This Week in SAP

Come and feast your eyes on this week’s SAP news bounty:

Here is the Twitter Pick’n’Mix:

  • @thorstenster: Having great fun at#SAPInsideTrackBonn. Atmosphere is very good, wonderful crowd.
  • @chiprodgers: Just blogged: 62,000 Views of SAP TechEd Live Videos #sapteched
  • martin_english: FYA: SAP cancels rampup for NetWeaver BW 7.2 – functionality to be rolled into BW7.3 later this year  (via @cbjorlin)
  • siliconchris: SAP cancels the planned BW 7.2 RampUp. Instead functionality will be available in BW 7.3 later this year 
  • qmacro: Why does everyone seem to be an Architect these days?#
  • yojibee: I just heard the words SAP, installation and easy being used in the same sentence. I am sceptical but let’s see how this goes #bobj
  • rhirsch: don’t know how people can say that SAP isn’t seriously looking at the cloud as a app platform. I’m seeing it in a variety of settings

This Week In SAP

Another week, another pick of blogs worth a bedtime read (maybe)

Twitterverse was mostly about Chuck Norris (or so it seemed)

oliver: @thorstenster Chuck Norris does no need a SAP Business Suite. He has everything in-his-memory database

vijayasankarv: When Chuck Norris types data itab ..with header line, ABAP does not dare to say it is obsolete..instead, it shows a “Success” Message

openczun: ok, I’ve got to get in on this – Chuck Norris writes such performant ABAP code that the programs are finished before they are executed

martin_english: @pixelbase Chuck Norris uses MAYBE clause in SQL

se38: Chuck Norris´ Pretty Printer converts Java source into ABAP

vlvl: Chuck Norris can calculate the ROI of installing CE

vijayasankarv: SAP runs Chuck Norris

some other Tweets spotted by yours truly:

SAPMentors: Nominate the next SAP Mentor 

dparnas: SAP Fact #95 now comes with a drawing from an 11 year old son of a norwegian SAP employee 

yojibee: RT @vlvl: New Silverlight Drawing board in Visual Composer –  << more Adobe tech being replaced with Silverlight #SAP

@yojibee @pixelbase SVG maintenance ended two years ago, don’t blame only one side…. (in response to yojibee)

ITSinsider: RT @jimworth: Sometimes we get caught up in the “cool of the tool”, but we need to look at the strategy #acweb4

The Boys Were Back In Town

Drawing by an 11 year old son of a norwegian SAP employee

Experts, Analysts and ERP pundits are still recovering from the top-level management changes that SAP announced over the course of the last 10 days. Triggered by this, there has been noticeable noise around the notion of SAP as an acquisition target. No one seems to remember that SAP once was in a similar situation.

During the Dotcom boom SAP was relegated to the bottom of analysts’ short lists. Walldorf didn’t have an answer for the pundits back then either. For the latter, ERP was very yesteryear and regarded as obsolete. They claimed it was stuck in the “old age” of doing business, all bricks & mortar, not enough “New Economy”. Even the belated introduction of the Internet Transaction Server (ITS) left the IT journaille unmoved. “Too little, too late”, they moaned.

However economic history taught the dotcom whippersnappers a lesson and the german software concern had the last laugh – and the bigger financial breath. Hasso et al rubbed it in: It was at Sapphire 2001 in Lisbon where SAP played a keynote video in which a father and his son walked through an IT museum of the future. Stopping in front of a massive pile of old PCs, monitors and keyboards the father explained (in a very tongue-in-cheek way) that this is what was left of the dotcom bubble – and that only the stronger players survived. Hasso and his team were thoroughly enjoying this moment, giving a 90 minute keynote during which he slated those who doubted the power behind SAP. The boys were back in town.

Right now, there is a similar atmosphere of underestimation. Back then, Hasso kept the software giant on a steady course. There is no reason why he shouldn’t do that again.

This Week In SAP

Blimey! What a week this has been… There were so many news that I had to kick-start the blog press last Tuesday for a “Leo Special” (#leogone). The second half of last week was mainly dominated by discussions whether SAP is now an acquisition target and newsitems regarding further SAP board reshuffles. Let’s have a look at what we’ve got…

  • Forrester’s Paul Hamerman reports on the departure of John Schwarz and elevation other board level changes. He also sees a commitment from SAP to “changing its meandering position”.
  • Redmonk’s James Governor chimes in with a wonderful summary on Leo Apotheker’s biggest legacy at SAP: Sustainability.
  • TechTarget’s Courtney Bjorlin asks whether SAP would be in a better position “if Shai Agassi never left“. This is a conversation that has bounced around the Blogs and Twittersphere for a while now and is a moot point. My take is that Agassi, as disruptive as he has been during his tenure at SAP, created a lot of fronts within the software house. Surely SAP would be different had he remained in power, but I’m not convinced if it would be a better place (no pun intended, haha!). I’m also not sure about the point that is made around “innovation around SAP”. SAP’s Composition Environment does exactly that. It’s there!
  • Stop-Rewind-Play: Josh Greenbaum talks about “SAP restarts the post-Kagermann” era.
  • Panaya came up with an analysis of SAP salaries. Interesting and sobering fact to note here is the gender bias “The median salary for women is 8-12% less than men in Europe and North America.

Tell us about it, Twitterverse!

  • twailgum: What if Shai Agassi never left SAP? by @cbjorlin>sap’s problem is b/c ‘outsiders’ like shai do leave. promote fr w/in!
  • jonerp: Very interesting update from @sambayer on “What is SAP CRM really being used for?” (w/Survey data)
  • SNCSocrates It may be stressful, frustrating, and incredibly confusing, but I’m actually starting to enjoy ABAP programming.
  • sapcebit: SAP combines CeBIT with World Tour in Halls 19 and 20. Reg show floor Hall 4, D12; Hall 5, A04
  • cote: Man, seems there’s executive musical chairs going on over at SAP:

The last 48hrs In SAP (a Leo Special)

Leo Apotheker (source SAP)

Typical! After last a slow news week it’s all happening within 48 hrs. I thought I provide a little summary of the best SAP, Hasso and #leogone related posts of the last 2 days.

  • Dennis Howlett only minutes after the news broke that Leo Apotheker and SAP have parted ways.
  • Thomas Otter weighs in with about “Hasso and SAP”. I guess the core of this piece is “SAP’s challenges are bigger than simply replacing the CEO. It needs to recover its geist.
  • CIO’s Thomas Wailgum predicts a competition between Snabe and McDermott in his “So long, Leo. We hardly knew ye.
  • Dennis Howlett with a good summary post the press conference during which Plattner was announced as back at the helm.
  • Vinnie Mirchandani with an interesting contribution, linking into arguments with Apotheker last year. He’s defiant that ERP needs its soul back. A commenter quite rightly points out whether it ever had a soul, but I can see where Mirchandani is coming from. There needs to be more Wow! for Innovation (not just slideware).
  • Computerworld with a good round-up of the events up to Tuesday
  • Hasso means business with regards to gaining trust of customers back. Sapphire 2010 to be held in Europe and US in parallel, using real-time connected sessions.
  • InformationWeek’s Bob Evans probably strikes the hardest with this lengthy analysis of the change at the SAP helm. Poignant phrase referring to Plattner’s suggestions how to bring back trust: “look at where customers rank in the great chain of being constructed by Plattner: dead last. Almost an afterthought.

Achtung, Twitterverse, Baby!

  • nenshad: #SAP‘s Apotheker built one of the most formidable enterprise software sales machines and delivered YEARS of record growth
  • yojibee: @nenshad @rwang0 Great sales guy, less great CEO – as simple as that (IMO of course) #SAP
  • dahowlett: RT @jhurwitz: Oracle buys another company: AmberPoint- SOA management < blimey !!!!
  • monkchips: so Hasso runs SAP. tell us something we didn’t know. #leogone
  • dahowlett: At last: “WE made a mistake” – re: maintenance
  • rwang0: RT @kitson: #Plattner: “the average age of the typical #SAP installation is quite substantial.” #erp #crm #sap
  • paulhamerman #SAP Hasso sets a tone for accountability, admits mistakes.This transparency will be important in helping SAP regain trust
  • twailgum: #leogone I said it last night, and I’ll say it again: “SAP, Who Are You?” Hasso offered direction this a.m. We’ll see where this all goes.
  • @InFullBloomUS: “It’s time #SAP announced a next gen product strategy that twill take their R/3:#ERP6 customers to the future.
  • @sapnews: SAP to Hold SAPPHIRE® 2010 Customer Conferences in Europe and U.S.:

This Week in SAP

This week has been a bit slow, so only a few headlines I could make out through my “SAP-shaped specs” (try to say that fast three times in a row!).

  • Thomas Wailgum on what SAP and TV Series “Lost” have in common. I’m not into Lost, but there are apparently some spoilers in there.
  • Tim Negris of TheVirtualCircle.com on swiss army knifes and why Ellison wanted Sun.
  • Jon Reed with some highly praised SAP Career Outlook 2010 contributions here and here.
  • and lastly a bit of an “evergreen” pick. Evergreen because it’s been around a while now and most of the readers of TWIS know about it already. “SAP Me Sideways” is an anonymous blog by an end-user SAP Consultant who updates his site with some interesting anecdotes and insights into what life is like in the trenches of  a SAP implementation. If you’re expecting any white papers and marketing slideware here, move on! 

 

over to you, Twittersphere:

  • @kalsing: Sun CEO @openjonathan Tweets His Resignation, Haiku Style
  • @yojibee: Awesome! The new @sapmentors page is up  (thanks to @aslann )
  • pixelbase: looking through a WDA component and discovered rude names for outbound plugs 🙂 (okay, my own tweet, but I liked it!)