From: www.itworld.com

BEA stays the server-centric course

by Lee Copeland Gladwin

March 1, 2001 —

 

DALLAS - Unlike other leading application server vendors, such as IBM Corp., which offers a bevy of programs that run on its platform, BEA Systems Inc. isn't developing an application-centric strategy for its flagship WebLogic application server.

Instead, the San Jose, California-based company wants to stick to its server-centric strategy, said Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Bill Coleman at BEA eWorld 2001, the infrastructure software company's sixth annual user conference, here this week. But analysts said that plan makes the firm's growth outlook slim.

"At this stage of development for BEA, they don't have the mind share as an applications company, and specifically, they don't have the mind share as a commerce
Bill Coleman, BEA
Unless you can do all the applications in the world, you [had] better not compete with applications.

company," said Larry Perlstein, an analyst at Stamford, Connecticut-based Gartner Group Inc. "They're going to have to diversify the company to continue the growth rate that we've seen."

On Monday, BEA unveiled plans to merge its Web and transactions servers, BEA WebLogic and BEA Tuxedo, in the forthcoming release of WebLogic Enterprise 6.0. Combining the two products will help customers build applications for diverse computing environments, officials said.

BEA also introduced a new product to its portfolio, the Campaign Manager, a customer management application slated to ship in April. Campaign Manager offers building blocks for e-commerce applications, such as the shopping cart and order-management components in the WebLogic Commerce Server. But BEA has shied away from developing full-blown applications.

"The strategy of trying to do applications is a self-defeating strategy," said BEA's Coleman. "The success of a platform, [such as] ours or Windows, is based on getting all the application vendors to run on you. And unless you can do all the applications in the world, you [had] better not compete with applications."