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October 3rd, 2007

SAP, Adobe, Microsoft: three monkeys take on SaaS

Posted by Phil Wainewright @ 2:52 pm

Categories: SAP, Microsoft, Business models, Adobe

Tags: Strategy, Revenue, Adobe Systems Inc., Software-as-a-service, Problem, Product, SAP AG, Microsoft Corp., SaaS', Software As A Service (SaaS)

The challenge: transition from a business model where you earn revenues by selling perpetual software licenses to one based on monthly subscription payments. Not only that, but achieve the transition while continuing to report rising revenues and protecting your profitability. Can it be done? Steve Singh, CEO of Concur, has led his company through the transition and is doubtful any public company above $1 billion in annual revenues has a realistic chance of succeeding.

Three of the world’s largest software companies — SAP, Adobe and Microsoft — have other ideas. Instead of facing the painful disruption of replacing their existing products with SaaS alternatives, they plan to enter other markets with new SaaS offerings that don’t compete with those existing products. Once they’ve built up a separate revenue stream from subscription services in these new markets, the theory is that they’ll then have a cushion to lessen the pain of transitioning their conventionally licensed products to SaaS, should they need to later on.

There are three variations on this ‘SaaS containment’ strategy. Each has its own merits, but the flaw they all share is a determination to put off the evil moment of facing up to the impact of SaaS on their core business. So I’ve chosen to name them after the proverbial three wise monkeys who ‘See no SaaS’, ‘Hear no SaaS’ and ‘Speak no SaaS’.

Adobe: ‘See no Saas’. The market leader in publishing, design and web development software has just launched the first of a family of services that will target a product segment Adobe doesn’t currently serve. Online word processor Buzzword, whose acquisition was announced this week, will head a portfolio of collaborative editing and publishing services for the office productivity market. It’s a bold plan, aimed at a market where Microsoft alone currently earns revenues of some $16 billion a year. As a containment strategy, it has some merit, because most of the functionality of office productivity is distinct from what Adobe’s existing products provide. But there’s still an overlap, and the more sophisticated the online services become (in order to appeal to an ever-larger proportion of the target market) then the more likely they are to start harming licence sales of the existing products. Eventually, Adobe will find itself conflicted by difficult choices as the functionality of the two product sets begins to converge: should it accelerate development of the online products in the expectation of future revenues or hold them back in order to protect existing licence sales?

SAP: ‘Hear no SaaS’. The world’s biggest business software vendor has chosen to create a SaaS offering that covers the same spread of functionality as its existing products, but targeted at a sector of the small to midsize business market that it doesn’t currently serve. Its plan is to achieve massive success for Business ByDesign within that target market, but with no seepage into its existing customer base in other segments of the market. SAP earns points for effort — Business ByDesign has an impressive all-new services architecture — but the strategy has one simple flaw. If the product’s good enough to take its target market by storm, it’s going to penetrate other segments too. If it’s not good enough to appeal to other segments, it’ll flop in its own target market. Either way, if you ask me, SAP can’t win.

Microsoft: ‘Speak no SaaS’. The world’s largest software vendor is pursuing a strategy of launching services that are complementary to its existing licensed products, while refraining from offering services that compete directly against any form of licensed on-premises software. It’s betting that most customers will prefer to stick with trusted, established products rather than switching to online alternatives, giving it plenty of time to build up revenues from those complementary services. Choosing not to offer direct on-line competition to its own products may seem like a head-in-the-sand strategy, but you can hardly blame Microsoft for seeking to buy time for its existing business model while it develops a services strategy. The problem is that, in providing online services for customers without putting the core products themselves online, Microsoft risks sending customers elsewhere in search of a more integrated user experience.

Some sources for the wise monkeys maxim cite a fourth member of the team, ‘Do no SaaS’. That would be Oracle.

Phil Wainewright is a commentator and strategist on emerging software industry trends. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 3 Talkback(s)
RE: SAP, Adobe, Microsoft: three monkeys take on SaaS
The SAP approach can be a winner if their entry into the small business market brings in more additional revenue than they will lose as their enterprise market switches from paying large maintenance p... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Ed.Spire@... Posted on: 10/04/07 You are currently: Logged In | Log out
SAP has a not-so-secret anti-cannibalization strategy BobWarfield   | 10/03/07
Not-so-clever, either phil wainewright  ZDNet | 10/04/07
RE: SAP, Adobe, Microsoft: three monkeys take on SaaS Ed.Spire@...   | 10/04/07

What do you think?

7 Trackbacks

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  • SAP, Adobe, and Microsoft Are All Following My Protected Game ...
    The economics of SaaS are magical. SaaS combines two powerhouse ideas for generating revenue and growth: radically reducing friction in the sales process and recurring revenues. The first means SaaS companies can close deals with a ...

    Trackback by SmoothSpan Blog — October 4, 2007 @ 1:54 am

  • ZDNet.com, Software as Services, 3.10.2007: SAP, Adobe, Microsoft ...
    ZDNet.com, Software as Services, 3.10.2007: SAP, Adobe, Microsoft: three monkeys take on SaaS by Phil Wainewright: "The challenge: transition from a business model where you earn revenues by selling perpetual software licenses to one ...

    Trackback by eMedia News — October 4, 2007 @ 5:35 am

  • Kunnen SAP, MS, cs de draai maken?
    Phil Wainewright vraagt zich (hier en hier) af of software-verkopers die het nu moeten hebben van licenties (hij noemt in dat verband SAP, Microsoft, Adobe en Oracle0 de draai naar SaaS wel zullen kunnen maken. Zie ook dit interview met ...

    Trackback by Mat 2.0: SaaSaaS — October 12, 2007 @ 12:18 pm

  • Which OEM (amongst the big guys) will succeed at SaaS?
    SAP, Adobe, Microsoft: three monkeys take on SaaS. Posted by Phil Wainewright @ 2:52 pm Categories: SAP, Microsoft, Business models, Adobe Tags: Strategy, Revenue, Adobe Systems Inc., Software-as-a-service, Problem, Product, SAP AG, ...

    Trackback by dotnet :: Nice SaaS! — November 3, 2007 @ 2:31 pm

  • Do Microsoft’s SaaS Services Stink?
    He pointed out that SaaS is well proven by Salesforce.com and similar companies but that ... Phil Wainewright at ZDNet called Microsoft’s

    Trackback by Anonymous — November 6, 2007 @ 3:07 am

  • Do Microsoft's SaaS Services Stink?
    customers that could theoretically migrate to on-demand applications, Microsoft's Live services "have been a bomb in the consumer and small business sector," Gallagher says, and the company could stand to work on its Internet services strategy. Phil Wainewright at ZDNet called Microsoft's approach equal to one of the three monkeys (along with SAP and Adobe): Speak no SaaS, and said that Microsoft's strategy appears to be launching of services complementary to its products but not offering anything that might

    Trackback by Anonymous — November 6, 2007 @ 3:07 am

  • What does MS open sourcing .net have to do with SaaS?
    ...net application went fairly unnoticed by the wider SaaS community. ... to other application development platforms like Force.com . Only better

    Trackback by Anonymous — November 9, 2007 @ 3:06 am

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