Oracle's software gets lukewarm reviews

18 January 2002 10:23 AM

Tags: 11i, ebusiness software, oracle, analyst, sales, customer, say

The latest version of Oracle's 11i e-business software has better data analysis, but analysts say users need more than this.

Oracle has announced a new version of its 11i e-business software with many new features, but analysts say the company has to offer more than that to woo customers. The software maker says the new version will be released in the next 60 days, offering businesses better access to customers, sales and inventory data.

As well as better data analysis, the new applications will allow businesses to share sales and product information with marketing partners over the Web and automate the maintenance of company assets such as factory equipment.

But analysts say Oracle needs to provide more than new features and functions to shore up its ailing applications business.

With rivals SAP and Siebel already offering similar products, "Oracle needs to compete on service," said Laurie Orlov, an analyst at Forrester Research. "They have to do a better job managing their image and acting more customer friendly."

Sales of the product have flagged over the last year. While the entire market for business software has been hit hard by the dour economy, Oracle's sales declined more sharply than its competitors. New e-business application license sales, totaling US$163m, were down 42 percent year over year in Oracle's second quarter ended 30 November.

Oracle itself is partly to blame for slow adoption of its e-business software, analysts say. The company's message that businesses should toss out all other software and use only Oracle applications doesn't fly with customers, said Melissa Eisenstat, a financial analyst with CIBC World Markets.

"SAP has sold multiple (applications) for years, but they don't emphasise buying the whole suite at once," Eisenstat said. "The monumental all-in-one approach is not being adopted by customers."

Oracle admits that while more than 5,000 customers are in some stage of installing the 11i software, they're doing it in bits and pieces rather than adopting all the components.

"While we do sell the entire suite, not all businesses are putting all 70 components in," said Lisa Arthur, vice president of e-business software marketing at Oracle.

Sales of Oracle's e-business software have also been affected by well-publicised problems encountered by customers with the first release of 11i. Oracle promised the applications would be easy to implement. In reality, many companies found an unusual number of glitches in the software and put the brakes on their projects. Arthur says Oracle fixed the bugs and that the new applications won't have the same problems.

"We have six generations of the e-business suite under our belt, so it's extremely stable," Arthur said. "Early on, it was extremely complex. With that complexity there were some early concerns from customers, but those concerns have been completely eliminated."

Software quality continues to be an issue for Oracle customers, however, because of the way the company releases products, Orlov said.

"They wait until the software has reached a level of stability to ship it to their largest customers, and then hand-hold them through the debugging process," Orlov said. "It's a bit tougher for smaller customers," because they don't get the same level of attention.

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Talkback 1 comments

  1. Why not use MySQL or Postgresql on Linux / UNIX servers? There are tons of tips on their Websites or the Web in general. If Oracle area anything like Microsoft MSDN, they leave most people to wade through a lot of junk to find the relevant information whe Dwight Walker -- 18/01/02

    Why not use MySQL or Postgresql on Linux / UNIX servers? There are tons of tips on their Websites or the Web in general. If Oracle area anything like Microsoft MSDN, they leave most people to wade through a lot of junk to find the relevant information whereas open-source projects because they are driven by programmers have tons of well-aimed tips and if they are not good they get bagged right there and then - no mumbo-jumbo or stuffing around. I like to see large companies like Oracle suffer for bad service - gives us tons of work :).


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