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A Mismatch Made in Heaven The Enterprise and SaaS
9 September 2013
Stanton Jones Paul Schmidt
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The Enterprise and SaaS: A Mismatch Made in Heaven
Enterprise CIOs estimate that in 5 years, they expect to spend a majority of their software budgets on SaaS, including ERP. - Citi Research
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The Enterprise and SaaS: A Mismatch Made in Heaven
Enterprise demand for SaaS is surging. Providers are building, acquiring and partnering SaaS platforms at a breakneck pace. What happens when they meet?
Financial Contractual Operational
Buyers Expect
Financial ► Substantial savings
over on-premises Contractual ►To negotiate all
aspects of contract Operational ►To dictate “how”
operations should occur (e.g., security, support, updates)
Providers are Delivering
Financial ►Premium for up-to-
date technology Contractual ► Short, standardized
MSAs and exhibits Operational ► Standardized
operations with focus on transparency of “what” over “how”
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The Enterprise and SaaS: Closer and Closer to the Core
SaaS is generally accepted at the periphery of the enterprise; however, this mismatch becomes more acute when evaluating it for the core…
Finance HR
IT
Workforce Administration
Corporate ERP
Business Unit ERP
Talent Management
Spam Management
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Why the Mismatch?
Multi-tenant architectures
Single line of code for all customers
Creating a intuitive “black
box” for business buyers
Creates new contracting models
with focus on:
Shared, multi-tenant architectures create huge strategic benefits. However, they are hard to quantify and conflict with traditional enterprise sourcing archetypes.
Cash to fund customer
acquisition and R&D
Standardization in order to scale
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Buyers: Where Does ISG See Most SaaS Demand?
Stand-alone platform comparisons, BPO provider platform changes, systems integrator selection and SaaS business case/strategy are in most demand:
SaaS Platforms in Demand Types of Client Demand
Platform-based BPO • Platform change • Process harmonization • Business case
Platform Comparisons • RFX & feature comparisons • Negotiations • Business case
Systems Integrator • Who can implement? • Who can configure? • RFX, financial, negotiations
ISG believes this list will expand significantly over the next five years as leading outsourcing suppliers productize their IP into vertical SaaS offerings.
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Sellers: A Stampede to SaaS
The enterprise SaaS market is seeing a tremendous amount of acquisitions, partnerships and IPOs…
Acquisitions
Adoption trends over the next three years support 33% annual growth in SaaS with significant headroom beyond this as long-term SaaS adoption could be 9x current levels. -- Citi Research
Partnerships
IPOs
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Barriers to Adoption: Financial
Up-front payments that begin before the system is live, combined with prices that increase over time create sticker shock for enterprise SaaS buyers.
Reality
Buyer Expectation
Cheaper than on-premises
Scale up and scale down easily
Short contract durations
Easy termination
Monthly payments
Pay only for what you use
Price decreases over time
May be more expensive
Baselines make scaling down difficult
Multi-year commitments
Limited to no term for convenience
Up-front / annual payments
Payment begins on signing
Price may increase over time / CPI
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Barriers to Adoption: Contractual
Procurement and internal counsel are often unprepared to negotiate SaaS agreements. Leading providers are sticking to their guns and holding firm on terms.
Reality
Buyer Expectation
Contract will be on buyer’s paper
Unlimited liability for data breach
Termination for convenience
Outsourcing SLAs and reporting
“Try before committing”
Transition assistance
Step-in rights
Contract on supplier paper
Limited liability (breach exceptions)
No termination for convenience
Web 2.0 SLAs; self service reporting
“Commit then try”
Self-service data exports
No ability to step-in
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Barriers to Adoption: Operational
The standardized nature of SaaS operations requires a movement from “how” to “what”, causing challenges for buyers that want to dictate requirements.
Reality
Buyer Expectation
ITIL-based operations
On-site security audit & pen testing
Dictate data location; no changes
Robust BC/DR; participate in testing
E-Discovery / Legal Hold Process
Dictate maintenance/release window
All data is encrypted
Service health and ops portals
Rely on 3rd party audit(s)
Changes; customer can limit to region
Simple BC/DR based on RTO & RPO
E-Discovery / Legal Hold Functionality
Standard windows/continuous update
In-memory DBs vs. persistent stores
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Recommendations: Creating a Match Made in Heaven
Early in the process, be transparent about the SaaS business model, then focus on specific pain points of executive decision makers:
CIO
CMO
CHRO
COO
Inherent modernization
Decrease reliance on IT
Embedded analytics
Early transparency around SaaS business model with IT, Finance, Procurement & Counsel: • Cash up front • Multi-year term • Supplier’s paper • Standard SLAs • 3rd party
security audits
A
B
C
D
Digital platform (prospects, customers, influencers)
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Let’s Talk…
► Stanton: linkedin.com/in/stantonjones ►Paul: linkedin.com/pub/paul-schmidt/1/5b1/59b
►@stantonmjones ►@phshss
►Blog on Consider the Source focused on how emerging technology is impacting the broader sourcing market
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Information Services Group is a leading technology insights, market intelligence and advisory services company, serving more than 450 clients around the world to help them achieve operational excellence. ISG supports private and public sector organizations to transform and optimize their operational environments through research, benchmarking, consulting and managed services, with a focus on information technology, business process transformation, program management services and enterprise resource planning. Clients look to ISG for unique insights and innovative solutions for leveraging technology, the deepest data source in the industry, and more than five decades of experience of global leadership in information and advisory services. Based in Stamford, Conn., the company has more than 800 employees and operates in 21 countries.
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