| By SAP News Desk | Article Rating: |
|
| February 2, 2006 08:30 AM EST | Reads: |
18,546 |
'Europe's most influential technology company is helping us make on-demand the global standard,' wrote Marc Benioff (pictured) in a memo yesterday to all his employees at SalesForce.com. He was referring to SAP, the German software giant, which is finally expected to announce an on-demand CRM product this week, after what Benioff called 'months of warming up.'He was far from optimistic, on SAP's behalf:
"For starters, they had better hope that their on-demand offering will win more fans than their on-premise solution has."
But that was just his opening salvo. Soon he warmed to this theme:
"While SAP claims leadership in CRM, experience suggests a different story. I have often wondered, 'If SAP's CRM software is any good, then why doesn't SAP use it to manage their own customer relationships?' I have interviewed hundreds of salespeople and executives from SAP from around the world, and each has told me the only CRM system at SAP is an executive system based on Microsoft Excel. I'm not surprised since I have never met a salesperson anywhere in the world who uses SAP CRM. Indeed, Gartner noted at a recent conference that only 19 percent of SAP CRM customers actually use it. If fewer than a fifth of our customers used our service, we'd consider that a failure. At SAP, they call it a business plan. Even SAP's largest customers such as Dupont, DeutschePost, AirProducts, Autodesk, EFI, DeutscheBank, Analog Devices, and so many others use Salesforce for CRM."
He then lambasted SAP in the strongest possible terms:
"Let's state it simply: SAP is an innovation-free company. When reporters describe the great innovators of this industry, it's easy to identify the significant contributions of many of the leaders. For Oracle, it's the database; for Apple, the Mac, iPod, and iTunes; for Microsoft, the PC operating system; for Intel, the microprocessor. But for SAP? I struggle to think of a single innovation that SAP has contributed. Their code is as bulky and inefficient as it is expensive and unloved by its users."
Benioff ended his memo with a hint that SAP might so founder that it would become Oracle's next acquisition prey:
"Siebel tried to sell an admittedly inferior on-demand product as an on-ramp to its on-premise system. It appears that on-ramps make road pizza out of your business model. That strategy sent an entire company slouching towards Redwood Shores this week. Will SAP make the same mistake?"
They don't make CEOs like Marc Benioff any more.
Published February 2, 2006 Reads 18,546
Copyright © 2006 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
- "It's the End of Software," Declares SalesForce.com's Marc Benioff
- Salesforce.com CEO Benioff "Another Employee Memo"
- Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff to Speak at BEA Leadership Conference
- CEO Benioff Accuses Gates of Stealing a Page Out of SalesForce.com's Play Book
- Salesforce Pushes To Be an End-to-End Cloud
More Stories By SAP News Desk
SAP News Desk trawls the world's news information sources and brings you timely updates on the world's leading provider of enterprise resource planning (ERP) and its various software product lines used to integrate back-office functions such as distribution, accounting, human resources, and manufacturing.
- Cloud Expo New York: Why PostgreSQL is the Database for the Cloud
- Cloud Expo New York Speaker Profile: Dave Linthicum – Blue Mountain Labs
- Agile Adoption – Crossing the Chasm
- Cloud Expo New York: The Java EE 7 Platform - Developing for the Cloud
- Write Once Run Anywhere or Cross Platform Mobile Development Tools
- Cross-Platform Mobile Website Development – a Tool Comparison
- Cloud Expo New York: Cloud Architectures Require Scale-Out Storage
- Cloud Expo New York: The Growing Big Data Tools Landscape
- Architecture Governance – the TOGAF Way
- Big Data – A Sea Change of Capabilities in IT
- Cloud Expo New York: Cloud Computing and Healthcare
- Cloud Expo New York: Mobilizing Enterprise Applications for the Cloud
- Cloud Expo New York: Why PostgreSQL is the Database for the Cloud
- Cloud Expo New York Speaker Profile: Dave Linthicum – Blue Mountain Labs
- Agile Adoption – Crossing the Chasm
- Red Hat Executive Appointed to Technology Services Industry Association (TSIA) Support Services Advisory Board
- Graal, a Dynamic Java Compiler in the Works
- Cloud Expo New York: The Java EE 7 Platform - Developing for the Cloud
- Write Once Run Anywhere or Cross Platform Mobile Development Tools
- Cross-Platform Mobile Website Development – a Tool Comparison
- Cloud Expo New York: Cloud Architectures Require Scale-Out Storage
- What Motivates Open Standards in the Cloud?
- Cloud Expo New York: The Growing Big Data Tools Landscape
- Architecture Governance – the TOGAF Way
- The i-Technology Right Stuff
- The Top 150 Players in Cloud Computing
- Who Are The All-Time Heroes of i-Technology?
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- Get the Message
- ESB Myth Busters: 10 Enterprise Service Bus Myths Debunked
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Is Web 2.0 the Global SOA?
- i-Technology Viewpoint: Thinking Outside the VC Box
- i-Technology Viewpoint: When to Leave Your First IT Job
- SOA Web Services Edge Conference Coverage on SYS-CON.TV
- SYS-CON.TV's "SOA Web Services" and "Enterprise Open Source" Programs To Air in December
- Five Reasons Why Web 2.0 Matters


















