Home > SAP administration / development News > NetSuite targets SAP R/3 customers with discounted SaaS ERP offer
SAP administration / development News:
EMAIL THIS

NetSuite targets SAP R/3 customers with discounted SaaS ERP offer

By Courtney Bjorlin, News Editor
03 Nov 2008 | SearchSAP.com

SAP news, tips and expert advice
Digg This!    StumbleUpon Toolbar StumbleUpon    Bookmark with Delicious Del.icio.us    Add to Google

Hoping to win SAP R/3 customers who are angry with SAP's support fee hikes, NetSuite is promising to cut their annual bills in half if they switch to its SaaS ERP.

Whatever they're paying annually for SAP maintenance and support, NetSuite says it will charge half that amount for an annual NetSuite subscription and support for a comparable number of seats. NetSuite typically sells one-year subscriptions but will consider multi-year subscriptions and apply the offer, a spokesman said.

The vendor is also offering all SAP customers 100 free hours of professional services for a NetSuite implementation, seeking to capitalize on the delayed rollout of SAP's SaaS ERP , Business ByDesign. In particular, NetSuite is targeting enterprise-size customers that are thinking of running SaaS ERP in a division or subsidiary, executives said.

NetSuite is calling the program "Business ByNetSuite." NetSuite costs $99 per user per month, plus a base fee of $499. That price includes maintenance but not support. Business ByNetSuite comes with 24/7 support, but the vendor didn't provide its cost.

"For SAP R/3 customers, NetSuite is the antidote to the incredibly high costs associated with SAP license fees, complexity, implementation and ongoing maintenance," NetSuite CEO Zach Nelson said. "This offer is great for NetSuite, great for SAP customers, but not so great for SAP."

For more on SaaS ERP
Learn whether SaaS ERP can be profitable

Learn whether SAP Business ByDesign customers are happy with their choice

The offer is catching SAP R/3 customers at a time when many are considering ERP upgrades. NetSuite's moves also coincide with software incentives SAP is promoting , largely to prop up the small and medium-sized business (SMB) customer base. SAP blamed its lower-than-expected third-quarter earnings on an abrupt spending freeze by SMBs. SAP is offering financing assistance, software discounts of up to 20% on Business-All-in-One (its ERP for midmarket customers) and other discounts on midmarket Business Objects software.

NetSuite's discount is the second aimed at a competitor that the San Mateo, Calif.-based vendor has launched in as many weeks. Two weeks ago, NetSuite took aim at Salesforce.com , offering to replace customers' Salesforce.com implementations with NetSuite CRM+ for half the price.

This is NetSuite's second dig at SAP this year. In its June launch of NetSuite for Manufacturers -- geared to midmarket light manufacturing -- the company said it was taking "aim at SAP's core market," and wanted to "exploit the prolonged delay of SAP's Business ByDesign."

Asked why it keeps pitting itself against SAP and not Oracle – Oracle CEO Larry Ellison owns a majority stake in NetSuite, and analysts have speculated about whether Oracle might buy it – NetSuite said it was because of differences in customer sentiment.

"We really haven't heard the same kind of angst from the Oracle customer base," said Mini Peiris, NetSuite's vice president of product marketing. "That's mainly why we're looking at what's going on in the SAP customer base right now."

SAP customers, particularly European user groups, have been vocal in their distaste for SAP's Enterprise Support offering, which will increase the fees for maintenance and support from 17% of net licensing fees to 22% over the next four years. User groups have said they don't see the value in Enterprise Support . SAP has said it is working with user groups, and customers are seeing the value in Enterprise Support.

In an effort to ease SaaS integration fears, NetSuite has also partnered with three SaaS service providers – Berwyn, Pa.-based Boomi; Mountain View, Calif.-based CastIron Systems; and Austin, Texas-based Pervasive Software.

NetSuite's offer is more likely to be attractive to large SAP customers looking to buy a lighter-weight ERP software for smaller operating units -- a strategy many companies are pursuing -- than it is to entice SAP customers to rip out their R/3 software, according to Paul D. Hamerman, vice president and principal analyst at Cambridge, Mass.-based Forrester Research.

And it's a reason the delayed rollout of Business ByDesign is hurting SAP, regardless of the economic conditions, Hamerman said.

"They're losing opportunities to sell Business ByDesign," Hamerman said.



Tags: SAP trends, strategy and ERP market shareSAP ERP softwareSAP Business ByDesignVIEW ALL TAGS

Digg This!    StumbleUpon Toolbar StumbleUpon    Bookmark with Delicious Del.icio.us    Add to Google


RELATED CONTENT
SAP trends, strategy and ERP market share
NetSuite gets German certification for SaaS ERP, takes jab at SAP
SAP's Web 2.0 strategy makes way for social networking in business apps
Supply chain sustainability software needed for green IT strategy
SAP's Wookey outlines the company's on-demand ambitions
How to attain high availability for SAP and local area networks
Keys for SAP customers on SAP's product strategy going forward
Sapphire videos: SAP customers talk about application strategies in '09
Focus on growth, business processes helps users stay afloat in the downturn
ASUG's plans for 2009 include finding new CEO, more software influence
SAP co-founder: Hardware will change the way SAP develops software

SAP ERP software
SAP ERP Central Component (ECC 6.0) upgrade guide
SAP selling software to help track stimulus money
SAP customers talk IT strategy in '09 at Sapphire, part 1
SAP customers talk IT strategy in '09 at Sapphire, part 3
Minimizing business disruptions during an SAP upgrade or implementation
Shift from SAP projects to ERP benefits realization needs IT involvement
Is there a flaw in ERP systems?
SAP ERP customer launches NetSuite SaaS CRM despite holding SAP CRM licenses
In ERP software comparison, SAP scores highest, but Tier 2 competitive
SAP extends enhancement packages across suite with Business Suite 7
SAP ERP software Research

SAP Business ByDesign
Can SaaS ERP be profitable?
A tale of two small businesses and their ERP software
SAP delays on-demand ERP
SAP for the midmarket: Special Report
ASUG CEO discusses challenges for 2008
SAP Business ByDesign and the midmarket: Five questions answered
Business ByDesign gets thumbs up from early adopter
TechEd: SAP terms on the rise
SAP Business ByDesign promising but needs work, analysts say
SAP Business ByDesign: An introduction

RELATED GLOSSARY TERMS
Terms from Whatis.com − the technology online dictionary
SAP  (SearchSAP.com)

RELATED RESOURCES
2020software.com, trial software downloads for accounting software, ERP software, CRM software and business software systems
Search Bitpipe.com for the latest white papers and business webcasts
Whatis.com, the online computer dictionary



SAP Training & Employment
HomeNewsTopicsBlogsTipsAsk the ExpertsMultimediaWhite PapersProducts
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  For Advertisers  |  For Business Partners  |  Site Index  |  RSS
SEARCH 
TechTarget provides technology professionals with the information they need to perform their jobs - from developing strategy, to making cost-effective purchase decisions and managing their organizations' technology projects - with its network of technology-specific websites, events and online magazines.

TechTarget Corporate Web Site  |  Media Kits  |  Site Map




All Rights Reserved, Copyright 2000 - 2009, TechTarget | Read our Privacy Policy
SearchSAP.com is a search service provided by TechTarget and is completely
independent of and not affiliated with SAP AG.
  TechTarget - The IT Media ROI Experts