Users Speak Out about SAP NetWeaver
Starting around August of last year I started tracking down SAP
users who were early adopters of the NetWeaver platform, and I
found an interesting dynamic happening that lead me to continue
researching what was going on. What I found was the SAP was
attracting entirely new customers based on the NetWeaver
platform.
What makes this unique in the SAP world is that the vast
majority of SAP applications get sold because there is an ERP
instance somewhere in the organization to tie back to. Rarely if
ever in the years of doing primary research on their customer
base would I find a reference who had just come onboard for
their channel management applications for example. NetWeaver on
the other hand is starting to show up as the architecture for
future Web Services in some companies who were not multi-decade
ERP customers for example. This finding contradicted many
people's perceptions (including my own) of just how SAP goes
about selling their applications. I decided to go all out and
complete a research study of SAP NetWeaver early adopters,
mostly out of personal interest but also because I love doing
primary research and wanted to see what could be learned from
NetWeaver early adopters.
What I Found Out
It's a good thing I started this project in August as a hobby of
sorts because the effort to get people to respond to a survey on
this topic takes a fair amount of work. Also I attended SAP user
group meetings in my area and continued to work at getting the
Zoomerang survey to people who were kind enough to provide their
e-mail addresses. The big break in getting connected with
NetWeaver users came from a friend at Disney who introduced me
to several and the networking started working from there. From
that point I was able to complete a decent sample size of 300
companies distributed globally, and visited many companies
locally through user group meetings and buying lunches. The
result is a report published in December titled Users Speak Out
About SAP NetWeaver.
Here are some of the key take-aways from the research:
* The majority of manufacturing companies start out with the
vision of unifying databases that had been siloed nearly out of
existence in the past so channel strategies can be more
aggressively pursued. This focus on creating competitive
advantage through better integration pervaded the conversations
with users.
* Integration to support growth strategies was by far the
largest driver of investment. Companies are looking to turn
their data warehouses into a competitive advantage outnumbered
those looking to consolidate databases in general. There is a
definite atmosphere of using NetWeaver as a platform to
stimulate revenue growth over simply completing database
consolidations.
* Consolidating portals onto a single platform is where
Halliburton and others are both moving towards in their
NetWeaver strategy. This is a common theme in many of the early
adopters; they want to have a single portal for the majority, if
not all, applications in specific business units.
* In manufacturing industries the challenge of handling
Engineering Change Orders ECOs) and order change sequencing
between Oracle and SAP systems is an area that causes shared
customers much pain. Intermediating between both systems for
their change order numbering sequence took custom development to
resolve for example.
* One high tech manufacturer uses SAP NetWeaver as the
integration hub for their order capture, order management and
fulfilment systems, including integration to an Oracle supply
chain system. The pay-off for this manufacturer is the
elimination of manual product option updates that was previously
done at the director level of the company as these senior
managers are the only ones with the interrelationships of
products in their heads. Instead of having to work one weekend a
month to update the order capture systems, directors can have a
Saturday off.
* One heavy equipment manufacturer did an ROI analysis for
NetWeaver integration and built in assumptions of cost savings
based on headcount reductions. As the NetWeaver integration
project came online, it was apparent that more integration
engineers were needed than budgeted, and the two engineers were
re-assigned to those roles. This is a familiar situation in
those companies that did do ROI on NetWeaver projects; they
focused on headcount reductions and ended up re-assigning the
engineers and staff they thought they would not need anymore.
* When those customers who came to SAP for NetWeaver were asked
why they made that decision the two most common responses were
integration experience and pricing or licensing. There were also
an even mix of responses across industry expertise and ease of
customization as well.
* When SAP customers with a median of 6 to 10 years of
experience with SAP were asked what they would most like to
change about the company, they asked for greater simplification
and management of licenses. Specifically they asked for a portal
view of all licenses so they could manage their entire SAP
investment efficiently.
SAP Satisfaction Levels
The research shows that the majority of companies are either
satisfied to somewhat satisfied with SAP and this is again a
fascinating point. For the next survey the reasons why
satisfaction is where it is need to be explored.
If you are any SAP customer, feel free to participate in the
survey. I will provide a summary of the results next month.
Bottom Line
There's not that much of a correlation between over-the-top
enthusiasm on the one hand in the SAP base and NetWeaver
adoption, or in other words the SAP zealots out there aren't
necessarily leading the charge to NetWeaver. What is leading the
charge is the integration expertise that new customers are
seeing and the ability to get clear licensing and pricing terms
nailed down early in their relationships with SAP.