« December 2007 | Main | June 2008 »

February 2008 Archives

February 1, 2008

Oracle SaaS Platform is Leading Choice for SaaS ISVs

Oracle and several partners outlined the leadership position of Oracle SaaS Platform as platform of choice for SaaS ISVs, especially mission-critical on-demand application vendors.

We have a standards-based, comprehensive, integrated platform for SaaS ISVs that are serious about their offerings and commitment to customers be it around security, service-level management, or performance.

Here are some excerpts from the press release:


Leading ISV's that have chosen the Oracle SaaS Platform to offer their applications in a SaaS delivery model include: 170 Systems, 3i Infotech, Adaptive Planning, Agistix, Autodesk, Blackboard, Cadec, Callidus Software, Cerner Corporation, ChartOne, Cisco WebEx, Citrix Online a Division of Citrix Systems, Inc., dthree, E2open, Fair Isaac Corporation, HireRight, Infopia, Intacct, Ketera, MAXIMUS, MedQuist, Micros Systems Inc., Octagon Research Solutions, Inc., Perot Systems, Sabrix Inc., Soundbite Communications, SPS Commerce, Taxcient Inc., Teranode Corporation, TradeBeam Inc., Where 2 Get It, Inc., Xactly Corporation.



"As a SaaS leader, quality, speed of delivery and security are the lifeblood of the WebEx business," said Gary Griffiths, vice president, products and operations, Cisco WebEx. "By using Oracle, we can focus on serving our 6 million users and growing network of WebEx Connect partners without worrying about database scalability within our on-demand collaboration services platform."


"Cerner's Healthe services address the ever growing burden of healthcare expenses that employers face each day," said Bill Wing, Vice President of Healthe Services. "Oracle SaaS technology enables our Healthe solution for clinics to provide electronic medical records, online scheduling, and community health records to better coordinate the care of tens of thousands of employees and their families around the world. Oracle has helped Cerner save companies millions in medical and pharmaceutical expenses while improving the productivity and health status of the populations we manage."


"Oracle's leading database, middleware, and enterprise manager software provide SPS Commerce with a rich platform on which to deliver a competitive SaaS offering," stated Archie Black, President and CEO at SPS Commerce. "We not only leverage the Oracle SaaS Platform for our supply chain services at our data center, but also integrate with Oracle systems at many of our customer sites, such as Welch's. Software as a service is the future, and we are pleased to partner with an organization that shares our vision."



"This is a very exciting time to be partnering with Oracle, a company that shares our vision of an on-demand world," said Treb Ryan, CEO of OpSource. "On-Demand delivery is serious business and requires serious tools and platforms. Oracle clearly understands this and delivers enterprise class products and services that play a major role in advancing the acceptance of the on-demand model. OpSource On-Demand, OpSource's industry leading Web application delivery platform utilizes Oracle Database to support leading SaaS ISVs as well as some of the most exciting Web 2.0 companies."



The SaaS Paradox

One of the interesting questions that was asked at an event recently was whether the slowdown in the US economy would have an impact slowdown SaaS' momentum. Its an interesting paradox whether something that reduces customer spending up front, may in fact be impacted by the reduced customer spending.


The arguments for a SaaS slowdown were cited as a general slowdown in tech  spending, and a cut back in Marketing and other "non-essential" budgets that typically spend on SaaS applications.


The arguments against a SaaS slowdown were that SaaS apps are no longer "discretionary", they are mainstream apps that have a tangible ROI & benefit for the customer. If anything, customers demand a higher return on their tech investment in a slowdown, and with SaaS, one can see the benefits of technology investments much more clearly & quickly than in a traditional technology spend. The slowdown according to some, might actually make SaaS more mainstream as customers focus on their core businesses, reduce their capital spend, while keeping their operational expenses in check.


Whether SaaS will be impacted by a slowdown or not is something that time will tell, however ts clear that SaaS is here to stay, and is certainly not going away.

February 15, 2008

SaaS - All Hype and No Play?

One of my friends after reading my blog asked me to outline some of the primary benefits of SaaS. While some of the the benefits may resonate more than others with the readers, to me the primary benefits of SaaS t(real and Perceived) to the end user include:



  • Lower Operational Cost: due to scale advantage that provider is able to leverage and distribute across multiple customers

  • Lower Cost of Customization & Software Maintenance

  • Faster Initial Deployment & Upgrades

  • Up-to-date Features provided by Specialist (do not have to wait for patch)

  • Access to Industry-wide Best Practices (software user does not have to hire in-house industry expert)

  • Strategic Benefits: Ability to Focus on Companyi??s Core Competencies (as opposed to IT)

  • Balance Sheet Management; Fixed to Variable Cost Conversion
If some of the readers have additional benefits that they can list, please comment on it. Also, i would love to hear more about how different vendors are innovating with SaaS to provide new applications to the end-user, so send me your favorites or nominees.

February 19, 2008

Insight as a Service

Do customers using SaaS, & vendors providing SaaS gain any better insight than those using traditional methods of software delivery? The answer (surprisingly) seems to be - yes.

One of the benefits application providers accrue is insight based on information gathered across all of their customers. Application vendors can aggregate information across their various customer base to provide information on trends seen within a specific segment or a specific region. For e.g. Student Information System providers can deliver insight to their customers on student scores across subjects, and across regions. Horizontal application providers like Human Resources systems can identify compensation trends across industries and across regions.

Application Hosters can also provide information to application developers on which areas within the product were more frequently used, where customers spent the most time, and even which pages took the most time to load.

SaaS vendors also provide information on  who accessed the application, when, and for how long. Such metrics can help their customers gauge the effectiveness of their SaaS application usage and usage patterns.

Finally, SaaS vendors can understand which of their customers have higher adoption rates, which ones use more modules, and which ones can benefit from additional services.

If information & insight is powerful, then SaaS packs a punch.

About February 2008

This page contains all entries posted to The SaaS Report in February 2008. They are listed from oldest to newest.

December 2007 is the previous archive.

June 2008 is the next archive.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

Powered by
Movable Type and Oracle