27 Oct 2008
By David Rae
There are several explanations as to why enterprise software vendors are enjoying a buoyant market, despite the slowdown. The first is that an economic slowdown plays into the hands of business intelligence having a better understanding of how profitable (or not) certain parts of a business are is crucial for companies to successfully negotiate an economic downturn.
Competitive co-operation
Another reason is that the sector has adopted a certain zeal for “co-opetition”,
a rather clumsy name for when participants in a market co-operate with each
other despite being fiercely competitive. Don Welker, a manager in the business
intelligence and analytics practice of consultancy company
Clarkston,
explained the consolidation craze in a recent white paper.
“The future of the industry will largely be driven by how these companies with such strong partnerships are able to co-operate, yet still compete,” Welker says. “Co-opetition is a model where the winner-take-all mentality is substituted with the notion that a network of stakeholders co-operate and compete in order to create maximum value. It is not uncommon today to have an SAP ERP implementation that is hosted on IBM hardware with an Oracle database, an SAP BW Enterprise Data Warehouse (EDW) with Cognos for analysis and reporting and Hyperion for financial consolidation.”
But for how long? Following SAP’s acquisition of Business Objects, which followed hot on the heels of its acquisition of Pilot Software, both of which marked a major shift in corporate strategy, the CEO of the former Business Objects, John Schwarz, sent an open letter to his customers to try and allay any fears about product continuation or innovation. He heralded how Business Objects would operate independently within SAP and that the software would be based on open standards so that Business Objects customers who were not also customers of SAP wouldn’t suffer. How long this remains true, however, is debatable. All software acquisitions, at some point, are integrated into the acquiring company’s technology.
In its Magic Quadrant for Business Intelligence Platforms 2008, Gartner says this year reflects the tipping point for when the business intelligence market moves away from being led by independent software companies such as Business Objects, Hyperion and Cognos to a market led by super-vendors such as SAP and Oracle. “Future BI investment decisions will be tethered much more closely to strategic sourcing and will be more influenced by organisational relationships with application and infrastructure vendors,” is the view from Gartner.
Into the fold
While the rampant consolidation of 2007 has left the business intelligence
sector almost unrecognisable from its previous state, there are mixed beliefs on
what it means for corporates. Some claim SAP was simply buying customers when it
acquired Business Objects and would soon incorporate those customers into the
fold; Oracle has long pursued a strategy of buying customers.
But while independent software companies, such as the SAS Institute, still exist and new and improved technologies are developed by smaller start-up companies, the so-called mega-vendors of SAP, Oracle, IBM and Microsoft won’t be able to rest on their laurels.
As a result, corporate customers could get the best of both worlds – access to new and better technology through their existing relationships while, at the same time, cost reductions thanks to the economies of scale and synergies these deals could bring.
BI’s continued growth
There are several reasons why business intelligence will continue to grow:
STRENGTHS AND WEAKNESSES OF THE MAJOR PLAYERS
arcplan – Independent BI vendor, which is strong in corporate
environments that have lots of heterogeneous technologies. Its CFO cockpit
product – an analytic and dashboard suite designed for finance users – is well
regarded.
Actuate – Open-source (the building blocks of the software are available for scrutiny and development by anyone) software which is powerful and scalable. Very well thought of in financial services and the public sector.
Board International – European business intelligence company, which is particularly strong in the food and pharmaceutical sectors.
Business Objects – Before being bought by SAP, Business Objects was the largest business intelligence software company in the world. It has a full suite of BI tools and is particularly strong in the ‘on-demand’ sector.
Cognos – Acquired by IBM, it has long been a leader in the BI world and enjoys a particularly strong enterprise level deployment. Despite this, Gartner views its predictive analytics as weak.
Information Builders – Extremely scalable software (10,000+ user implementations) which is also sold through IBM as DB2 Web Query.
Microsoft – While PerformancePoint Server 2007 benefits from tight integration with office products and SQL Server, its integration within heterogeneous environments is not as well developed.
Microstrategy – Seen as a potential acquisition target of
Microsoft, Microstrategy is a well-regarded
BI company, which is particularly strong in the governance sector.
Oracle – Oracle can boast its own well-regarded BI platform, as well as that of Hyperion, which it bought last year. The software can also be deployed in non-Oracle environments.
SAP – Combined with Business Objects, SAP is the largest BI vendor, more than twice the size of its nearest competitor. However, implementation difficulties exist, according to Gartner’s research.
SAS – Particularly strong in advanced analytic and predictive software, with offerings such as fraud detection and prevention – recently announced a collaboration deal with Teradata.
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