SAP will shut TomorrowNow subsidiary by end of October
SAP plans to close its TomorrowNow software maintenance subsidiary by Oct. 31, having failed to find a buyer for the company. It will help TomorrowNow's 225 customers to find new support providers before the company closes its doors, it announced Monday.
TomorrowNow built a business selling third-party support for PeopleSoft and
JD Edwards applications at around half the price charged by the original software
vendors, later adding support for Siebel and Baan software to its range.
SAP bought TomorrowNow in February 2005: the company offered a convenient way
for SAP to get closer to customers of its arch-rival Oracle, which had acquired
PeopleSoft and JD Edwards in 2004, and later snapped up Siebel too.
However, in March 2007 Oracle filed suit against TomorrowNow and SAP, alleging
that they had gotten a little too close. Oracle charged that TomorrowNow employees
had illegally downloaded support materials for PeopleSoft and JD Edwards products
from an Oracle Web site. SAP has denied gaining access to Oracle's intellectual
property in this way.
Last November, SAP announced the resignation of TomorrowNow's management team,
and said it was considering selling the company. Both moves were seen as ways
for SAP to distance itself from the activities of its subsidiary and clean up
its reputation.
In the end, arranging a sale proved too much of a challenge.
"We carefully considered many options for selling TomorrowNow, but it
would have been an extremely complex transaction for both the seller and the
buyer. We chose to wind down operations instead," said SAP spokesman Saswato
Das.
Oracle is asking for damages likely to total US$1 billion or more in its suit,
according to documents filed with the court last month. A trial is scheduled
for February 2010.
Das would not comment on what effect the closure of TomorrowNow might have
on the case. SAP expects the cost of winding down operations at TomorrowNow
to be "immaterial," he said.
SAP aims to make the switch in support provider as smooth as possible for TomorrowNow's
225 customers, around 70 of whom are also direct customers of SAP, Das said.
"We are working with each customer individually to help them choose their
best option, including choosing Oracle support. Some can go to other third-party
support," he said.
Despite abandoning the market, SAP still sees a role for third-party software
support.
"We believe the third-party maintenance market has its strongest appeal
to customers using software that is considered end-of-life or obsolete, which
does not apply to the bulk of SAP software," he added.
IDG News Service
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