Thursday, June 6, 2013

SAP’s Purchasing Power Play

SAP just did a big acquisition, along with a little head fake.

While the announcement by SAP, the German enterprise software company, said this was a deal about online marketing, in fact, it’s part of a broader effort by many companies to reshape retail sales.
SAP announced Wednesday that it was buying Hybris, a Swiss e-commerce software company. The price was not disclosed, but someone familiar with the deal who was not authorized to speak on the record, said SAP paid “somewhat less than $1 billion” for hybris.

The deal follows Tuesday’s announcement by Salesforce.com that it was acquiring ExactTarget, an online marketing services company, for close to $2.5 billion.

Not surprisingly, many industry analysts wanted to make a connection between the two deals.
Bill McDermott, SAP’s co-chief executive. 
Stringer/Germany/Reuters Bill McDermott, SAP’s co-chief executive.
 
That link was reinforced when Bill McDermott, SAP’s co-chief executive, took a couple of shots at Salesforce during the conference call about the Hybris deal, saying Salesforce had bought an old-fashioned e-mail marketing company (yes, that’s old-fashioned now). Gartner, an industry research firm, recently announced that Salesforce had replaced SAP as the leading vendor of customer relationship management software, giving Mr. McDermott reason to want to get even.
The Salesforce deal, however, is part of a larger plan by Salesforce to blend advertising, marketing and sales. Marc Benioff, the chief executive of Salesforce, has said that technologies like cloud computing and social media increasingly break down the distinctions between those things.
This is particularly true for customer relationship management of sales from one company to another, where complicated specs and contracts mean e-mail matters more.

SAP is going after consumers as much as businesses with Hybris and hoping to use the data from online commerce for Big Data marketing, and eventually, things like planning inventory and manufacturing. That is a much bigger goal, and ties into both SAP’s roots in enterprise resource planning software and the online data analysis of its HANA platform.

“You can read this purchase as us being serious” about customer relationship management,” said James Dever, a spokesman for SAP. “But it’s deeper than that. This touches a company’s back end transactional data,” or information about things like inventory.

One feature of Hybris’s software is that it allows customers to open an online shopping cart on one computer and then adjust an order later on another computer before closing a sale. Using its HANA platform, SAP hopes to let sellers see behaviors, then offer deals or companion offers before a sale is completed.

Eventually, companies may be able to use that overall information and data analysis to figure out faster how much of a product they need to make, store or sell quickly. The product could also help in planning what to stock in retail stores.

In some ways, the SAP deal is closer to last year’s move by NetSuite, another SAP rival, to offer online commerce services. While that business has been slow to emerge, NetSuite recently announced some significant deals involving blended online and traditional brick and mortar sales.
“The big picture is that consumers want to connect with companies on a personal, individualized basis, online and offline,” Zach Nelson, the chief executive of NetSuite, said.

In an even bigger picture, deals like this are part of the broader move to create the immediacy and data-led insight (or, if you prefer, cookie-based spying) of online retail with the high-touch experience of physical stores.

Amazon.com moved early into online skills and has edged into the physical world by offering fast delivery of goods. Apple has gone farther, designing stores that in many ways embody its online sales presence, from the minimalist look to the absence of formal checkout kiosks.
If SAP can build out Hybris, it could blur further the barriers between ads, sales and marketing. And more companies could break down barriers between things online and off.

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Approyo Announces Hana Post Production Support

Approyo's always available PoC’s and support approach automatically allows the business process, end-user, application, datacenter and cloud perspectives, providing unmatched support across the entire Hana solution

PRLog (Press Release) - Oct 23, 2012 - 
NEW YORK, NY - October 23, 2012– Approyo the leader in SAP Hana business transaction-driven Proof of Concepts & Support offerings, today announced a new Post Production Support (PPS) solution to serve its growing client base in the Hana arena. The new (PPS) offering is part of a prestigious demand from the SAP eco-system customers, and key to the company's growth and strategy. Clients and partners such as SAP, CSC, and Booze Allen Hamilton just to name a few accounts have engaged Approyo for the solution.
Read more here...

Saturday, September 22, 2012

SAP Hana POC's


SAP Hana POC Through the Cloud
Hana Proof of Concept NOW!
The Silver Lining® Cloud for your SAP Hana Proof of Concept allows you to jump right into your research without waiting for hardware or time to build an on-site system. You can immediately deliver capabilities to numerous staff members for assessment and acclimation. We designed our Silver Lining® solution to be seamless to your environment.

Sign up and go through a normal SAP log on GUI pad or on an Ipad or thru the web. You will have full Hana Studio access to a fully configured SAP Hana Cloud that allows you to grasp the new Hana solution, build upon knowledge needed in the complex issue of SAP, all while not having to install, service or support the solution.

Companies using SAP are engaged in evaluation, of the new Hana in memory solution. 
As companies strive to justify and leverage these investments, executive management is looking for the following –
• Reliability in testing for your POC
• ROI from the investment in new tools and applications (Try it before you buy it)
• Higher levels of acceptance, utilization and production from its user and technical communities

What is needed is the option to access a fully functional SAP Hana system where SAP users can construct Proof of Concept and Conference Room Pilot environments to experiment with this new SAP functionality – with full control and usability and no disruption to your production environment!  Approyo has invested over two years working hand in hand with SAP experts in creating a reliable, fully functional SAP Hana cloud solution to address this need.

This offering will enable any SAP client to access their own fully functional SAP Hana  environment for Proof of Concept and experimentation purposes.

Your “cloud” is highly secured and only accessed/used by your organization and requires NO internal resources (systems/ or technical staff) to utilize (Only to do a Hana Studio implementation).

This solution is intended for non-production utilization as an alternative to buying/supporting incremental servers whereby we handle the hosting of your Hana cloud instance –in 17 minutes!! As confirmed by select trial users of this offering, “the Silver Lining SAP Cloud Solution” adds tremendous value throughout the SAP POC process and is ideal for rapid, low-cost access to a fully functional Hana environment.

Contact Approyo to confirm your interest in deploying our Silver Lining SAP Hana cloud solution. We will discuss your interest and requirements for using the solution and provision your own SAP clouds. A POC term for Hana is typically been 90 days.

Companies today are adopting Hana to drive higher value to their users while stretching increasingly scarce IT dollars. Approyo is committed to assisting these companies in pursuit of this goal and strive to provide meaningful solutions that drive value into the SAP landscape.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

How we built a Customisable Cloud Hadoop using MapR and Brooklyn on EC2


In our recent blog post Customisable Cloud Hadoop: Automating MapR on EC2 using Brooklyn we demonstrated using Brooklyn and MapR to create a powerful and flexible Cloud Hadoop Cluster.
In this post we reflect on how we went about writing it, including some of the issues encountered. This post will be particularly useful if you are working through the source code.


Read more here.........

Friday, June 15, 2012

Cloudsoft Expands its Advisory Board with the Appointment of Major General David Shaw CBE


Former Director of Army Media and Communications to Drill Cloud Computing Start-up in Institutional and Government Markets

EDINBURGH, June 14, 2012 – Cloudsoft Corporation, a software innovator specialising in multi-cloud application management, today announced they have appointed Major General David Shaw CBE to their strategic advisory board. Shaw joins the board to help shape Cloudsoft‘s approach to government and institutional markets, and to provide guidance in media and communication.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

How Enterprises Can Bend the Programmer Learning Curve

http://sandhill.com/article/how-enterprises-can-bend-the-programmer-learning-curve/