We need a score card nowadays to keep track of the re-organizing of Tech biz companies - and the moves being made by top executives - its like a very intense game of musical chairs, and the prizes for the winners are stupendous. Right now the tech world's big businesses could be the new template for the classic Abbot and Costello routine - but what could we call it... "Who's On Google, What's On Apple, and Nobody's on Yahoo? Marlene
Ex-Oracle Exec
John Wookey To Head Up SAP’s New On-Demand Market Effort
http://blogs.zdnet.com/Greenbaum/?p=189
Previously
appeared on November 11, 2008 posted by Joshua Greenbaum
It’s hard to know
which was more significant, the announcement that SAP is going to tackle on
demand at the top of its market, or the name of the person – former Oracle apps
exec John Wookey – who was picked to lead the effort. Off the top of my head,
I’d say it’s a draw: an almost amazing segue into a new, and very challenging
market, and an amazing pick to head up the effort.
John won’t lack
for challenges in his new job, the title of which is executive vice president
for large enterprise on-demand. Having lead Oracle’s efforts to rationalize its
ever-growing, and increasingly heterogeneous acquisitions until he abruptly
left last year, John has some experience in accomplishing what looks almost
impossible to do.
Why this job will
be so hard only starts at the technical challenge of figuring out how to push
the quintessence of on-premise software into the cloud. That may turn out to be
the easy part of the job. And that’s saying a lot. SAP’s software portfolio is
so huge, and so complex, that nothing in the cloud today remotely comes close
to matching its capabilities or capacity requirements. In fact, that complexity
probably signals one of the design goals of John’s team: don’t try to put it
all in the cloud any time soon. Because it won’t be possible, period.
(That sentiment
was echoed to me by Microsoft’s Dynamics team at their analysts’ meeting last
week. With Azure, Microsoft’s new platform in the cloud set to launch next
year, one of the things the Dynamics group is not doing is rush headlong
towards hosting their full- blown ERP systems on Azure. Microsoft CRM, yes. But
not AX, NAV, or GP: not yet, and, as they are currently constituted, not ever,
either.)
The bigger
challenge for John and SAP will be that elusive on-demand business model. Look
at Salesforce.com’s margins (which are starting to look as negative as its
stock price), and Netsuite’s struggles, and you can see what SAP is trying to
avoid.
Mixed up in John’s
mandate is the on-going struggle about how to rationalize SAP’s Business
ByDemand mid-market on-demand product, which its users tell me is highly
functional, and which SAP tells me still can’t run in a profitable fashion. And
that’s before anyone figures out who will sell this and how SAP will keep BBD
from cannibalizing everything else SAP sells. BBD isn’t a large enterprise
product, so I doubt it will come under John’s bailiwick, but it’s impact will
loom large over his efforts going forward.
Here’s where I
think he’ll start first, and in many ways this is similar to what Microsoft
told me about Azure and Dynamics: SAP’s large enterprise, on-demand efforts
will likely start with running specific processes and services in the cloud
that are both highly discrete and have a distinct value-add above and beyond
the cost benefits of merely flipping on-premise functionality into the cloud a
la Salesforce.com. That latter model eventually ends up in a price war, and
flies in the face of SAP’s higher value market position.
Here’s what else I
imagine John will get to do. Help guide SAP towards strategic on-demand
acquisitions, which he will then have the pleasure (genuinely, I believe) of
synching up with SAP’s on-premise and on-demand offerings (remember SAP CRM
On-demand? It’s still out there, poised for a come-back this spring).
Considering his integral role in the heady days of Oracle’s initial acquisition
spree, I think John will be rather good at this.
Final point:
John’s resurfacing at SAP says a lot about SAP’s perception of its own
strengths — and weaknesses – at a time of incredible uncertainty in the market.
SAP clearly sees that there’s no time like the present to invest in the future,
and bringing John Wookey on board is a remarkable vote for future success that
SAP is willing to make at what otherwise might look like a pretty bleak hour
for the global economy. The fact that the company went outside to find a
high-profile executive to lead this effort is a welcome recognition that an
infusion of some new blood is exactly what is needed for this critical effort.
Hopefully John will be able to navigate the somewhat complex SAP culture and
put SAP in the leaders’ circle in a market it can no longer afford to sit back
and watch unfold without it. Regardless, it’s going to be a helluva ride.
Slam dunkin like Shaquille O'Neal, if he wrote infromiatve articles.
Posted by: Lavonn | December 27, 2011 at 12:31 AM