Aussies flock to SAP Business Suite 7

By Suzanne Tindal, ZDNet.com.au
20 November 2009 05:48 PM
Tags: sap, business suite 7, wilkes, r3, erp, upgrade, r-3, cent

Forty per cent of SAP's Australian and New Zealand customer base has already chosen to migrate to the company's new platform, Business Suite 7, since it was made available earlier this year.

The upgrade means moving from SAP's traditional R/3 platform to the new suite — a combination of what the vendor believes are the best applications for doing different business functions such as customer relationship management. It was announced in February, and was made generally available in May.

Thirty nine and 47 per cent of Australian and New Zealand companies respectively had made the commitment to move to it, SAP ANZ Solutions manager Tim Wilkes told ZDNet.com.au yesterday. Those figures put the speed of adoption at 10 to 15 per cent faster than the last major release, R/3 4.6C, back in 2000, he said.

Customers truly saw the benefit, according to Wilkes. "The heart of it is that there are sound platform reasons for upgrading," he said.

Business Suite 7 was set to put an end to stove pipe systems, with data inside the company being linked with external feeds such as Twitter to give executives a complete view of its company and products. This creates more "clarity" for users, according to Wilkes, something useful in penny pinching times of crisis. Companies were able to use the suite to get a better idea of how the business is really operating — "instant gratification" in terms of information.

The new release also tackled a problem of battling through massive upgrades where the end result of billions of dollars worth of research and development was pushed through in one go. For Business Suite 7, SAP has expansion packages which come out every four to six weeks. Customers choose which of the new features they want in a check-box fashion.

"Once you've got [Business Suite 7] in you don't need to upgrade," Wilkes said. He believed customers were thinking about what they needed to do to get ready for better times.

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Talkback 2 comments

    What is this ****? Tegs -- 23/11/09

    By way of disclosure I have worked for a competitor to SAP, but even so, what kind of nonsense PR fluff are you regurgitating here?

    SAP says lots of its customers are upgrading to its new product? Wow, shock horror. Guy from SAP says the new release solves a lot of problems .... really? you don't say!

    I looked around the page expecting to see an SAP advert by way of some logical reason for this blatant cosying up, but no!

    Working for an IT company I know that we sent out a lot of this kind of thing to journalists, but surely your job is to filter this kind of self-serving advertising crap so your readers don't see it.

    I apologise for the rant, and I am willing to be corrected, if I have actually missed an important story buried in here.

    PR faff Renai LeMay -- 23/11/09 (in reply to #320392406)

    hey Tegs,

    you're right -- the article is not that hard-hitting :)

    However we thought it worth posting that forty percent of SAP's local customer base had migrated to Business Suite 7. Honestly, from the IT managers and CIOs I have talked to, a migration of this magnitude is a big deal, and we didn't expect so many to have made the move that quickly.

    Cheers,

    Renai LeMay
    News Editor
    ZDNet.com.au

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