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At this year’s annual SAP user conference, SAPPHIRE, the technology giant showed advances in its cloud and in-memory computing efforts. It has completed the migration of its conventional VR_2012_TechAward_Winner_Logoapplication suite and portfolio of tools to operate on SAP HANA, its in-memory computing platform, and made improvements in its cloud computing environment, SAP HANA Enterprise Cloud. The last time I analyzed SAP HANA was when it won our firm’s 2012 Overall IT Technology Innovation Award. Now HANA has been transitioned from just a database technology into a broad platform. SAP wisely consolidated its efforts previously known as SAP NetWeaver into SAP HANA. This resolves some confusion regarding HANA and NetWeaver in the cloud, which I assessed. The recently announced SAP HANA Platform now provides the enterprise class of HANA implementation in the cloud. It comes with a trial edition of the data and visual discovery technology now called SAP Lumira, whose price has been reduced to encourage adoption (and which I discuss more below). The use of in-memory databases for big data is accelerating: According to our technology innovation research, 22 percent of organizations are planning to use this technology over the next two years, and through 2015 it will have a higher growth rate than other approaches.

SAP HANA is gaining functionality as a platform and has made an important step forward with its service pack 6. This new release expands integration of the technology into data across its applications and systems. HANA now has virtualized access to data in vr_predanalytics_benifits_of_predictive_analyticsHadoop and a range of other databases along with supporting the necessary data integration. Integrated with Sybase SQL Anywhere, HANA enhances mobile use of that technology; it also works with Sybase ESP to integrate event streams and machine data, and with Sybase Replication Server to connect with Sybase ASE and other databases. HANA’s increased spatial processing capacity handles this type of data, which then can be accessed by tools and applications. Our latest research into location analytics finds new applicability for this across business processes and our next-generation business intelligence research reveals that applying location-based analytics is important to 40 percent of organizations. The latest version of HANA has advanced data modeling capabilities through SAP HANA Studio to make it easier to use data and build a range of business models including predictive ones. Majorities of research participants said that such capability through predictive analytics provides a competitive advantage (68%) and new revenue opportunities (55%).

SAP supports text or natural-language processing needs. At some point I hope it enables HANA to dynamically create text as a result of its analytics; that could communicate better with people than just showing charts and data. This capability already is available in the workforce analytics products of SuccessFactors, whose Headlines technology won our 2012 Overall Business Innovation Technology Innovation Award; however, that does not yet seem to be part of SAP HANA and other applications, which could be a business benefit and product differentiator.

SAP also is expanding its software partner ecosystem to spread use of HANA with a range of applications. An early example is Tagetik, whichprovides its financial application suite on HANA for in-memory computing. SAP also announced recognition of innovative SAP HANA based applications including Warwick Analytics and Semantic Visions that are well worth examining. SAP also is adding integration points with other network storage, data center integration and even business intelligence and analytics. To this point, however, not many vendors are certified on SAP HANA, and my inquiries with various software company executives found they have more work to do and are not getting strong support from SAP to streamline the process to become certified. Elsewhere in its technology ecosystem, SAP announced further cooperation with HP in what is called Project Kraken to create an appliance with 16 processors and 12 terabytes of memory, designed to operate SAP HANA effectively for any range of analytical and transactional needs. Success of this computing appliance is equally important to HP, which is in a do-or die-battle against IBM and Oracle who are advancing in this area. At the same time SAP’s one-time partner Teradata has a competitive approach, whose recent advances in in-memory computing with its new intelligent memory and appliance that I assessed is well worth examining.

HANA is now part of SAP’s overall business intelligence strategy, as my colleague Tony Cosentino has pointed out. This is a positive step as the company works through the challenges of keeping a very large customer base happy as it moves its product line into the future. One of its key points for its future is the newly announced SAP Lumira, which was previously known as SAP Visual Intelligence, a more self-explanatory product name for the intended audience that is engaged in business analytics or even big data analytics. SAP Lumira is really the new face of its business intelligence products whether on-premises or in the cloud; it meets a need for discovery technology, which I outlined and is important to the future of business analytics. This was challenged by partners MicroStrategy and Tableau who were demonstrating their approaches at SAPPHIRE showing its competitive approach and how it can make good use of data from SAP and inevitably SAP HANA as they work through integration of the technology. Our research into technology innovation found that data and visual discovery is not available to 19 percent of organizations, ranking third behind the most unavailable predictive analytics (27%). SAP Lumira interoperates with other SAP products along with supporting Microsoft Excel spreadsheets. SAP also has released SAP BusinessObjects 4.1 with improved access to Hadoop through MapReduce and Hive, and also to Oracle’s Exadata and Essbase technologies. A new edition of SAP Crystal Server and Edge edition furthers support of BI for small and midsize businesses (SMB). SAP continues to have fierce competition in IT departments for BI and to overcome it is working to help business analysts and management use business analytics.

In the realm of business applications, SAP has fulfilled its promise to make HANA the underlying platform across on-premises deployments and the cloud. Its SAP Business One application suite version 9 is designed for SMB and runs with HANA and even Microsoft SQL Server. Simultaneously, the SAP Business Suite is now available on SAP HANAAs my colleague Robert Kugel explained, that makes it possible for customers to avoid using Microsoft or Oracle database technology and take advantage of new technology and applications built on HANA. Examples of this are SAP’s release of its fraud management application on HANA, which Robert assessed, as he did for advances in its EPM portfolio for finance. A word of caution here: Companies that use SAP’s applications on third-party databases have to be careful as the license in most cases only allows for application-specific access to the database, limiting the potential of other business uses. The range of new applications and tools running on HANA is steadily increasing as partners make progress adapting to it; SAP’s digital marketplace dedicated to HANA shows what is available.

SAP is so bullish on its ability to design consumer-friendlyUntitled applications that it also announced efforts to bring that quality into the enterprise through the SAP Fiori apps for common business functions; it also has simplified the user experience of its applications. This is nothing new for SAP which has long emphasized usability and made improvements in a continuous improvement cycle. SAP has invested significantly into the user experience and created AppHaus to build demonstrations of the latest advances. Even so, after looking at the range of new applications, I think SAP still has to improve upon the user experience and design of the applications. SAP is heading in the right direction, but it ought to build an application assembly and design environment that the teams at SAP, and its customers and partners, all can use to build people-centric applications, especially for use on the Web and mobile devices. I got to test applications that demonstrate user experience advancements, but they all were custom-built, and I saw others with primitive user interfaces for business applications; these fall short in trying to engage users across a range of experience and facilitate the natural collaborative aspects of their responsibilities. Those aspects are critical, as our research across every line of business finds usability to be the top evaluation category for software evaluation, and it was the top criterion in 64 percent of all organizations. My analysis suggests that SAP needs to consider the critical aspects of personalization based on role, responsibility and experience and adapt the user experience to them. As well, less can be more when presenting information for the majority of business purposes, and guiding individuals to what is relevant is more important that piling up charts or information on the screen.

Separately from its HANA efforts, SAP has advanced enterprise-class readiness for mobile technology, has outlined a comprehensive mobility framework and deepened support for security through a partnership with Mocana for any applications that embrace SAP’s mobile portfolio and technology. This addresses an evident need, as our technology innovation research into mobile technology finds the top barrier to business deployment is security and risk issues, found in 47 percent of organizations. SAP has to also consider in the world of BYOD the preference for native platforms (39%) over the Web or HTML5 (33%), along with no preference (20%); it won’t be easy for SAP to make everyone happy, especially when half of individuals have a distinct preference for their type of smartphone or tablet. Our research finds fewer than one-third (32%) of people satisfied with their organization’s mobile access to applications and information. I did not hear much about SAP HANA in the company’s mobile strategy except that it powers tools and applications that operate on a smartphone or tablet. But overall SAP is investing more into advancing mobile technology than other technology suppliers, and its potential is yet to be realized as business and IT begin a transformation to mobile readiness.

Since my analysis after last year’s SAPPHIRE SAP has brought to reality its cloud computing strategy with products that are now available. I thought that more could have been highlighted in SAP’s sustainability efforts in including its software, for which last year vr_bti_br_access_preferences_for_innovative_technologieswe provided a 2012 Leadership Award to its customer Danone for its use of SAP products. I was more surprised that SAP was rather quiet about its efforts in business and social collaboration as it works to transform its technology by embedding the Jam product in its software. SAP is working to ensure its products are simple but sophisticated, available on any platform or device and localized to any country in the world – and that they operate on SAP HANA. It is also working to deliver faster methods to onboard and experience its software through rapid deployment. SAP’s focus is to inject the technology innovations into its platform and applications while also supporting what our technology innovation research finds is the desire for a variety of access methods: on-premises, on-demand and hosted approaches that are distributing quite rapidly. It is clear that organizations want choice in how they access technology and applications; SAP is prepared to address this as it enters a new era of opportunity built on SAP HANA.

Regards,

Mark Smith

CEO & Chief Research Officer

At the SAP TechEd conference in Las Vegas this week, the global software giant unveiled the latest versions of its technology, platforms and applications across the cloud, mobile and on premises. SAP executive Vishal Sikka followed up in person to his written response to the statements Oracle CEO and Chairman Larry Ellison made at Oracle OpenWorld on the limited nature of SAP’s HANA in-memory computing technology. Sikka presented a SAP HANA server with 100 terabytes of DRAM processing 1 petabyte of raw data to counter Ellison’s commentary, and Oracle has yet to release its comparable Exadata X3 appliance. SAP also announced that SAP HANA Cloud is available in Amazon Web Services (AWS) to provide anyone the opportunity to use the technology, though the AWS version will be limited in the size of data it can process in its in-memory environment. Amazon’s Andy Jassy, the senior vice president of AWS, spoke about the company’s work with SAP to advance cloud computing’s utility for developers.

In truth, appliances and in-memory computing have varying use case scenarios. Our big data benchmark research finds a place for both approaches. They are just about even in demand, and our research finds that those who provide the highest business value in the shortest period of time will gain the most adoption.

SAP also unveiled its rearchitected SAP NetWeaver Cloud platform as a server for use across the Internet. SAP announced free developer licenses for NetWeaver, designed to help build a community of cloud developers. However, SAP lacks a simple port and transfer from on-premises applications to the cloud edition; an organization’s applications will require some adjustments to migrate across these environments though its data services can help transport data from the platforms.

The HANA Cloud and NetWeaver Cloud announcements indicate SAP’s commitment to cloud computing, where Oracle and Salesforce.com also compete. SAP uses open source and standards-based interfaces with SAP NetWeaver, such as the Eclipse IDE, which helps developers ease into this environment while extending it for a range of interoperability with other SAP technologies and applications.

After some analysis and detailed conversations with product executives, I started to assemble use case examples of how the technologies could work together, and began to see how a common set of data services across the technologies work. Meanwhile, SAP is working to provide more data integration and information management services that can interoperate between the cloud and on-premises environments that is probably one of their largest technology challenges. SAP will need to provide more clarity to help developers and IT management understand how these technologies operate to ensure it will be considered for developing and deploying applications in the cloud.

Also at TechEd, SAP demonstrated a new AppDesigner product for application assembly. It deploys HTML5-based applications that can be accessed from mobile platforms, including Apple and Android smartphones and tablets. SAP executive Sanjay Poonen outlined advancements that provide more in-depth application and data-level security, which our newest benchmark into next-generation business intelligence found to be the top technology concern for making business analytics and metrics available on mobile technology. SAP’s approach – to reach multiple mobile platforms – is important, as our recent benchmark on technology mobility for workers and managers found a growing volume of mobile device deployments in organizations. To support tablets with its applications, SAP also announced the release of its EPM Unwired applications, which provide support for a range of finance and operational management issues today. Coming soon it promises a mobile application for business planning that operates via HTML5 or via a native application for Apple’s iPad. These are important steps forward for SAP, which provides a broad range of mobile applications that complement and extend its existing cloud and on-premises applications.

SAP also discussed of the upcoming SAP HANA SP5. It will support the OLTP and OLAP needs of organizations, and further integrate in the enterprise. I got some insights on HANA Studio and how it has advanced business process management toward what the company calls operational process intelligence. SAP aims to be as open as possible in terms of the hardware on which it can operate. It has configurations with Cisco, Dell, Hitachi, HP, IBM, Fujitsu and NEC hardware, and is creating a certification program to ensure it can operate anywhere where there is market demand. This approach will make SAP HANA a very open platform for big data, which is the complete opposite of the engineered approach by Oracle, which is pushing its single integrated platform for software, hardware and storage.

I have been tracking the technology and customer advancements with SAP HANA since its introduction in 2011 at SAPPHIREAt this year’s SAPPHIRE SAP hinted that SAP HANA and SAP NetWeaver would be transitioning to cloud technologies; now that has been officially unveiled. SAP continues to execute on SAP HANA technology advancements and its other platforms and applications for cloud computing. It now faces a mindshare battle for the attention of developers and IT management. It will have to reassess its efforts at SAP TechEd to ensure they are on par with if not better than those at Oracle OpenWorld and Salesforce Dreamforce and Cloudforce events. My assessment, after attending these events, is that SAP has some work to do to gain the attention of this audience. SAP will also need to gain more commitment from its consulting, systems integration and software partners. They lacked any significant presence at SAP TechEd, but should see the new services as a great opportunity to be part of a new generation of cloud computing.

As for the rest of SAP TechEd, I found a significant focus on cloud and mobile computing, with less attention provided to areas like business intelligence and information management. The company did demonstrate SAP Visual Intelligence, which provides a critical component of business analytics for analysts who need to perform root cause analysis and exploratory tasks on large volumes of data, which is not possible in tradition BI with its chart and tables. This visual discovery offering is critical, as it is one of the capabilities not available to more than a third (37%) of organizations doing big data computing today, according to our big data benchmark research.

Bottom line, if you are a CIO or part of the developer and IT organization, you should learn about SAP’s advancements in cloud and in-memory computing. SAP is investing heavily in these areas in order to build a foundation for the future of its business applications, no matter whether customers want to run them in the cloud or on mobile platforms.

Meanwhile, you can catch my live commentary from the event on Twitter with the #SAPTechEd hashtag and my handle @MarkSmithVR.

Regards,

Mark Smith

CEO & Chief Research Officer

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