Tips to Create a Recession-Proof ERP Vendor Strategy

By Thomas Wailgum , CIO.com |  IT Management/Strategy, ERP, vendor management Add a new comment

If your current vendor "strategy" regarding ERP, CRM or BI apps is simply saying "No, not at this time," or "Please stop calling me," then you might want to read Forrester Research's new report, "Five Steps To Building A Recession-Proof Packaged Applications Strategy."

[ MORE ON CIO.com Oracle vs. SAP Smackdown: Who Has the Better ERP Applications Strategy? With Dynamics, Microsoft's ERP and CRM Business Apps Go Head-to-Head with Oracle and SAP Enterprise Software Unplugged Blog ]

How best to manage your vendors in this difficult economic environment? It's a critical question, and one that Forrester VP and principal analyst Ray Wang has been tackling on a large scale for some time. (Wang's most recent report offers a comprehensive overview of a recessionary packaged-applications strategy, and vendor management is just one piece of his sage advice.)

Your near-term goal for a down economy strategy is clear, Wang writes: "Find ways to optimize existing investments in packaged apps in order to free up money to fund not only budget cuts but also potential revenue sources for innovation."

With that in mind, CIOs and IT decision-makers need to reexamine their vendor relationships and make enterprise applications decisions "based on business needs rather than bias toward a particular vendor or technical solution," Wang writes. "This approach will favor vendors that deliver choice, value, and predictability in the overall relationship as well as provide greater alignment between apps strategy and business drivers." (See "Oracle vs. SAP Smackdown: Who Has the Better ERP Applications Strategy?" and "With Dynamics, Microsoft's ERP and CRM Business Apps Go Head-to-Head with Oracle and SAP" for more on the competition in the enterprise apps market.)

Here's what Wang advises when looking at vendor relationships:

1. Avoid Sole-Sourcing Vendor Lock-in by Separating Application Decisions. While good client-vendor partnerships are always the goal, Wang writes, application delivery professionals "must always mitigate the risk of vendor lock-in and identify alternatives to the incumbent."

His advice: Define a two-part, long-term apps strategy, identifying the core (slow changing) and the specialized products owned today and required for the future. "Consolidate and/or optimize current application installations, especially ERP, to invest in more high-value specialized applications," Wang writes. "By reducing the cost of the core, you will free up the budget for innovation and new projects."

2. Be Open to Best-of-Breed Applications Outside the Core. When companies are considering front-office and vertical applications from Oracle and SAP, IT and senior managers must subject the leading vendors' offerings to the same harsh scrutiny that they would apply to any vendor.

"For front-office and vertical applications, you have many best-of-breed choices from both software vendors and systems integrators-and these options will often be better than the products that Oracle and SAP offer," Wang writes. "Maintaining a mix of application suppliers will also help preserve your freedom of choice as you evolve your applications portfolio."

3. Prepare for Software Contract Renegotiations. Reductions in workforce, a drop in output production, and new business models will require a review of existing contracts, Wang points out.

"Remove and renegotiate contracts that include cost-prohibitive restraints on moving data centers to other countries and on outside contractors using the system as well as contracts that lack provisions to remove unused licenses, to renegotiate contracts during M&A, and to renegotiate maintenance clauses that do not account for deflation," he advises. "In addition, prepare for the next round of growth with price protection of additional licenses and options for enterprise license agreements."

4. Contain Escalating Maintenance Costs. Maintenance costs for enterprise applications range from 16 percent to 25 percent of net license costs. And customers wind up paying the equivalent of two times their original license cost during a typical 10-year ownership life cycle, Wang notes. "For some customers, maintenance remains an expensive insurance policy that includes access to regulatory updates, bug fixes, and other support-related functions."

For instance, Forrester has spoken with more than 400 customers and has found many who spend US$500,000 on maintenance but call support only five times annually, Wang states. "At $100,000 a call, app delivery pros should work with vendor procurement specialists and the office of the CIO to renegotiate maintenance contracts that reflect better usage of the support capabilities."

5. Check Out Third-Party Maintenance. IT and business managers can protect themselves by turning to third-party support, which can help safeguard against lock-in from vendors that actively deny customer choice, Wang notes. Today there are companies offering third-party support for many major vendor offerings-Rimini Street offers third-party JD Edwards, PeopleSoft, and Siebel support and plans to provide SAP third-party support in 2009. (For more on Rimini Street and maintenance alternatives, see "Rimini Street Will Now Offer Maintenance Support for SAP's R/3 Products" and "As SAP Support Costs Spike, Users' Group Leader Preaches Collaboration -- Not Rebellion.")

"The market's best hope will lie with the emergence of new offshore third-party maintenance providers in China-a territory not yet beholden to the dominant vendors," Wang writes. "For these providers to break through-much like the business process outsourcing providers in India before them-and answer the growing demand for affordable maintenance, industry trade groups and other professional associations need to encourage them through investments in joint ventures or the development of third-party maintenance consortiums."

    Add a comment

    Post a comment using one of these accounts
    Or join now
    At least 6 characters

    Note: Comment will appear soon after you have activated your account.
    Obscene/spam comments will be removed and accounts suspended.
    The information you submit is subject to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.

    ITworld LIVE

    IT Management/StrategyWhite Papers & Webcasts

    White Paper

    Evaluator Group: Storage Federation - IT Without Limits (Analysis of HP Peer Motion with Storage Federation)

    As the role of IT increases within organizations, the need to move data when and where it is needed is critical to support emerging business requirements. This has become increasingly difficult due to the huge growth of data volumes. This white paper sponsored by HP + Intel evaluates a solution that aims to enable the movement of data without physical limitations. Read now and see how this could enable agility and efficiency.

    White Paper

    ESG Lab Validation Report: HP Data Protector & Deduplication Solutions

    Many organizations have deployed disk-to-disk backup technologies to improve the speed and reliability of their backup and disaster recovery operations. A growing number of these now look to data deduplication to enhance retention periods and reduce costs. This ESG Lab Validation Report sponsored by HP + Intel examines a number of backup and recovery solutions and evaluates their ease of implementation as well as their ability to improve reliability and reduce costs.

    White Paper

    Business Value of Blade

    The nature of the blade platform makes system management, monitoring and provisioning easy and efficient. Access this resource to learn how blade migration will save your data center time and money while increasing performance.

    White Paper

    Accelerate time to application value

    For your IT organization to keep pace with the business, you need a new, faster approach to infrastructure deployment-an approach that increases agility and accelerates time to application value. That's HP Converged Systems. Built on Converged Infrastructure, these systems deliver the industry's first portfolio of pre-integrated, tested, and optimized infrastructure solutions for applications running in virtual, cloud, dedicated, or hybrid environments.

    White Paper

    Converged Infrastructure for Dummies

    As you know, everything is mobile, connected, interactive, and immediate. This is exactly why organizations need a highly agile IT infrastructure in order to keep pace with extreme fluctuations in business demand. This book will help you understand why infrastructure convergence has been widely accepted as the optimal approach for simplifying and accelerating your IT to deliver services at the speed of business while also shifting significantly more IT resources from operations to innovation.

    See more White Papers | Webcasts

    Ask a question

    Ask a Question