Showing posts with label Suites. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Suites. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

CRM Watchlist 2013: Sweetest Suites Part 2 of 3

Previously on CRM Watchlist 2013....

The reviews keep rolling in.  We now move on to SAP and Oracle, which will be followed by the final group of suite providers – SugarCRM, Infor and NetSuite. And that’s only the first category.  Oi.  There are going to be ten posts all in all.

So, in order for me to have some sort of life before the year is out and I’m on to the 2014 Watchlist, let’s get on with it and head to our next CRM Watchlist 2013 Winner:

If this were about 9 or 10 months ago, I don’t think I would be writing this. SAP, a company, I like a great deal and have always had fair and brutally honest dealings with, had, as far as I could see lost their way. There had been some dramatic changes in their CRM strategy – seemingly for the worst; they had some management losses there and with the exception of three people – Volker Hildebrand, Reza Soudegar and Jamie Anderson, were decimated when it came to innovative, creative leaders in CRM; their overall cloud strategy was not just big but, at least from the perception many had – including me, overwrought and they didn’t seem to be truly adopting what were strong extended social or even collaborative capabilities, which are mainstream enough to be table stakes for companies in the enterprise technology world.  Meaning all in all, they seemed to be in a decline and heading to what could have been a free fall.

What made it even more difficult to deal with was that even with all the dramatic changes going on at SAP around their conversion to the cloud and the transformation of their technology model, they still adhered to the same old things that had damaged them in the past. For example, their product marketing continued to be poor even when, as one of the bright spots, all other facets of marketing was showing signs of improvement. They finally had (have)a dynamic Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) in Jonathan Becher who is not only an excellent strategic marketing guy but a great spokesperson for the company.  Some of the larger non-product focused marketing efforts, like putting on Sapphire were brilliantly conceived. The experience at the 2012 event, for example, was superb from the way accessibility of the floor space was handled to the quality of customer videos on the main stage. In other words, the overall experience excelled. But when it came to marketing SAP technology in public arenas – it was just plain out of touch with contemporary reality.  It was consistently “feature function” focused rather than what gets customers to respond – the business outcomes the products support.

There is much more than that to say about 21st century marketing, but this is a minimum contemporary criterion for marketing to customers that SAP was not even nearly fulfilling.  I couldn’t reconcile the difference between the product marketing and the marketing efforts represented by Sapphire until I found that that all marketing, except product marketing reports to Jonathan Becher. That of course explains how there would be that disparity, but doesn’t solve the problem. However, I am encouraged with the ascension of Denise Broady to run the Line of Business Product Marketing. I had the opportunity to meet her at an SAP event in January 2013 in NYC and I was beyond happy. She has her head straight and then some.

Don’t get me wrong. This is not a failing company.  They are a successful company with strong year over year revenue growth. Gartner gives them 19.3% share of the CRM market, which makes them the #1 in market share according to Gartner numbers in 2011 at least.

There were signs in many places as 2012 progressed of what became their hopeful reinvention. They were in the forefront of the re-emergence of the idea of customer experience as it applied to the world of CRM and SCRM with a book. The Customer Experience Edge written by the aforementioned Volker Hildebrand, Reza Soudegar and the now departed Vinay Iyar.  They predated by about a year, any of the major companies that are now trumpeting customer experience as 2013 advances. (Note: this is NOT to say that many smaller companies, e.g. Responsetek, haven’t been talking about customer experience for years; they have.) Their messaging was appropriate and, thus, resonated.  That alone gave them some real juice in the changing CRM world.  Though at the time, they didn’t quite yet have the products or the organization to support it beyond the messaging.

Additionally, they continued to have a powerful presence and significant influence with a sophisticated and industry leading approach to communities that can serve an ecosystem; from the huge and active 3 million strong SAP Community Network (SCN), to their brilliant Customer Value Network (CVN), run by Jim Goldfinger, a paradigm for how to partner with customers at the most important and fundamentally personal levels, even in an enterprise environment that can be less than personal sometimes.

But even all this wasn’t a substitute for the momentum necessary to keep up with a rapidly expanding and evolving market. At first, through the end of 2011, the demands of the market pushed vendors into publicly acknowledging trends. These trends had a noticeable “right-brained” tinge; among them:

Social – business, channels, media, CRMCustomer experienceCustomer engagement; systems of engagement; gamificationPredictive analytics leading to customer insightBig data

In other words, how do you not only identify customer behavior; figure out the next actions that individual customers are going to take but then create the business proposition that provides both the customer and the company with the value they are seeking.  That meant a very different approach to those who thought of business systems, programs, and technologies, as strictly transactional and operational.

To respond to this required (and still does) thought leadership – which SAP kind of did that with the book et. Al. But, the demand changed at the end of 2011 when business value from the formerly trendy social experiments became a requirement.  As Dion Hinchcliffe, über social business influencer/analyst/consultant in his always wonderful way, expresses it in a recent ZDNet post on his 2013 Forecast:

“A closely related issue is that the discipline still represents a very different way of working than many organizations are used to. But whatever the issues, and there are good many, the organizations I've spoken with in the last year now seem to realize the social world isn't going away any time soon. Many of them are now making plans accordingly.

This perspective dovetails with the work that eConsultancy did on the state of Social at the end of 2011 where they found that 64% of the companies responding considered social as past the experimental stage. Social and the other right brained aspects of customer behavior as a strategic consideration was going mainstream (for a much bigger discussion on this, see this post I wrote at the end of 2011, back when I was young. J)

As 2012 progressed, it was no longer was it enough to be up with a trend – there had to be clear value that was either measurable - or at least identifiable – that could be derived from the necessary social and customer experience programs. The ability of traditional CRM was far too limited to provide for the needs of contemporary business, though it still had a good deal of benefit. Thus not only did technology vendors have to provide the extended systems and technologies to meet the increasing customer demand but they had to be able to prove their value to the marketplace in general.

SAP had to make some serious moves – and for a while, it didn’t look like it was going to.

But, thankfully a series of actions starting about 8-9 months ago – two big ones that I’ll mention here, though there were others – gave me some real hope that SAP figured this out. In fact, the actions were significant enough that if they are realized without major derailment over 2013, they could not only put SAP back on track but will make them a genuinely competitive leader with some momentum in the market.  In other words, the kind of impact I expect in 2013.  So, rather than keep you in suspense any longer, here are the two encouraging moves.

The November 2012 announcement of SAP Customer 360 Powered by HANA – This is a complete revamp of their CRM suite to not only take advantage of in memory computing but will also extend the components of the suite broadly. Where in the past they had a series of separate products e.g. SAP CRM, SAP Sales on Demand etc., now they have a single suite that is organized around a solution portfolio. Thanks to their overall social “product strategy” SAP’s social collaboration layer, Jam, runs through all the applications in Customer 360.  This is a considerably more organized, less piecemeal approach, which, while still something short of an overall ecosystem, is far better than the scattershot set of products that they had in the past to service different aspects of CRM.  The next phase is discussed below.The game plan for social and collaboration in the cloud developed by SAP’s Global VP and GM of Enterprise Social and Collaborative Software, (and great friend of mine) Sameer Patel - who’s hiring by SAP from the thought leader ranks might have been the hire of 2012 for them – a genuine lifesaver. His presentation of the vision for collaboration coupled with the road maps for the development of the technology, if allowed to proceed by SAP without an all too common political interruption, could put SAP in the forefront of “the social cloud” applications providers – certainly contesting and even possibly bettering IBM and its Connection products and services among many others.

But there are things that SAP must do – and I mean must do to varying degrees – in 2013 in order to have the deeper level of impact that I expect that they can – and will in 2013.

Expand Customer 360 from a series of products to a platform with an ecosystem.  HANA is already part of the product suite. SAP’s Jam, as mentioned earlier is being integrated, giving it a social layer.  What is left to do is to transform a fairly robust partner channel into an ecosystem that is rewarded not just for sales but for innovation. Take a page out of the book of salesforce, Microsoft and the countless other vendors who are creating application exchanges for partners. Work with partners like BridgeX and Next Principles who provide some advanced capabilities by highlighting their work and engaging them to extend what they provide.  There is a tiny bit of this evident in the relationship of Netbase to SAP but that is more of SAP operating as a strategic reseller of Netbase rather than seeing them as a part of an ecosystem.Make sure that what Sameer Patel’s social cloud group is envisioning gets off the drawing boards and into production.   It is not just a vision, nor can it be seen as successful because Jam is integrated into CRM, financials, HR and talent management as a collaboration layer. The full roadmap needs to come to fruition. If it does, SAP becomes a real competitor in 2013.End the artificial and wrongheaded separation that keeps product marketing as a separate organization. Product marketing moved under CMO Jonathan Becher. They have to once and for all change the way that they do product marketing because it does nothing more than make people think that they don’t understand the changes in  the world. Feature/function approaches to marketing might appeal to the SAP historic customer – the CIO – and only to the more traditional ones but it doesn’t appeal to the line of business leader or the CMO or the persons who are actually going to use the systems and who are getting increasing budgetary authority. Many of SAP’s competitors get this (not all) already and are adjusting.  It makes simple sense to have the CMO own all aspects of marketing.  Let’s see it happen this year.Make sure that the CRM and social collaboration leadership are working in sync and are staffed by creative, progressive thinkers. The recent elevation of Jamie Anderson to Head of Global Solutions Marketing, Customer Line of Business Solutions (CRM), while the longest title on the planet, provides SAP with an innovator and a person willing to lay it out there – who is also an effective public spokesperson and thought leader himself.  This is mission critical for SAP who, when solid leadership emerges or the collaborations get serious, has a history of shooting its own messengers so often, the body count is too high to measure. If the indications are that SAP will leave this newer leadership layer in place to do what they are capable of – delivering on a contemporary vision with solid technologies, providing the collaboration internall at the company.

SAP is in line to have a major impact in 2013 if their plans for social in the cloud their CRM apps and HANA are all coherent to the market – when it comes to marketing/messaging and portfolios. But the work they need to do is intense – but they can do it. They did it with CRM 2007 several years ago and while the stakes are now higher, their resources, their intelligence and their effort to move forward is both laudable and daunting. They share the enigmatic gene that several other winners do – a company that can be great and yet could step on its own feet. I’m betting on them dancing really well.

Oracle is the industry’s most peculiar duck as 2013 unfolds. When it comes to impact in the customer-facing space, it has the most to prove and probably the least to do – though what it has to do is daunting.

If you look back at 2012, Oracle began to distance itself somewhat from CRM and began to increasingly focus its customer-facing applications business around what it called a customer experience suite.

To that end (at least by coincidence)  they spent an incredible amount of time in 2012 acquiring companies and repositioning themselves as a public/private cloud/hybrid/on premise focused enterprise technology company with end to end hardware and software. They began developing the messaging to build out this end to end solutions posture. They aligned themselves in the course of this with their repositioning away from CRM to a more customer experience focused public face and unlike any other vendor making the claim, built a portfolio of software applications that justified the statement, at least as far as product arrays go.

Even though their acquisitions didn’t get the publicity that salesforce.com’s acquisitions did, they were probably more significant to the turn that Oracle was making.  Some of them were hard core CRM related acquisitions like Market2Lead in 2010, some were focused around knowledge creation, distribution and consumption like InQuira and Endeca; some were put in place to enhance engagement and insight like Vitrue and Collective Intellect.  All were geared to customers continuing to purchase stuff due to a great customer experience built around customer-controlled engagement in multiple channels. Here’s a list with dates of those acquisitions (in date order):

Market2Lead – May 2010 – incorporated into Oracle CRM On Demand as the marketing moduleATG – November 2010 – ecommerce platformInQuira – July 2011RightNow – October 2011Endeca – October 2011Vitrue – May 2012Collective Intellect – June 2012Involver – July 2012Eloqua (still pending) – December 2012

But these acquisitions are only a reflection of Oracle’s commitment to building out a complete enterprise ready suite that will support customer experience.  Their customer experience product portfolio encompasses what appears to be 27 separate products ranging from ATG and Endeca to Fusion CRM to Oracle Real Time Decisions to Oracle Social Relationship Management to various industry verticals to their Big Data Appliance. Here’s the complete list.

But their commitment to customer experience goes much further than that. In a recent analyst call with David Vap, Group VP of Oracle Applications, he discussed Oracle teams that worked with customers on customer journey mapping for a two to three day period identifying the customer experience from a strategic perspective – identifying in the detail necessary the key places that a company needed to invest in – or not – to enhance and improve their customers’ experience with them. It’s almost services above and beyond technology – though of course in the long term as David rightly pointed out – it could well mean more software sales.  

However, with all this realignment comes my real concerns.

When repositioning significantly, especially in an area that is trending, either legitimately or not, there has to be something that establishes the company touting the new position as  differentiable in that domain.

In the case of Oracle, since customer experience is the trend du jour of vendors, they have to move very quickly to grab some thought leadership high ground.

But they have a problem.

For those of you who don’t know it, Anthony Lye, the leader of the CRM practice at Oracle for over 6 years, left Oracle at the end of the year and now is working at LBi as the President of their Digital Platforms and Channels.  Anthony was not only highly respected as a business leader, but had a highly visible thought leadership footprint in both the customer community and the industry as a whole.  Oracle, as of this writing, has no one who has replaced him; especially at the level that he was operating. This departure couldn’t come at a worse time – precisely while the market is trying to make sense of Oracle’s transformation to an organization that focuses their customer facing portfolio around the customer experience.

I’m not going to discuss Fusion CRM, or their current CRM product portfolio because that’s for another day.  The CRM Watchlist is an impact award and it is clear that Oracle is betting a lot on their repositioning around customer experience and their impact in 2013 is going to be determined by how successful they are in this particular area.  The other stuff will be germane but not mission-critical to their impact. Again, their impact, not their sales. We are concerned with mindshare as much as market share in these here pages, buckos.

As I said earlier, Oracle has a daunting task in front of it but it’s not complicated. There are two things they have to do quickly.

Hire a leader that can effect the transformation of the customer-facing applications business from top to bottom. That means focus the messaging; align the products; provide the thought leadership and the public face; deal with the analysts, press and influencers and provide the vision for the work and those in the practice.  A tall but necessary order. The succession should be a quick and smooth one. No procrastination on this allowed.Seize thought leadership in and around customer experience. This is a fertile area at the moment with no clear leaders in mindshare. What hasn’t emerged via the vendors is any kind of thought leadership at all. Oracle has some market research; SAP did their book but these are all one offs that are fine but there doesn’t seem to be a conscious, well thought out, organized effort to get the mindshare. For example, one thing they can do is make the intellectual and business case for their 27 products in the portfolio. At the moment, it’s laudable they have a customer experience product portfolio, but there is no real explanation as to how it as a whole and individually aligns with the thinking around customer experience. At least I can’t find it.

While I can think of a number of other initiatives that would be valuable for Oracle in 2013, and a number of discussions to be had (e.g. the acquisition of Eloqua), I think that these two are mission critical to the kind of impact they need to have this year, as opposed to the impact they will have just because they are Oracle.  I am assuming they will act on these things with the focus and urgency it deserves which is why they became a Watchlist 2013 winner.


View the original article here

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

CRM Watchlist 2013: Sweetest Suites Part 2 of 3

Previously on CRM Watchlist 2013....

The reviews keep rolling in.  We now move on to SAP and Oracle, which will be followed by the final group of suite providers – SugarCRM, Infor and NetSuite. And that’s only the first category.  Oi.  There are going to be ten posts all in all.

So, in order for me to have some sort of life before the year is out and I’m on to the 2014 Watchlist, let’s get on with it and head to our next CRM Watchlist 2013 Winner:

If this were about 9 or 10 months ago, I don’t think I would be writing this. SAP, a company, I like a great deal and have always had fair and brutally honest dealings with, had, as far as I could see lost their way. There had been some dramatic changes in their CRM strategy – seemingly for the worst; they had some management losses there and with the exception of three people – Volker Hildebrand, Reza Soudegar and Jamie Anderson, were decimated when it came to innovative, creative leaders in CRM; their overall cloud strategy was not just big but, at least from the perception many had – including me, overwrought and they didn’t seem to be truly adopting what were strong extended social or even collaborative capabilities, which are mainstream enough to be table stakes for companies in the enterprise technology world.  Meaning all in all, they seemed to be in a decline and heading to what could have been a free fall.

What made it even more difficult to deal with was that even with all the dramatic changes going on at SAP around their conversion to the cloud and the transformation of their technology model, they still adhered to the same old things that had damaged them in the past. For example, their product marketing continued to be poor even when, as one of the bright spots, all other facets of marketing was showing signs of improvement. They finally had (have)a dynamic Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) in Jonathan Becher who is not only an excellent strategic marketing guy but a great spokesperson for the company.  Some of the larger non-product focused marketing efforts, like putting on Sapphire were brilliantly conceived. The experience at the 2012 event, for example, was superb from the way accessibility of the floor space was handled to the quality of customer videos on the main stage. In other words, the overall experience excelled. But when it came to marketing SAP technology in public arenas – it was just plain out of touch with contemporary reality.  It was consistently “feature function” focused rather than what gets customers to respond – the business outcomes the products support.

There is much more than that to say about 21st century marketing, but this is a minimum contemporary criterion for marketing to customers that SAP was not even nearly fulfilling.  I couldn’t reconcile the difference between the product marketing and the marketing efforts represented by Sapphire until I found that that all marketing, except product marketing reports to Jonathan Becher. That of course explains how there would be that disparity, but doesn’t solve the problem. However, I am encouraged with the ascension of Denise Broady to run the Line of Business Product Marketing. I had the opportunity to meet her at an SAP event in January 2013 in NYC and I was beyond happy. She has her head straight and then some.

Don’t get me wrong. This is not a failing company.  They are a successful company with strong year over year revenue growth. Gartner gives them 19.3% share of the CRM market, which makes them the #1 in market share according to Gartner numbers in 2011 at least.

There were signs in many places as 2012 progressed of what became their hopeful reinvention. They were in the forefront of the re-emergence of the idea of customer experience as it applied to the world of CRM and SCRM with a book. The Customer Experience Edge written by the aforementioned Volker Hildebrand, Reza Soudegar and the now departed Vinay Iyar.  They predated by about a year, any of the major companies that are now trumpeting customer experience as 2013 advances. (Note: this is NOT to say that many smaller companies, e.g. Responsetek, haven’t been talking about customer experience for years; they have.) Their messaging was appropriate and, thus, resonated.  That alone gave them some real juice in the changing CRM world.  Though at the time, they didn’t quite yet have the products or the organization to support it beyond the messaging.

Additionally, they continued to have a powerful presence and significant influence with a sophisticated and industry leading approach to communities that can serve an ecosystem; from the huge and active 3 million strong SAP Community Network (SCN), to their brilliant Customer Value Network (CVN), run by Jim Goldfinger, a paradigm for how to partner with customers at the most important and fundamentally personal levels, even in an enterprise environment that can be less than personal sometimes.

But even all this wasn’t a substitute for the momentum necessary to keep up with a rapidly expanding and evolving market. At first, through the end of 2011, the demands of the market pushed vendors into publicly acknowledging trends. These trends had a noticeable “right-brained” tinge; among them:

Social – business, channels, media, CRMCustomer experienceCustomer engagement; systems of engagement; gamificationPredictive analytics leading to customer insightBig data

In other words, how do you not only identify customer behavior; figure out the next actions that individual customers are going to take but then create the business proposition that provides both the customer and the company with the value they are seeking.  That meant a very different approach to those who thought of business systems, programs, and technologies, as strictly transactional and operational.

To respond to this required (and still does) thought leadership – which SAP kind of did that with the book et. Al. But, the demand changed at the end of 2011 when business value from the formerly trendy social experiments became a requirement.  As Dion Hinchcliffe, über social business influencer/analyst/consultant in his always wonderful way, expresses it in a recent ZDNet post on his 2013 Forecast:

“A closely related issue is that the discipline still represents a very different way of working than many organizations are used to. But whatever the issues, and there are good many, the organizations I've spoken with in the last year now seem to realize the social world isn't going away any time soon. Many of them are now making plans accordingly.

This perspective dovetails with the work that eConsultancy did on the state of Social at the end of 2011 where they found that 64% of the companies responding considered social as past the experimental stage. Social and the other right brained aspects of customer behavior as a strategic consideration was going mainstream (for a much bigger discussion on this, see this post I wrote at the end of 2011, back when I was young. J)

As 2012 progressed, it was no longer was it enough to be up with a trend – there had to be clear value that was either measurable - or at least identifiable – that could be derived from the necessary social and customer experience programs. The ability of traditional CRM was far too limited to provide for the needs of contemporary business, though it still had a good deal of benefit. Thus not only did technology vendors have to provide the extended systems and technologies to meet the increasing customer demand but they had to be able to prove their value to the marketplace in general.

SAP had to make some serious moves – and for a while, it didn’t look like it was going to.

But, thankfully a series of actions starting about 8-9 months ago – two big ones that I’ll mention here, though there were others – gave me some real hope that SAP figured this out. In fact, the actions were significant enough that if they are realized without major derailment over 2013, they could not only put SAP back on track but will make them a genuinely competitive leader with some momentum in the market.  In other words, the kind of impact I expect in 2013.  So, rather than keep you in suspense any longer, here are the two encouraging moves.

The November 2012 announcement of SAP Customer 360 Powered by HANA – This is a complete revamp of their CRM suite to not only take advantage of in memory computing but will also extend the components of the suite broadly. Where in the past they had a series of separate products e.g. SAP CRM, SAP Sales on Demand etc., now they have a single suite that is organized around a solution portfolio. Thanks to their overall social “product strategy” SAP’s social collaboration layer, Jam, runs through all the applications in Customer 360.  This is a considerably more organized, less piecemeal approach, which, while still something short of an overall ecosystem, is far better than the scattershot set of products that they had in the past to service different aspects of CRM.  The next phase is discussed below.The game plan for social and collaboration in the cloud developed by SAP’s Global VP and GM of Enterprise Social and Collaborative Software, (and great friend of mine) Sameer Patel - who’s hiring by SAP from the thought leader ranks might have been the hire of 2012 for them – a genuine lifesaver. His presentation of the vision for collaboration coupled with the road maps for the development of the technology, if allowed to proceed by SAP without an all too common political interruption, could put SAP in the forefront of “the social cloud” applications providers – certainly contesting and even possibly bettering IBM and its Connection products and services among many others.

But there are things that SAP must do – and I mean must do to varying degrees – in 2013 in order to have the deeper level of impact that I expect that they can – and will in 2013.

Expand Customer 360 from a series of products to a platform with an ecosystem.  HANA is already part of the product suite. SAP’s Jam, as mentioned earlier is being integrated, giving it a social layer.  What is left to do is to transform a fairly robust partner channel into an ecosystem that is rewarded not just for sales but for innovation. Take a page out of the book of salesforce, Microsoft and the countless other vendors who are creating application exchanges for partners. Work with partners like BridgeX and Next Principles who provide some advanced capabilities by highlighting their work and engaging them to extend what they provide.  There is a tiny bit of this evident in the relationship of Netbase to SAP but that is more of SAP operating as a strategic reseller of Netbase rather than seeing them as a part of an ecosystem.Make sure that what Sameer Patel’s social cloud group is envisioning gets off the drawing boards and into production.   It is not just a vision, nor can it be seen as successful because Jam is integrated into CRM, financials, HR and talent management as a collaboration layer. The full roadmap needs to come to fruition. If it does, SAP becomes a real competitor in 2013.End the artificial and wrongheaded separation that keeps product marketing as a separate organization. Product marketing moved under CMO Jonathan Becher. They have to once and for all change the way that they do product marketing because it does nothing more than make people think that they don’t understand the changes in  the world. Feature/function approaches to marketing might appeal to the SAP historic customer – the CIO – and only to the more traditional ones but it doesn’t appeal to the line of business leader or the CMO or the persons who are actually going to use the systems and who are getting increasing budgetary authority. Many of SAP’s competitors get this (not all) already and are adjusting.  It makes simple sense to have the CMO own all aspects of marketing.  Let’s see it happen this year.Make sure that the CRM and social collaboration leadership are working in sync and are staffed by creative, progressive thinkers. The recent elevation of Jamie Anderson to Head of Global Solutions Marketing, Customer Line of Business Solutions (CRM), while the longest title on the planet, provides SAP with an innovator and a person willing to lay it out there – who is also an effective public spokesperson and thought leader himself.  This is mission critical for SAP who, when solid leadership emerges or the collaborations get serious, has a history of shooting its own messengers so often, the body count is too high to measure. If the indications are that SAP will leave this newer leadership layer in place to do what they are capable of – delivering on a contemporary vision with solid technologies, providing the collaboration internall at the company.

SAP is in line to have a major impact in 2013 if their plans for social in the cloud their CRM apps and HANA are all coherent to the market – when it comes to marketing/messaging and portfolios. But the work they need to do is intense – but they can do it. They did it with CRM 2007 several years ago and while the stakes are now higher, their resources, their intelligence and their effort to move forward is both laudable and daunting. They share the enigmatic gene that several other winners do – a company that can be great and yet could step on its own feet. I’m betting on them dancing really well.

Oracle is the industry’s most peculiar duck as 2013 unfolds. When it comes to impact in the customer-facing space, it has the most to prove and probably the least to do – though what it has to do is daunting.

If you look back at 2012, Oracle began to distance itself somewhat from CRM and began to increasingly focus its customer-facing applications business around what it called a customer experience suite.

To that end (at least by coincidence)  they spent an incredible amount of time in 2012 acquiring companies and repositioning themselves as a public/private cloud/hybrid/on premise focused enterprise technology company with end to end hardware and software. They began developing the messaging to build out this end to end solutions posture. They aligned themselves in the course of this with their repositioning away from CRM to a more customer experience focused public face and unlike any other vendor making the claim, built a portfolio of software applications that justified the statement, at least as far as product arrays go.

Even though their acquisitions didn’t get the publicity that salesforce.com’s acquisitions did, they were probably more significant to the turn that Oracle was making.  Some of them were hard core CRM related acquisitions like Market2Lead in 2010, some were focused around knowledge creation, distribution and consumption like InQuira and Endeca; some were put in place to enhance engagement and insight like Vitrue and Collective Intellect.  All were geared to customers continuing to purchase stuff due to a great customer experience built around customer-controlled engagement in multiple channels. Here’s a list with dates of those acquisitions (in date order):

Market2Lead – May 2010 – incorporated into Oracle CRM On Demand as the marketing moduleATG – November 2010 – ecommerce platformInQuira – July 2011RightNow – October 2011Endeca – October 2011Vitrue – May 2012Collective Intellect – June 2012Involver – July 2012Eloqua (still pending) – December 2012

But these acquisitions are only a reflection of Oracle’s commitment to building out a complete enterprise ready suite that will support customer experience.  Their customer experience product portfolio encompasses what appears to be 27 separate products ranging from ATG and Endeca to Fusion CRM to Oracle Real Time Decisions to Oracle Social Relationship Management to various industry verticals to their Big Data Appliance. Here’s the complete list.

But their commitment to customer experience goes much further than that. In a recent analyst call with David Vap, Group VP of Oracle Applications, he discussed Oracle teams that worked with customers on customer journey mapping for a two to three day period identifying the customer experience from a strategic perspective – identifying in the detail necessary the key places that a company needed to invest in – or not – to enhance and improve their customers’ experience with them. It’s almost services above and beyond technology – though of course in the long term as David rightly pointed out – it could well mean more software sales.  

However, with all this realignment comes my real concerns.

When repositioning significantly, especially in an area that is trending, either legitimately or not, there has to be something that establishes the company touting the new position as  differentiable in that domain.

In the case of Oracle, since customer experience is the trend du jour of vendors, they have to move very quickly to grab some thought leadership high ground.

But they have a problem.

For those of you who don’t know it, Anthony Lye, the leader of the CRM practice at Oracle for over 6 years, left Oracle at the end of the year and now is working at LBi as the President of their Digital Platforms and Channels.  Anthony was not only highly respected as a business leader, but had a highly visible thought leadership footprint in both the customer community and the industry as a whole.  Oracle, as of this writing, has no one who has replaced him; especially at the level that he was operating. This departure couldn’t come at a worse time – precisely while the market is trying to make sense of Oracle’s transformation to an organization that focuses their customer facing portfolio around the customer experience.

I’m not going to discuss Fusion CRM, or their current CRM product portfolio because that’s for another day.  The CRM Watchlist is an impact award and it is clear that Oracle is betting a lot on their repositioning around customer experience and their impact in 2013 is going to be determined by how successful they are in this particular area.  The other stuff will be germane but not mission-critical to their impact. Again, their impact, not their sales. We are concerned with mindshare as much as market share in these here pages, buckos.

As I said earlier, Oracle has a daunting task in front of it but it’s not complicated. There are two things they have to do quickly.

Hire a leader that can effect the transformation of the customer-facing applications business from top to bottom. That means focus the messaging; align the products; provide the thought leadership and the public face; deal with the analysts, press and influencers and provide the vision for the work and those in the practice.  A tall but necessary order. The succession should be a quick and smooth one. No procrastination on this allowed.Seize thought leadership in and around customer experience. This is a fertile area at the moment with no clear leaders in mindshare. What hasn’t emerged via the vendors is any kind of thought leadership at all. Oracle has some market research; SAP did their book but these are all one offs that are fine but there doesn’t seem to be a conscious, well thought out, organized effort to get the mindshare. For example, one thing they can do is make the intellectual and business case for their 27 products in the portfolio. At the moment, it’s laudable they have a customer experience product portfolio, but there is no real explanation as to how it as a whole and individually aligns with the thinking around customer experience. At least I can’t find it.

While I can think of a number of other initiatives that would be valuable for Oracle in 2013, and a number of discussions to be had (e.g. the acquisition of Eloqua), I think that these two are mission critical to the kind of impact they need to have this year, as opposed to the impact they will have just because they are Oracle.  I am assuming they will act on these things with the focus and urgency it deserves which is why they became a Watchlist 2013 winner.


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Monday, April 29, 2013

CRM Watchlist 2013 Winners: Sweetest Suites Part 3 of 3

Previously on CRM Watchlist 2013:

That finishes up the “Big 4” of the customer facing tech companies.  Now we move on to the 3 other enterprise worthy suites that should make waves in 2013. Thing is, this is not a small group. For example, Infor is a $2.8 billion company that actually when it comes to straight revenue is larger than salesforce.com. So it’s a matter how to realize their potential for these three – all of whom made serious progress in 2012 and all of whom are poised for impact in 2013 – and should, even if they don’t take my suggestions too seriously, should still whack the landscape hard this year.

The thing is that when I consider what I want to write, I have to consider a lot of things. Many of them include the right brain of the impact equation. That means looking for not just holes, but anomalies and then deciding if they are going to be of any consequence and what that means to the companies that I’m digitally advising here. So some of this advice doesn’t meet industry standard lingo nor does it jive with what “advisors”, “consultants” and “analysts” are “supposed to do.”  So treat it for what it is. My opinion – which while a defensible one – is still just that. An opinion.  Use it or lose it but don’t abuse it.

Without further ado….

Practicality defines this company which is both a great thing and can sometimes be not so great. If there is one thing to know about Infor it’s this: they are far more advanced in the customer-facing department than almost any company on the Watchlist – and if there is another thing to know about Infor, it’s this – who in hell knows that?

This, if you didn’t know, is the company that owns and has revived to its greatest glory, Epiphany (thankfully, they took out the period – those of you who know what I mean are geeks indeed), which is what most CRM related analysts and industry watchers consider one of the greatest CRM/CEM and now SCRM/CXM (snarky I am) products ever.

Additionally, their 2012 release of Inforce Marketing, a product associated with Infor’s commitment to building on the Force.com platform (though mostly around ERP), was an important step. This is their first pure SaaS based product; for marketing – this coming from a company that had a pretty big marketing suite (all on premise) for the enterprise.  So this eliminates a limitation that they had to some extent.

Infor, in fact, has been spending a lot of time on their customer facing applications thanks to the interest Charles Phillips in making the CRM-related products a strong part of the Infor overall growth plan. Epiphany, which has been around since it was part of an independent company in the 90s, has had the most benefit from this investment, with their Interaction Advisor being used as a core to build multiple products that are horizontally and vertically specific. Examples include a churn interaction advisor which uses their real time interaction engine to reduce Telco churn; their email interaction advisor which provides real time offers and experiences tied to email that takes into account the digital footprint of the customer as he or she acts in real time.

In December 2012, they made a not-very-surprising acquisition of the top flight Marketing Resource Management (MRM) company, Orbis Global, which, along with their standard Epiphany Marketing Suite and Inforce Marketing which incorporates some integrated marketing management (IMM) capabilities, gives them a place at the contenders table with Teradata’s Aprimo.

This company’s CRM practice management, led by industry veteran (and ardent Mets fan) George Wright, has done a great job of developing the products and the product roadmaps to reflect not just the trends that are out there in the industry. More practically, they are addressing the needs, the outcomes that are required for contemporary business by having what I will generally call incredibly savvy, sane and articulate product roadmaps.  For example, they address social by not just integrating social feeds and allowing the employees to communicate with the customers, but by placing a premium on sophisticated approaches to personalization. They don’t have to talk about big data, because they already scale infinitely.

The problem Infor has is that it has an ERP company mindset. Given that this $2.8 billion company derives the bulk of its revenues from its ERP products and more of their 70,000 customers are ERP than not, that’s certainly understandable. But its bestselling software should have nothing to do with a company’s mindset. ERP companies grew to prominence in the early 90s and the culture was shaped by the general business cultures and requirements of that era. ERP is focused on automation and efficiencies, not interactions with customers. It was designed (and is designed) to solve problems that lead to taking costs out of systems and making processes more efficient and customizing rules that are built for specific companies and industries.  The culture wasn’t focused on the 21st century’s biggest business questions – which are:

How do I retain customers who have a much greater choice when it comes to selecting the products and services I provide?How do I acquire customers when there is all that choice and there is much marketing noise out there that I have to cut through just to get their attention? Plus they trust their friends more than they trust us?How do we address the demands of the customers given that they have dramatically changed under aegis of the contemporary communications revolution in the midst of a dramatically changing economy and social environment?How do we provide value to and get value from customers, given that what a business calls value and what a customer calls value are different?

Infor’s customer-facing product portfolio is aligned to these concepts. While I can’t reveal their roadmaps, suffice to say they are impressively complete and significantly attuned to the practical outcomes that the current trends both require and portend.

But it goes further than that – down to the heart of the company – its culture. Charles Phillips, the CEO who was the co-President of Oracle is bringing in a new collaborative culture to Infor’s 13,000 employees.  As you can see by clicking on the link here, the culture of the company has been dramatically transformed. For those of you either too lazy to click (c’mon now) or just not interested enough, here are a couple of highlights in a nutshell.

250,000 emails went out to customers et. al. with individual executives contact information and encouraging them to contact any of them they want to directly – including Charles Phillips.There is a newly minted in house design agency to help make the software user experience something “organic.” (my quotes).There is an open floor plan to encourage collaboration and innovation with whiteboards everywhere.

But they are not perfect by any means, though their issues are not huge, either.

For example, their CRM marketing is actually very good and they do all the right things, but for reasons that I will call anecdotal, the CRM product suite doesn’t seem to be a big part of the Infor conversation, though it is a part of the Infor brand. Meaning, you have things like Inforce Marketing and Infor’s Epiphany Marketing Suite, but it seems to more a pro forma attachment than an organic part of Infor’s total offering. This isn’t a horrible thing, because the product offering and the practice there are so strong they can carry the conversation to a large extent by themselves, but it is something that has to be addressed. That can be done by dialing up the noise level so to speak – and escalating the visibility of the customer facing applications – in their own name (Epiphany) and in the name of Infor. 

So what is it as a company they have to do this year to accelerate the pace of impact for Infor – especially in recognition of their amazing products with their superb roadmaps and their already clear knowledge that social capabilities are aimed at outcomes, not “wow?”  There isn’t that much but what there is needs to be amplified considerably.

Be publicly proud – Infor has been notably too humble about what it has and what it can do for its customers. Yet as noted above, they have arguably the best customer-facing product in technology history; an excellent CRM leadership team; a CEO who is devoted to investing in the company in the right way; an excellent relationship with the analysts and influencers that they interact with.  So the ability to show their stuff – strut it a little (not too much) is important this year. That means more marketing dollars devoted the branding of Epiphany more tightly with Infor as a whole (e.g. a collaborative value chain, not a back office and front office) to the kind of outcomes-based positioning that shows the business benefits of the Infor overall suite – with customer-facing taking equal status with ERP and market research in areas that are germane to their offering.  It also means going out there and competing as one of the Big 5 – which doesn’t exist yet.Provide customer-facing thought leadership on (legal) steroids – This is the one area that they haven’t done well in. They have the practice leadership. They have the technology. They have the vision. What they don’t have is the body of content that makes their case – via the external thought leaders and the internal ones.  So, what they must do in 2013 is to dramatically expand their thought leadership efforts and start quickly.  That has two aspects. Engagement of external thought leaders for creation of assets and get George Wright and other designated practice folks out there speaking and writing and doing videos etc.  In other words, be VERY visible with a clear and effective program. With Infor, it takes a particular focus due to the way that they are using the Interaction Advisor – with both horizontally and vertically specific applications. So the thought leadership shouldn’t just be around industry wide themes (e.g. customer experience) but focused around some of the key verticals.  Allocate the budgets and the time and do it.

If Infor does just these two things this year, they can take their place in not the Big 4 but in the newly minted Big 5 in 2013.

NetSuite is one of the companies that I’ve always gotten. They do the things they have to do to make the operational side of business work from end to end. They started out in 1998 as NetLedger which gives you a big hint as to what they started out doing. Clearly their entré into the marketplace was around financial software.  But, over the years, their back office focus didn’t stop them from developing a world class operational CRM system that is used rather happily by their clients. 

What has always impressed me about NetSuite is their amazing attention to the everyday details of running business operations. There may not be a technology company on the planet that pays attention as closely as NetSuite. In an example that I like using to show what I mean; if the VAT tax were raised by a ½ percent on February 1, by February 2, every NetSuite system that needed to deal with the VAT tax would have the increase incorporated into the system. While this is metaphorical, it is also what NetSuite does empirically when the changes to the details matters.

But that’s the tactical.  Their strategic perspective has always been do what you have to do to grow steadily and be rock solid in your focus. So rather than the bells and whistles of “coolness” and rather than focus on a trend, other than SaaS, which is how they started their life, they focus on filling out the transactional and operational needs of their customers.  Their approach is to make sure that the day to day is covered.

Now, a story.

Back in the mid-1940s, Army had a national championship football team. It was led by 1945 Heisman Trophy Winner – Felix, “Doc” Blanchard, whose nickname was Mr. Inside, was a fullback known for his work up the middle; Glenn Davis, the 1946 Heisman Trophy winner, was known for his speed and his ability to get outside the opposition and break long runs.  The duo of Mr. Inside and Mr. Outside led Army to two national championships and a 27-0-1 record over three years.

NetSuite’s management team has its own Mr. Inside and Mr. Outside. Mr. Inside is founder and CTO Evan Goldberg who has a low public profile but is a brilliant technology development guy who is responsible for both the on the ground work for the technology at NetSuite, the roadmaps, and the technology vision.  Zach, Nelson, Mr. Outside, is the CEO and the public face of the company – and has the both the savvy and the flair to present NetSuite to the public in ways that resonate to their audience and potential audience.

On the marketing side, they have clearly matured in 2012, dialing back what was their long time, rather pointless, strategy of snarky attacks on their competitors. They did very little of that in 2012 – or maybe I just didn’t see it.  Either way, they tended toward marketing around their own strength as suite.

They also continued to show some power with their analyst/journalist relations due to the sterling work of Mei Li, their SVP of Corporate Communications. Mei, who I number among my closest friends in addition to being a professional I admire a great deal, has always had the right idea when it comes to influencers and outreach, recognizing that they are not demographics or categories – they are individual humans, whether they work for an analyst firm like Gartner or IDC or a boutique research firm like Constellation or are individual influencers – or they are journalists who write in the industry or for the general business press.  She gets it.

Put all of this together with the success of the management tandem and their strategy, is evident. In their recent earnings call, NetSuite announced that they had a record $308.8 million in revenue in 2012, a 31% increase over the prior year.  They had a 50% increase in operating capital to over $54 million.  In other words they are healthy and consistently growing.

Yet, their approach comes with a price that they have to pay – and 2013 is the year that they will either pay it or they might suffer some losses in mindshare and or market share.

Because they are so successful and consistently so, they have been less concerned than other companies on responding quickly to market shifts, some of which have been close to seismic; some of which have been nothing more than momentary trends; and some of which are now permanently embedded in mainstream thinking  For example, a couple of weeks ago, my colleague and friend, uber-influencer Esteban Kolsky, wrote a post on IBM’s recognition that social business is now mainstream and how they have not only adjusted to it but have actually used the shift to their business advantage.  NetSuite, at multiple levels, has not been as responsive as they should be.

The resulting efforts in the social realm for example have been less than stellar. They made partnership choices for collaboration and social network providers that both in retrospect and to some extent at the time, seemed odd and now seem downright dysfunctional. The big one was Yammer, now a Microsoft company – which takes them out of the running to be part of NetSuite’s ecosystem.

Yet, unfortunately, I’m preaching to myself here to some extent. This is a company that I love to deal with. I have friends there: Zach might be the coolest CEO to hang out with in the whole industry; I was at Mei Li’s wedding. I have a high regard for their product suite too and the depth it brings – which makes it competitive with anyone in the market. They have been an enterprise software suite in the cloud from almost the beginning, which gives them a maturity that you don’t often see in a software company.  Additionally, they are a company that does try to fix its own problems. They had serious customer service issues a few years ago and put some time and effort into dealing with it and anecdotally at least, the problems seem to have settled from a loud roar to a low buzz.  But when it comes to breaking out of a box that has been successful for them, they are loathe to do it – and it will impact them in the near future.

So what is it that they have to do in 2013 to have the impact that I know they can have?

Social and analytics embedded - When it comes to their product, I’ve said this a million times with them and I guess they don’t really listen, but this year (like last year), they have to incorporate social capabilities into their otherwise excellent suite.  To a lesser degree, they also have increase the robustness of their analytics – especially around customer analytics as more especially predictive if they want to play at the big enterprise level. Every indicator is that they do.Partnering much better, please - In conjunction with #1, they have to partner with the right companies in the social realm. As noted, their social partner choices have been a bust. They need to think through what they need to offer and then find the partners that make sense. I have some ideas but they aren’t appropriate part of the discussion here. It would take too much space up.Break out of the marketing box - They need to get out of what has been for years a nearly totally traditional marketing head. This is the 21st century and social marketing, organized analyst/influencer relations programs, thought leadership and content development at scale all need to be part of the thinking. Mei Li has done a brilliant job at the AR/IR stuff for years – the best individual in the business. Zach Nelson is a dynamic CEO with not only the operational skills to run a burgeoning business, but the good will of an ENORMOUS number of people.  The team of the two of them has reaped untold benefit for NetSuite. But there is a limit to what they can do as a team of two. Traditional marketing spend, while still has importance, isn’t where the deepest part of the budget needs to be – it needs balance. The faster that NetSuite realizes this, the faster they will reap the results of a contemporary marketing strategy. 

2012 was a monumental year for SugarCRM. They proved they could scale to the enterprise – and that was no small deal (please note the somewhat abstract pun there).

As far as the numbers go, here’s a number of the “really-good-but-still-just-a-number” variety:

SugarCRM’s customer base increased year over year by 22% by Q3 2012.

Nice going, guys. Can’t go wrong too much with that.  The question is of course, what kind of customer is that now that they are going upmarket?  What? What do you  mean, Paul? How is SugarCRM changing to be an enterprise player?

First, earlier last year, they began resituating their markets – aiming more toward the enterprise market place as a viable alternative to the bigger boys out there.  Their alliance with IBM had shown a theoretical scalability with the logic being that IBM wouldn’t have partnered with them around CRM if it weren’t for that capability. But they hadn’t done the requisite “proof of concept.”

But low and behold, in April they (and IBM) announced that SugarCRM was going to replace the 67,000 seats of Siebel that IBM had used for countless years – which, of course, was the reason that Siebel was being replaced.

As a bit of an aside, I think that Siebel has finally run its course. Even though many Siebel products, especially Siebel Call Center, are still being used after many years, its age is showing now.  In a recent discussion among several analysts, it was noted that there were quite a few customers who were either replacing Siebel or talking about replacing Siebel. The numbers were anecdotally significant. RIP, Siebel.  You were durable and you did good.

In any case, the SugarCRM announcement was an indicator of their ability to scale to enterprise proportions. As of today there are over 7000 seats done and by year end 2013, all of the 67,000 Siebel seats will have been replaced by SugarCRM.

But, very interestingly, by going upstream to the enterprise, they get contrapuntal with their new messaging around SugarCRM being aimed at a market of one – the individual user. As they scaled up, they focused down. Which of course, creates an interesting story – and conundrum.  How do you appeal to a company needing thousands of seats when your target is the individual user without being lost in a morass of homogenous faces?

But this raises a whole new set of requirements and actions by SugarCRM.

Calm the channel – Since SugarCRM is running parallel efforts – going up market at the same time as they are sustaining and supporting their existing small and medium business efforts – they need to make sure that their channel fully understands this revamped approach.  SugarCRM’s recent personnel move makes their channel a little nervous, even though there is actually nothing to be nervous about. But, perception is everything and SugarCRM needs to be alleviating the fears of their channel quickly.  The programs they are developing speak for themselves. For example, their new channel regional alignment – 10 regions in the U.S. rather than 5 – is a huge benefit for the partners – but they have to be able to explain how it is to those partners.Incorporate social into the SugarCRM platform as a development option – One thing I’ve always liked about SugarCRM is their attention to mobile and social as things that they need to incorporate into their platform.  With mobile, they’ve done a great job, able to work with any mobile operating system – natively with iPhone, iPad, Android and Blackberry and currently with the use of Companionlink – one of the better mobile integration applications for SugarCRM – with Google and Windows 8 Phone. I have to assume that Windows 8 Phone is on Sugar’s native integration roadmap somewhere. However, with social, they haven’t been as complete yet – but they are aware of that. With SugarCRM 6.0 they integrated some social capabilities via the Sugar Cloud Connectors. But these are primarily concerned with the integration of and the communication with social feeds from the external social networks (e.g. Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn). There is much more to social including analytics that has to be accounted for when the enterprise is involved. (See Infor review above on this). SugarCRM now has to make their move with a fuller social capability integrated into their platform if they are to compete at the enterprise level.Expand the thought leadership being generated internally and externally – Chris Bucholtz is doing a great job as the public thought leadership face of SugarCRM. With his stellar CRM Outsiders blog and his writing for CRM Buyer and his general interactions with the groups of influencers that he has been a part of for many years, SugarCRM has made great progress in this domain. But they now need to expand it even further with a program for thought leadership that involves a lot more visibly organized content production.  A great example of companies that have done this well are Eloqua and Marketo – who have a branded presence with their thought leadership efforts – e.g. Eloqua’s Grande Guides.  So, in a nutshell here, a branded thought leadership effort – not just thought leadership is their next phase. Expand partnerships to more than IBM – SugarCRM has established its bonafides when it comes to the enterprise. The product scales. They’ve proven that. Their partnership with IBM is incredibly strong with SugarCRM, in effect, being IBM’s CRM technology of record.  Several of the SugarCRM partners, such as Company to Watch winner DRI Global have done the integrations with SugarCRM and IBM Connections which together make a capable social business system. All well and good. But now, if SugarCRM isn’t being acquired by IBM – and I don’t know that it is or isn’t – Sugar needs to start stretching its enterprise muscles and getting allied with companies like Accenture, Deloitte, CSC, Ernst and Young Advisory, etc. to expand their enterprise footprint. Also to find partners that can sell into the enterprise and do so routinely.  The big deals necessary to make SugarCRM be what it wants to be don’t lie with IBM alone. They need to be starting down the path of developing these alliances. The big consultancies would be dumb not to take a look; and SugarCRM would be dumb not to try to show itself. A couple more marquee partners would be a huge plus for SugarCRM in 2013.Focus the messaging around business outcomes – SugarCRM has been great around two marketing thrusts – dropping “open source” as a differentiator – which they did with no damage to them; and their new focus around the system for one  - meaning organized around the individual user; not the company as an indistinguishable whole.  Now, in line with going up market and focusing down to the individual, they have to shift their message. One of my (new) favorite quotes is from poet Muriel Rukeyser and it goes: “the universe is made of stories not of atoms” In effect, that’s what SugarCRM’s marketing has to look like.  The potential danger of focusing on individuals as the core target is that they too get indistinguishable. Know what these individuals want out of a business system – how it helps them the person, not the “atom” and you’ll get to the heart of the enterprise – the people who make it up – and their particular needs. Use service design logic for the products and jobs-based thinking for the messaging.

If SugarCRM does all these things, there will be exactly the synergies between the enterprise and the individual needed to succeed; then the whole will be far greater than the sum of its parts.

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Next up: Aprimo, Eloqua, Hubspot, Infusionsoft and Marketo


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