SAP criticised for slow pace of innovation
IT giant accused of sitting on new technologies that could help its customers
User groups want more innovation from SAP
Enterprise software giant SAP came under attack at this week’s SAP User Group for failing to share its innovations with its customers, who struggling to deal with enormous upheavals in the enterprise environment.
SAP was criticised for having no new products due until 2014 and being late on product delivery despite investing almost 20 per cent of its revenue in research and development.
Keynote speaker Ray Wang, senior analyst at consultancy Altimeter, argued that the factors currently forcing change in business practices exist in four main areas:
1) The macro environment - the economic crisis, environmental concerns and loss of faith in capitalism.
2) Workplace dynamics - changing workplace norms, the distributed nature of work, mixed generations, an aging workforce and sourcing global talent.
3) Pace of technology - the pace of obsolescence is faster than the rate of adoption, consumer tech is ahead of enterprise, the digital divide is closing, and the connected "sameness" of the world is driving new models.
4) Business models - globalisation, new stakeholders, public/private hybrid, regulation/deregulation, and business process outsourcing.
Wang said: “These changes are pretty scary for business leaders – the planning cycle is now three years, down from 10. Ultimately, end users must be prepared to give up some level of control to obtain the flexibility required to optimise their existing SAP environments.”
There were also calls for SAP to deliver on past promises, these include: reducing the cost of ownership and complexity; addressing integration with legacy infrastructures; completing the original and promised product road map; reduction in the cost of maintenance; and renewed focus on innovation.
Wang argued that there was a lot of innovation hidden inside SAP with little market exposure. He said that the SAP Lab is focusing on disruptive technologies such as the use of web 2.0 in the enterprise, and is also developing a number of devices and sensor technologies as well as mobility solutions. However, Wang argued that internal politics prevents these solutions from emerging.
Wang added: “End users are spending so much time maintaining their existing environment with budget cuts and limited resources that they don’t have time to think about necessary innovations. SAP needs to start sharing innovation information with its customers.”
Chairman of the SAP User Group, Alan Bowling, said that another key area of debate was the significant concessions won by the user group regarding SAP’s attempted price rises for enterprise support.
Last year's proposal to increase maintenance support from 17 to 22 per cent of licence revenue was renegotiated to the extent that SAP now has to prove over a seven year period (rather than immediately, as was originally proposed) that the price they are charging is matched to value.
SAP is due to make an announcement in December on how it will meet the price/value proposition.