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November 15, 2002

In this Issue:

  • Microsoft Is All Business
  • Sun Illuminates N1
  • Handy Appliance

    Microsoft Is All Business

    The company is "moving up the stack" to provide enterprise apps for SMEs. Enterprises can't be far behind

    Industry News

    High-level intelligence at a glance

    Souped Up. MySQL, maker of the eponymous open-source DBMS, has added transactional support to the corporate version of its product, called MySQL Pro, to make it more attractive in the enterprise market.

    Blue Shift. J.D. Edwards & Co. will standardize its J.D. Edwards 5 product line on IBM infrastructure technology, including WebSphere Portal, WebSphere Application Server, and IBM security software. The company will continue to support Oracle and Microsoft DBMSs, in addition to DB2.

    Game Over. Peregrine Systems Inc., rocked by accounting scandals, an SEC investigation, and the departure of top executives, has filed for bankruptcy protection. The company also sold its Remedy unit, which it acquired in 2001 for $1.2 billion, to BMC Software Inc. for $350 million.

    Clearing the Air. Computer Associates International CEO Sanjay Kumar, speaking at a Council of Institutional Investors meeting in September, proclaimed that "no accounting irregularities and no violations of GAAP" have been found by the board's audit committee in a recently ordered probe. At press time, the reaction of the SEC, which is investigating CA for past accounting practices, was unknown.

    With large corporations tightening their belts, small and medium enterprises (SMEs; with $50 million to $1 billion in revenue) are attracting the attention of an array of software vendors looking to broaden their own revenue streams. Over the last year and a half, Microsoft has aggressively entered the SME enterprise applications market with its acquisitions of Great Plains and Navision (now part of Microsoft's Business Solutions division). The company has announced plans to release five new sets of business applications targeting SMEs over the next year, including ones for customer relationship management, inventory management, and B2B commerce.

    Joshua Greenbaum, principal of Enterprise Applications Consulting (and an Intelligent Enterprise contributing editor), sees Microsoft's aggressive move into enterprise applications as a continuation of its strategy to "move up the stack." He also cites Microsoft's goal as becoming the end-to-end business technology provider to SMEs; the Great Plains and Navision acquisitions gave Microsoft the back-office technology these customers require, and the newly announced applications fill out its product strategy with front-office services.

    The company is already facing pushback from ERP vendors moving downstream into its sweet spot. SAP recently announced a new line of e-business solutions aimed at the midmarket, mySAP All-in-One, as well as new resellers and channel partners for SMEs. "Microsoft really wants to head off competitors [such as SAP, PeopleSoft, and Oracle] dipping into its traditional markets," says Greenbaum.

    Despite its current SME orientation, most observers predict that Microsoft will eventually target large enterprises for its business applications. Although Greenbaum concurs with this analysis, he sees several challenges. First, Microsoft must overcome real scalability challenges: The biggest question, he says, is how quickly Microsoft can add a Web-based user interface to its enterprise app architecture.

    In addition, Microsoft is infamous for misunderstanding the needs of large corporations. Targeting large corporations, which are notoriously needy, will also require Microsoft to adopt a more direct sales model. (Conversely, the ERP vendors, which for the most part lack contacts with reseller networks, will have a hard time entering the channel-oriented SME market.)

    However, one potential challenge has been overblown, says Greenbaum. Despite widespread speculation about fallout from Microsoft going into direct competition with its partners, Greenbaum characterizes this arrangement as standard operating procedure in business software: "In enterprise applications, vendors partner with everybody. [Coopetition] goes on all the time."

    — Michelle M. Young

    In this Issue:

  • Microsoft Is All Business
  • Sun Illuminates N1
  • Handy Appliance










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