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ERP Supplier Comparison, 2009

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Created on: Oct 16, 2009 3:05 PM by Dennis Byron - Last Modified:  Oct 16, 2009 4:16 PM by Dennis Byron

The following 2009 ERP Supplier Comparison was prepared by IT Business Edge contributor Dennis Byron. This was originally published on December 31, 2008.

 

InforMicrosoftOracleSAPOther
ERP FunctionalityOver 20 “brands” with widely diverse functionalityFour basic brands; all but AX with basic functionalityFour primary brands, two with deep functionalityTwo brands, one with the deepest functionality available
  • Lawson—Two
  • Sage—Multiple
  • Intuit—One
Market penetration/ activity, ERPWith its many brands, probably third largest but heavily maintenance- revenue- and AS/400-basedWould rank somewhere between Infor and LawsonGaining on SAP, especially in North America, but still significantly behind SAP in ERP market shareHolds wide lead in ERP market share (SAP is also gaining in middleware behind IBM, Microsoft and Oracle)Sage and Intuit in particular have many more installations than Infor, Microsoft, Oracle and SAP but are aimed totally at small- and medium-size enterprises
Market penetration/ activity, standaloneAlso has a widely diverse mix of standalone application brandsLeads based on Office; also actively pushing  CRM capability as a service; will use the experience to market ERP as a serviceLarge lead over SAP in standalone applications market share, primarily through acquisitionSAP does not really compete in standalone applications market but has a few offeringsThousands of examples
ERP Partnership strategyPartners heavily with IBM and IBM distributorsPartners heavily with Microsoft developer community; looking for 100,000About 4500 middleware partnerships that should be transferable to applicationsHas been trying unsuccessfully for 10 years to build a program; looking for over 1,000Tend to partner with IBM and Microsoft (but rarely both); many newer ERP suppliers partner within open source community
ERP Industry applications strategyWide span but primarily product supply chainCovers breadth of the industry classification codesA lot of standalone, unintegrated industry-centric point productsIntegrated industry centricity of its ERP offering in 25 major codes is key to SAP success in ERPThousands of examples from companies such as Agresso, Compiere, HotWax, IFS, OpenBravo and XTuple mentioned in accompanying articles
ERP PlatformHeavily AS/400-based.NETDifferent platform under each brandSolid modern middleware base for both brandsPrimarily use IBM or Microsoft middleware or LAMP/WAMP stack
ERP/SaaS StrategyThrough partnersTrying to build into major delivery methodNot a major market goal of Oracle’s according to public statements; may be counting on NetSuite “off the books”Will take another run at NetWeaver-based SaaS, probably under the BusinessOne brand (given the failure of the Business By Demand service).Others have shied away from direct SaaS, most notably Lawson (whose CEO was not shy about it)
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