Oracle-Hyperion deal, CIOs and CFOs

ZDNet reports on SAPs reaction over Oracle’s purchase of Hyperion – what I find more interesting is the actual reasoning behind the deal that Oracle president Charles Phillips gave to ZDNet.

Hyperion’s software wraps up financial information into a dashboard and helps companies deliver their regulatory filings to the SEC. While CFOs may write checks for other applications they know Hyperion’s software well.

“There are a lot of other tools we have that we can sell. Normally the CIO reports to the CFO so that relationship was important,” said Phillips.

Oracle’s game plan: Use Hyperion’s access to the CFO office to sell other applications. CIOs are critical, but CFOs call the shots.

This reminded me of Dan McWeeney’s post on “SAP users of tomorrow“. Dan quite rightly emphasised the importance of UIs in the future and how they will influence key decision makers.

One thing I’d to add to this is that in my view Oracle is (for once) using a clever approach here: the CFOs are the ones who “sign the cheques”. I am probably out on a limb here, but my guess is that even in the future it will mostly be CIOs who are getting excited about a good UI – not the CFOs. So trying to get a communication route directly to the key people sounds like a plan to me.

use your Wiimote in your enterprise app

Some developers at Colgate Palmolive worked on a little project to connect a Wiimote -the new and innvoative gaming remote for Nintendo Wii systems- to a SAP NW resource planning system using data from a BW backend.

It’s one of those things that are too hard to call as to what this could bring: Just another pointing device? Or is the creation of sales orders with a shake of the Nunchuck just around the corner?

Yahoo! Pipes

Yahoo Pipes LogoYahoo must have been listening very well to all those bloggers out there who were wishing to easily amalgamate (or “mash up”, as they now say) several feeds and searches – Yahoo Pipes does just that. Craig and TechnologyDriven both posted about this already and tonight I had a first glance at this rather marvellous WebApp. My first impressions are that it is very intuitive – although not 100% fool proof (yet). There were some situations where I had some problems – like when searching for other Pipes straight from the editor.

Currently I am still using some PHP goodness a la Magpie RSS to mashup my SAP News feeds on the right… but watch this space.

I wonder if this will be the final piece of the jigsaw on Craig’s SDN Network Community Wiki Blog Roll? 😉

PHP Development in SAP

PHP logoThink SAP Netweaver and PHP don’t mix? Think commercial development platforms don’t need any Open-Source, free and community-driven dynnamic web development scripting language? And you think why SAP should embrace an environment that stands in direct competition to its own BSP (Business Server Pages) solution?

Think again, because for a while now PHP has a small but thriving community on the SDN forum. Surely one of the big advantages of tasting the mix between SAP and PHP is PHP’s simplicity and the dissemination of PHP programming skills due to the way how it is distributed. Especially customers who have already invested into home-grown or off-the-shelf PHP solutions might appreciate this when SAP is to be considered. Netweaver/PHP collaborations could be one of the many doors that enable SAP to get deeper into the SME market.

Useful links and entry points into this area are: