-->

Speed and Clarity Drive SAP's Success

ORLANDO, FLA. — Speed and clarity continued to be key value propositions emphatically echoed by SAP executives during SAPPHIRE '09, the German software company's annual user conference held here this week. A keynote delivered by SAP Cofounder Hasso Plattner, in fact, went to great lengths to impress upon the crowd of attendees that the sheer speed of modern computing means companies must ramp up immediately or risk being left behind.

[Editors' Note: For more of Christopher Musico's coverage from SAPPHIRE '09, see his earlier destinationCRM.com news story here, and his blogposts here and here.]

Plattner began his address by warning attendees he'd be speaking to them not as a vendor executive but rather as a kind of professor, delivering a lecture about how the formerly abstract concepts generated in the halls of academia and among computer scientists can now produce clear business benefits. "Increased bandwidth is a reality today," he noted, as an example. "We can build different enterprise applications to make you better understand your own data. We collect an unbelievable amount of [data], but how to digest, interpret, and derive information from data is still slow -- or is actually getting slower -- because of the increased size of our databases."

This paradox can be a killer, Plattner said, especially in today's economic environment. Decisions must be made quickly, in part because circumstances shift quickly. Giving an example of SAP's own battle with this conundrum, Plattner recalled that "in the beginning of [last] August, SAP thought it would have the best quarter ever…by the end of [the month] we thought it would be a good quarter. But, the outcome, as we all know, is that we didn't do so well."

This real-world example -- not only of corporate performance, but of corporate transparency -- underscored Plattner's contention that a delay of even two minutes in receiving data requested by a database query is, oftentimes, simply too late. "The reality is we take data out of our production [and] transactional systems; [utilize] a process called extract, transfer, and load into a business [data] warehouse; and from there we create large cubes for reporting, and report against those," he said. "This is not appropriate anymore. I don't want to change everything we did in past, but want to make it tremendously faster…and I predict it will change how we work."

Shaking up business-as-usual for companies is of the utmost importance today, according to the previous evening's keynote by Bill McDermott, president of global field operations for SAP, and Jim Hagemann Snabe, a member of SAP's executive board.

McDermott described our current economic cycle as one that occurs "every seven to 10 years." The difference this time around, he said, is that the cycle is driving structural change in every industry and market segment worldwide. "In order to lead in this environment, you must align business strategies, enablement of information technology, and business outcomes," he said.

Snabe explained that there are four forces shaping what he called "the new reality":

  • business network transformation;
  • technological innovation;
  • business models; and
  • business outcome.

All of these, Snabe added, involve the idea of sustainability -- a topic discussed at great length during SAP Co-Chief Executive Officer Leo Apotheker's keynote address on Tuesday. "The world is looking for ways to deal with the new reality, and [technology] is ready to deliver a new level of value," Snabe said.

Increased speed and technological innovation are beneficial, of course, but McDermott plainly stated that everything boils down to having the transparency necessary to perpetuate successful business outcomes. "Changing your business model is very important, but [it's] only one thing," he said."Having clarity to execute is another. Business insights are more important now than ever, and the fact is [that] too many business professionals today lack the clarity to run their business[es]. Instead, they operate in a world of data complexity and rear-view information."

To drive business outcomes, McDermott argued, companies must use technology strategically. He and Snable outlined three steps necessary to do so:

  • Discovery — benchmarking areas of your business -- such as supply chain management -- and looking for improvement opportunities;
  • Realization — turning to business-process design to understand how a solution might work specifically for the business in question, and to gauge the value expected; and
  • Optimization — implementing the business-process designs and measuring them to ensure the delivery of the expected value.

A legitimate argument can be raised that these phases should always be applied when considering technology investments, but McDermott inistsed to attendees that the hard economic times are ushering in a renaissance of rigorous implementation best practices. "To be clear," he said -- echoing once again one of the company's key concepts for SAPPHIRE '09 -- "this has always been relevant. It just has never been more relevant than it is now."

News relevant to the customer relationship management industry is posted several times a day on destinationCRM.com, in addition to the news section Insight that appears every month in the pages of CRM magazine. You may leave a public comment regarding this article by clicking on "Comments" at the top; to contact the editors, please email editor@destinationCRM.com.

CRM Covers
Free
for qualified subscribers
Subscribe Now Current Issue Past Issues

Related Articles

SAP Declares "ByDesign Is Here" (Sort Of)

SapphireNow '10: SAP's co-CEOs deliver back-to-back keynote addresses celebrating not only their first 100 days at the helm, but also the general availability of on-demand offering Business ByDesign 2.5 — two months from now.

SAP Insists "Mobile Is the New Desktop"

SapphireNow '10: SAP executives explain the recent Sybase acquisition and set a date for the general availability of on-demand software Business ByDesign 2.5.

SAP Slips StreamWork Into the Cloud-Based Collaboration Current

In the first major move since its recent restructuring, the German giant makes a play for the Enterprise 2.0 space — and beyond.

After CEO Ouster, Plattner's Plea: "Please Trust SAP. We Have Not Forgotten You."

Announcing the exit of Chief Executive Officer Léo Apotheker, SAP returns to a "Co-CEO" format, appointing Bill McDermott and Jim Hagemann Snabe to split leadership duties.

SAP Sets Sustainability in Motion

With the launch of Business Objects Sustainability Performance Management, SAP wants to provide companies with holistic views into their sustainable strategies and actions.

SAP Calls on Companies to Embrace "The New Value"

SAP World Tour '09: Morning keynote addresses challenge attendees to take charge — or risk failure.

On the Scene: Clarity Is SAP’s New Enterprise

SAPPHIRE '09: SAP executives stressed the emerging need for transparency among all enterprises. Did the message ring true?

CIO vs. CFO: The C-Suite Deathmatch

SAPPHIRE '09: Experts attempt to dispel stereotypes about the battles that rage over technology-purchasing decisions.

SAP Promises "Innovation You Can Trust"

SAPPHIRE '09: SAP co-CEO Leo Apotheker lays out his company's roadmap to navigate the economic crisis. "The only antidote to uncertainty is clarity," he says.

Former Oracle Executive to Join SAP

A year out of the spotlight, John Wookey is back on the scene, except now he's playing on a different side.

SAP Retains Market-Share Lead in CRM

Gartner report shows the Wonder of Walldorf still on top—but a lawsuit and other troubles loom.

SAP Seeks to Tie Up Loose Ends

SAPPHIRE '08: Relying on services-oriented architecture, SAP co-CEO Henning Kagermann believes his company can now help businesses "close the loop" between strategy and execution.

SAP + RIM = CRM2Go

Introducing a rebuilt version of its CRM application to run natively on Research In Motion's BlackBerry mobile devices, SAP aims to give companies universal access.

SAP Takes a Dual Approach

SAPPHIRE '06: The company highlights its hybrid on-demand/on-premise CRM offering, while persistently promoting its enterprise services architecture strategy.

SAP Goes Vertical

SAPPHIRE '05: SAP releases the latest version of its CRM suite, but analysts cite the company's 'failure' to deliver a hosted application.

SAP to Acquire Business Objects

The friendly takeover folds new business intelligence capabilities into one of the leading enterprise software platforms; amidst differing opinions, rumors loom of a counteroffer from Oracle or IBM.

SAP Unveils Its BI Black Box

SAPPHIRE '05 International: The software giant, HP, and Intel combine efforts to produce an appliance that allows more employees to tap into analytic

On the Scene: SAPPHIRE '06: SAP Continues Its Enterprise SOA Push

The enterprise software company underscores its on-demand CRM capabilities while continuing with its enterprise services architecture approach

SAP Targets Enterprise SOA

SAPPHIRE '06: Amid "the industrialization of software," the German juggernaut continues its service-based strategy.

SAP Zeroes In On the Contact Center With M&A

SAPPHIRE '07 International: The company acquires Finland's Wicom Communications; expect to see more large CRM firms buying contact center companies down the pike, according to one analyst.

A New Business Blueprint Stars at SAPPHIRE '05

SAPPHIRE '05: SAP touts its NetWeaver platform/partnership concept as the next evolution in CRM, blending innovation with best-of-breed capabilities.

SAP Sounds Off on SOA and Collaboration

SAPPHIRE '07: The business software giant highlights its enterprise services strategy and champions the importance of business network transformation.

SAP Looks to ‘Change the Game’

On The Scene: Sapphire 2008 -- One analyst believes the latest from the German juggernaut propels the company squarely back into the CRM 2.0 battle.

CRM Is All About Teamwork

SAPPHIRE '08: At SAP's annual user conference, the opening keynote address stresses the value of teamwork and its importance to any CRM investment.

SAP Refocuses on "Fun"

SAP CRM 2008: SAP's overarching theme of "customer co-innovation" goes beyond its newly launched CRM offering, according to company executives.

SAP Susses Out 2008

With financial results in hand and Business ByDesign humming along, the vendor offers some thoughts on what's coming next.