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May 19 2009   7:45PM GMT

Could Oracle be making an entrance into SAP’s SMB market with Virtual Iron?



Posted by: Courtney Bjorlin
SAP, SAP virtualization, ERP market share

At Sapphire, I had the chance to speak with Rob Enslin, SAP’s new North American president. We got onto the topic of the small and medium-sized enterprise market, where SAP has been successful in winning more customers than Oracle, according to analysts.

But the financial crisis in September slashed spending by SMBs, sank SAP’s earnings and sparked hundreds of millions in cost cutting measures across the organization.

So I wondered how SAP would spur sales in this segment again. Selling software to small and medium-sized business remains one of the main legs of SAP’s strategy, Enslin said. He said, in general, the industries SAP is selling well into now include the public sector, financial services, retail and utilities. Plus, Business ByDesign, its on-demand ERP, is still coming — though he couldn’t say when.

Moreover, SAP will be “flexible” in terms of how it sells software to these customers.

“We’ve got a big financing [program] on right now. We would do different commercial models today how we sold to these customers,” he said. “It’s not one commercial model, up-front. It’s whatever suits the customer.”

But Oracle, which has been pretty absent in this segment, may have signaled its entrance by purchasing Virtual Iron, which makes server virtualization management software.

Virtual Iron was nipping at the heels of Citrix, VMware, Xen and Hyper-V, mostly in the SMB market, according to Chris Carter, CTO and CEO of CCI, a Milwaukee-based consulting firm which specializes in SAP virtualization.

What remains to be seen, Carter said, is whether Oracle will take Virtual Iron and make it part of its virtualization software, Oracle VM, to bring to the enterprise market, or whether whether Oracle will take its applications to Virtual Iron, and therefore, the SMB market, Carter said.

In that case, they’d be able to offer SMBs a complete package of hardware [i.e. the Sun acquisition], virtualization software and business software.

SAP’s approach to virtualization – agnostic to what platform its customers use and leaving its execution to partners — has so far served it well, according to analysts. Plus, it has far more to offer in terms of business software — including SAP Business One and SAP Business All-in-One, its flagship ERP software packaged for SMBs.

But does SAP need to do more now that Oracle could be entering one of its major markets?

Apr 24 2009   2:42PM GMT

Easing your fears of SAP virtualization support



Posted by: Courtney Bjorlin
SAP, SAP virtualization

Support has been one of the biggest issues surrounding SAP virtualization, especially when it comes to moving mission-critical applications to virtual environments.

Typically, when there’s a problem with a virtualized application the application vendor will tell the IT shop it must uninstall the application from its virtual environment and move it to a physical setup to isolate the fault, according to this article on SearchServerVirtualization.com.

To that end, one of the most interesting presentations during SAP Virtualization Week was from Rick Scherer, a virtual infrastructure architect with the City of San Diego — who shed some light on this issue.

Continued »


Apr 20 2009   8:35PM GMT

Going green kicks off SAP Virtualization week



Posted by: Courtney Bjorlin
SAP, SAP virtualization

SAP announced an interesting initiative today — the Green IT community.

Dozens of SAP customers and partners will work together to research and develop sustainable software. Customers such as Colgate and partners like VMware, Citrix and Sun (SAP said it’s too early to tell if Oracle’s acquisition will affect Sun’s plans for participation) will lead the charge. Click here for a full list of participants.

SAP will start benchmarking the efficiency of its own software by determining how much energy it will consume. In turn, it’s asking partners to provide the same information on their products.

Plus, SAP offered an open invitation to any partners or customers who want to join the Green IT community. All they have to do is email GreenIT@SAP.com for more information.

“From a customer perspective, it’s a great way to become an early adopter of solutions and then to go and deploy those solutions,” said Peter Graf, who was named SAP’s first chief sustainability officer in March.

And thus SAP kicked off Virtualization Week, being held in Palo Alto, with a theme that it has continued to push over the last couple of months — green IT.

“For me, the natural first step in green IT is virtualization,” Graf said.

But why deploy these initiatives now? Graf elicited a few chuckles from the crowd when he remarked that even the mention of “green IT” had some participants nodding off. So he focused on a crowd pleaser — cost savings.

Graf put up numbers from an SAP customer that reduced its application servers from 218 to 116, and saved $714,000 on maintenance, $162,000 on facilities, $1,468 on staff and $13,520 on servers — reducing its total costs by 36%. 

And he said SAP itself has virtualized half of its servers.

“We’re doing it because it makes fundamental business sense,” Graf said. “This technology works. We are now virtualizing across the board at SAP.”

Industry analyst Joshua Greenbaum wrote an excellent blog last month when SAP made its sustainability efforts public on just why the vendor could really convince the world that this was important.

Using the virtualization conference to talk about sustainability is a smart move — as it links green IT more to cost savings than to some sort of abstract idea. It’ll be interesting to see what SAP does with this initiative at Sapphire.