value-add than a general ledger and drive the core business of our customers. We're selling them into SAP accounts because SAP only has administrative applications and lacks the expertise in these industries. The person who builds a good general ledger isn't the person you want building a billing engine for telcos. We've found that these industry applications are so strategic that customers will often give us the back-office administrative applications if we're providing the line-of-business applications.

In other cases, we simply surround SAP's general ledger with best-of-breed functionality in areas where SAP is weak. A very common scenario is the SAP GL surrounded by Siebel CRM, PeopleSoft HR, G-Log for transportation management, Hyperion for consolidation of those GLs, and Demantra for demand planning -- all sitting on Oracle Fusion middleware and the Oracle Grid. Many SAP customers also use Agile and Siebel CRM On Demand.

So we make sure we integrate well with SAP using standard technologies such as BPEL and our Application Integration Architecture, which supports a common object model across all applications. In this scenario, the customer simply decides they are a two-vendor applications shop: SAP for GL and Oracle for everything else. They can continue to run the GL but get world-class functionality, standard integration via our middleware suite, which most of them are already using, and support for all these other applications from the largest enterprise software company.

So the answer is that the applications market is changing. Customers spend more on custom line-of-business applications than they spend on ERP. We're aggressively pursuing the rest of the market that SAP seems to be ignoring, and we're betting that more customers will buy these processes off the shelf as their legacy applications age. Meanwhile, we'll let SAP add more complexity to their general ledger.

InformationWeek: Some analysts state matter-of-factly that there will be no super-set of Fusion applications within the next few years; that Oracle has changed its strategy here and will instead focus on a small set of Fusion applications and integration with the other software apps. Has there been a shift in strategy?

Phillips: We certainly recognize the tremendous value and brand loyalty associated with JD Edwards, PeopleSoft, Siebel, and Oracle EBS, and we plan to aggressively enhance those products for many years to come. We could have communicated that more clearly on day one, but now I think people understand what we're doing and they're responding well.

We've never said that every single feature in every single application would end up in Fusion Applications. We said we'd use our existing applications as a blue print to determine what represents the "best of " features, and we'd concentrate on those in Fusion Applications. But Fusion Applications will simply be an additional choice along with all of our other applications. The object model in AIA is the same one that will be used in Fusion Applications, which is a logical design, so it will make co-existence and upgrades easier for those customers that choose to go that route. But many will stay with PeopleSoft, Oracle EBS, Siebel, and JD Edwards, and that's fine with us. All these products will continue to have dedicated development teams that deliver enhancements based on conversations with our customers.

InformationWeek: You're asking customers to achieve innovation by integrating applications using Application Integration Architecture and Fusion at a time when many companies are attracted to simpler, easier answers to software and IT, such as hosted software. Doesn't that put Oracle at risk of being perceived as moving in a different direction than the Web 2.0 approaches to innovation?

Phillips: We were an original on-demand pioneer. We've been at this for nine years, and the current crop of press analysts don't remember how much time we spent educating the market on why on-demand was so important to the future of software and for customers in general. That is, of course, a separate discussion from Web 2.0, which we're also doing, but you can do one without the other. We have over 2 million subscribers to our on-demand service, and it's posting strong subscription growth.

Oracle is in the great position of not having to force customers to on-demand or on-premise. Enterprise customers are complex and have different needs and constraints. We understand what they're dealing with. Some will go all on-demand, some will stay with on-premise, and some large percentage will do both. We're the only company that accommodates all scenarios with proven, pre-integrated products. I'd also invite you to use release 14 of our CRM on-demand service, which is a fully Web 2.0 mashup, collaborative environment built using Oracle JDeveloper (the same IDE we're using to develop Fusion), which is turning out to be a major differentiator against the competition. We plan to be the largest on-demand company in the world, period. That's a lot easier to do if you're already providing customers their key ERP, CRM, and industry applications, as well as their technology infrastructure.

InformationWeek: Some CIOs complain communication breaks down after an Oracle acquisition. How would you convince them Oracle's strategy is in their long-term interests?

Phillips: Most of our customers see the same sales rep post-acquisition because we simply fold in a specialized salesforce and tell them to keep doing what they've been doing. We've had very little turnover in the field as a result, and we've become the employer of choice in software. We maintain the continuity so we don't break relationships. The results over three years suggest we're connecting well with customers, very well. As time has gone on, customers are not only understanding what we're doing but encouraging us. They continue to suggest acquisition ideas for us, and I routinely get calls the day of acquisition congratulating us [for] helping them to further simplify their architecture. So opinions have changed.

We do have various experts by product in the field. Customers have complex problems, and they need a functional expert to solve the problem at hand. We do not field the traditional generic account rep who knows his golf game better than the product. We want well-trained experts that can map our products to customer needs and help them solve problems.

Most of our customers also make acquisitions, and they're not only comfortable with our strategy but very interested in how we've executed so well. We routinely get asked by senior executives to discuss our acquisition methodology. Many of them believe we can better understand what they're going through as a result of our acquisitions. It has been a tremendous advantage for us to bring in proven innovation into Oracle quickly and solve customer problems. If we can bring them great technology instantly and then add value around it, they see that as a good thing.

At the same time, we continue to invest heavily in development to enhance what we have. The acquisitions are nothing but proven research and development moved under the Oracle umbrella, so our development budget is actually much larger that it appears, in a sense. Lastly, almost every interesting startup wants us to know what they're doing because we're the likely exit strategy given the tough IPO market. As a result, we get to see everything, and customers benefit from that.

InformationWeek: Is there a point when the aggressive acquisition strategy must end, due to integration overload or just the physical difficulty of managing it all?

Phillips: We have a very well-developed process, and it's pretty efficient. We have more capacity for acquisitions because we don't take very long to get them integrated, and in the software industry, that's a unique skill set to Oracle. We innovate in many areas, including around our business model itself. We aren't afraid to do something different because that's how you change the game. By now, our customers are telling us that it all makes sense, even if they didn't see it four years ago. We don't get these types of questions anymore because we have delivered.

InformationWeek: As a top Wall Street analyst, what would have scared you most about Oracle's acquisition binge?

Phillips: The stock is up 41% over the last 12 months. That usually assuages fears on Wall Street.

InformationWeek: What's the hard evidence that the PeopleSoft and Siebel acquisitions have been successful?

Phillips: The hard evidence is in our SEC filings. Our financial results speak for themselves. We described a five-year plan to our investors, which was to grow 20% a year on average with this strategy. We've exceeded that plan handily. That wouldn't be possible if our major acquisitions hadn't worked. Our customer satisfaction ratings and renewals are at an all-time high for both product families. The evidence is so overwhelming that I'm surprised the question is still being asked at this late date. I'm going to have to provide you guys with a list of new questions to ask.

InformationWeek: Do you view Oracle as a pioneer in overall software industry consolidation? Are you showing the rest of the industry the future?

Phillips: There's no question that we're changing the game. We took some arrows early on because that's what happens when you do something unconventional. But I think customers have benefited from what we've done, and they're encouraging us to do more, and that's always the bottom line.

InformationWeek: Is this acquisition strategy Larry Ellison's vision that you were tapped to carry out, or is this your vision that you convinced Larry to support?

Phillips: This has been a team effort. We all play a role and make each other smarter. It's about winning.

InformationWeek: SAP is planning something called A1S, an on-demand service for small and midsize companies. What's Oracle's position on software as a service (SaaS) and its response to A1S?

Phillips: They're nine years behind us on SaaS, and they don't know what they don't know. We have everything they're trying to build in SaaS. This will divert their resources and focus from their core product, mySap, while they walk up the learning curve. They now have at least four code bases: A1S, All in One, BusinessOne, and mySAP. And they still have to maintain R/3. By our count, they're using seven different development tools and five data models within mySap alone. In fact, given that many of the product groups in mySAP have separate schemas, separate installation processes, and significant integration gaps, I'd argue they have different product lines even under the mySAP umbrella, which can happen if you build a monster with 270 million lines of code. It has a life of its own and represents the very definition of complexity. That's why SAP had to start over for the small-business market.

So we both have multiple product lines, but we have critical mass on all of ours and a standard integration platform, BPEL orchestration layer, and object model -- all in AIA -- across all of our products. SAP does not. In fact, there are more SAP customers using Oracle Fusion middleware to integrate SAP applications than those using Netweaver. Netweaver appears to be directionless, as their Palo Alto people head for the exits with all the internal struggles with Waldorf.

InformationWeek: How will you keep Oracle database competitive with the rising threat from Microsoft?

Phillips: This question has been asked for the last five years, during which time we've expanded our database market share, delivered the only enterprise grid computing platform that works, and innovated with an entire family of options around the database for security, partioning, and performance. At the same time, we've gone down market and made our products much easier to use and install. We have cheaper entry-level pricing than Microsoft, and we also have a free version, so you can't get much cheaper than that.

The key change over the last few years is that we've added Ingram Micro, Tech Data, CDW, Arrow, and Dell as distributors. We didn't have the low-end distribution in the past. But with the packaging and pricing changes, those distributors are asking for our product because our brand name has grown so strong. Plus, they all need an answer for Linux, which is growing on the low end, and we have an 80% share on the Linux platform and built the clustered file system in Linux.

They also need an alternative to Microsoft, and it's all upside for us. We run well on Linux and Windows so customers, distributors, and resellers now have a choice. Our low-end database business has been exploding as a result. Our numbers are real sales and not allocated revenue from client access licenses. We now have a dedicated SMB business unit led by Tony Kender, focusing on this market. Dell is bundling our database pre-installed on servers with other hardware partners signing up shortly.

Author: Mary Hayes Weier @ InfromationWeek


Read more ...