This blog examines the business implications of IT service trends ranging from software-as-a-service (SaaS) and cloud computing to managed services and other on-demand services.

March 21, 2011

TrackVia Wins THINKstrategies’ Cloud Computing Business Value Award

THINKstrategies, Inc.  announced today that TrackVia has been named the latest winner of THINKstrategies’ new Cloud Computing Business Value (CCBV) Awards program, which is aimed at promoting the measurable business benefits being delivered by today’s cloud computing solutions.

The CCBV Awards program was launched in 2010 to recognize Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) and Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) providers delivering tangible business benefits to specific user organizations. These benefits include lower costs, faster deployment times, greater profitability, etc.

TrackVia is a provider of an application development platform designed to make it easier for business users to build their own database-driven applications and avoid the backlogs which typically plague IT and traditional inhouse software development organizations.

Click here to read about the measurable business benefits which earned TrackVia THINKstrategies’ latest CCBV Award.

Click here to learn more about THINKstrategies’ CCBV Award program or to apply for an Award.

The CCBV Award program builds on the success of THINKstrategies’ Best of SaaS Showplace (BoSS) Awards program which was initiated in 2009. Click here to read more about the BoSS Awards or to apply for an Award.

March 15, 2011

HP Shoots for the Clouds

HP’s new CEO, Leo Apotheker unveiled the company’s latest corporate strategy yesterday with plenty of fanfare, but little flourish.

The theme of his talk and HP’s new mantra is providing “connectivity” to the Cloud to move “Everyone On”.

While the picture he painted of this new world order and HP’s strategic response covered all the bases, there are still plenty of pieces which must come together in order to make it a reality.

Apotheker’s ‘vision’ was certainly well-conceived and his presentation was well-scripted. No one can argue with his view that,

“We see clearly a world in which the impact of cloud and connectivity is changing not only the user experience, but how individuals, small businesses and enterprises will consume, deploy and leverage information technology.”

I would also agree that ”HP is well positioned to be the trusted leader in addressing this opportunity.”  But, it faces plenty of problems capitalizing on this opportunity.

Apotheker’s four-point strategy to capture this opportunity includes:

  1. “Extending its leadership in managing and optimizing today’s traditional environments;”
  2. “Leveraging HP’s core strength in cloud to build and manage next-generation cloud-based architectures;”
  3. “Being the trusted partner to customers by enabling the seamless transition to hybrid computing models; and”
  4. “Defining and delivering the connected world from the consumer to the enterprise.”

That just about covers every angle of today’s rapidly evolving marketplace. And, HP has been inching in this direction for a while. It is not only the largest IT vendor, but also boasts a very loyal consumer, SMB, enterprise and channel following.

But, HP is also burdened with legacy products, both hardware and software, as well as cumbersome business processes. Many of its systems are too expensive. Nearly all of its software is too complex. And, too many of its business processes are too disjointed. So, attacking all of these market opportunities simultaneously in an cost-effective and profitable fashion isn’t going to be easy.

The good news is that Apotheker and HP recognize these issues and are promising to address them. Even more promising is Apotheker’s statement that they are not going to acquire more legacy systems and software to solve their problems. This will hopefully put to rest the persistent rumors that HP will acquire SAP.

Instead, HP needs to build and acquire new functional capabilities which will quickly automate its systems and SaaSify its software and services.

HP must carefully traverse the three segments of the Cloud Computing world — Software-as-a-Service (SaaS), Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) and Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS).

While Apotheker suggested that HP must play in all three areas, I would suggest that it concentrate on SaaS and IaaS, and limit its PaaS efforts to inviting third-party developers to add onto its OpenView IT management suite via application program interfaces (APIs) which can enhance and accelerate the evolution of OpenView. I call this the “tugboat” strategy.

In order for HP to outduel IBM, I believe it must capitalize on its consumer market presence; focus on its IT management capabilities, and keep its corporate infighting to a minimum.

IBM gave away its PC business and has no handheld device or consumer market presence. It has put its software emphasis on cloud enablement rather than cloud management. Middleware is important, but so is controlling the chaos created by the Cloud. And, IBM continues to contend with political battles between its hardware, software and services divisions which not only retard its responsiveness to rapid market changes, but also compounds its costs as each group seeks to maximize its revenue streams.

HP is certainly suscepitable to the same organizational issues, but can counteract them by exploiting its channel relationships and consumer orientation.

While Dell can match HP on the consumer front, it is still playing catch-up at the enterprise level with its Perot Systems services and automated systems. And, it hasn’t been able to overcome its historic channel issues.

When Lou Gerstner took over IBM as it was coming apart at the seams and many called for its divestiture, he proclaimed that the company’s competitive advantage was its broadbased portfolio of hardware, software and services, and asserted it didn’t need a vision it needed to execute.

Apotheker also sees the benefit of a multidisciplinary corporate portfolio, but believes that it needs to be guided by a new vision to fuel its continued growth.

Converting a vision into execution doesn’t happen overnight. In fact, it will probably never be entirely fulfilled. Instead, HP will be measured by how quickly it can demonstrate it is making tangible progress in its efforts.

[Disclosure:HP, IBM, and Dell have all been THINKstrategies clients.}

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March 13, 2011

Recent Writings on SaaS and Cloud Computing

In case you missed my recent columns and commentaries in other places, here’s a quick list of links for your reading pleasure and consideration:

E-Commerce Times: Amazon Web Services and the ASP Model Redux

Datamation: Who Will Move You to the Cloud? 

You can also click here to find my recent blogposts on TechWeb’s Internet Evolution microsite which include:

Filed under: Uncategorized

March 7, 2011

The Bi-Directional Elevator Pitch

When I founded THINKstrategies back in 2001, I chose the name because I wanted to help clients re-think how they viewed their business problems regardless of industry. One of the common challenges my ‘vendor’ clients face is how to explain the value of their business solutions in a succinct, compelling and differentiated fashion so it captures the attention of potential customers and the imagination of the broader marketplace. This typically translates into the daunting task of formulating an ‘elevator pitch’.

My most recent involvement in this exercise was last week when I helped my latest client put their pitch together as a part of a half-day strategy session. I refer to these meetings as “catalyst” sessions because they help clients generate new ways of thinking about their market opportunities, competitive challenges, solution pricing/packaging, or go-to-market strategies and tactics. In this case, our discussion generated a new way to think about the elevator pitch itself.

Most people approach the elevator pitch with one direction in mind — an upward ride in which the presenter incrementally adds more elements to their story to capture the audience’s attention and encourage them to want to learn more. The ride up to the first floor is typically dedicated to quickly stating what your business does, the product/service it sells, and the problem it solves. The trip to the second floor focuses on explaining how your business model/solution is different and the unique value it delivers. And, the ride to the third floor is spent offering case study examples as proof-points that demonstrate your ability to deliver on your promises. If you get as far as the fourth floor with the prospect, whether it is a potential customer or investor, you want to use the extra time to paint a picture of the bigger implications of your solution and strategy on the broader marketplace and the way businesses operate to really trigger their imagination about your company’s grander potential.

This outline is particularly useful for pitching potential customers or business partners who are concerned about the practical and tangible benefits of a vendor’s product or service. You’ll vary the value propositions you emphasize based on the buying authority of a potential customer, business partner or investor. But, the key is building up your story as you ride the elevator ascends to higher floors.

While this methodology is generally accepted and has proven to work in many situations, I think there are specific situations in which you should expect to present your elevator pitch in the opposite order.

For instance, let’s imagine you have an opportunity to quickly tell a senior decision-maker about your company. In many cases, these ‘elite’ prospects are more interested in the ‘big picture’, market implications of your company’s strategies and solutions rather than its specific product capabilities. In these situations, you should be prepared to present your elevator pitch as if you’re traveling down from the ‘penthouse’ of a building and drilling down from the higher-level value propositions and long-term goals to the more immediate functional capabilities and go-to-market tactics.

This new way of thinking can help you better construct your elevator pitch, and flesh out your longer term corporate strategy, to make it more compelling to the varying audiences who are essential to your success.

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March 5, 2011

Corralling the Social Cloud for Business Purposes

Salesforce.com unveiled a series of important enhancements to its Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) service-desk management capabilities this week aimed at helping businesses more effectively track and respond to the escalating volume of data feeds from Facebook and Twitter.

The company’s Service Cloud 3.0 announcement coincided with its CloudForce 2011 event at the Javits Center in NYC, in the backyard of ‘Corporate America’, the financial services sector and the traditional media world to maximize its attention.

The new round of enhancements were primarily focused on enabling users of Salesforce.com’s service-desk management platform to better monitor Facebook and Twitter feeds, and track their response to comments, complaints and other service requests via these increasingly important social networks.

Salesforce.com made sure to brand each feature as a separate offer to ensure it gained as much attention as possible, including Salesforce.com for Facebook and Salesforce.com for Twitter.

The new monitoring capabilities are actually enabled by a third-party company, called Radian6, which is now selling its solution on Salesforce.com’s AppExchange as well. By coincidence, people I know at SAP also use Radian6 to track Facebook and Twitter data feeds. So, don’t be surprised to see Radian6 acquired quickly by one of the two companies if Google, Microsoft or another suitor doesn’t swoop in sooner.

Despite the fact that most of the enhancements unveiled by Salesforce.com this week won’t be available for another quarter or two, its announcement overshadowed SAP’s own attempt to assert itself in the SaaS and social networking arena by previewing a new portfolio of on-demand business applications at CeBit aimed at responding to Salesforce.com’s growing success and the overall acceptance of SaaS/Cloud-based alternatives to legacy, on-premise applications.

I had an opportunity to get a private briefing re: SAP’s new offerings before this past week’s announcement (as I did for Salesforce.com’s Service Cloud 3.0 announcement) and was impressed with their functional and social networking capabilities, as well as the company’s intensifying efforts to deliver cost-effective SaaS solutions. However, it still has a long way to go to convince customers and the broader marketplace that it can succeed in the SaaS marketplace after numerous false-starts.

Meanwhile, Salesforce.com isn’t taking its foot off the gas pedal as it extends its lead as an innovator, and market/mindshare leader.

Disclosure: Salesforce.com and SAP are THINKstrategies clients.