SAP unveiled its Business ByDesign product around two years ago, but it is
still not ready for wide-scale customer deployment.
The company claims that the service is generally available in the UK, but
customers may have been denied access to the software because SAP cannot afford
to host the suite due to its underlying virtual architecture.
SAP said that this predicament should change by the summer of next year, but
some analysts doubt this claim, and argue that the company is misleading
customers and the press.
The 40 current customers of Business ByDesign in the six countries where it
is available are being used by SAP as good practice case studies, or what it
calls "referencing accounts", for when the firm is ready to encourage more
businesses to sign up, according to Rainer Zinow, Business ByDesign innovation
vice president.
"With the budget we have, we can only allow a certain number of customers to
deploy the solution. We are specific about who we sign," he said.
"Everyone wants to buy it, but the issue is how we can make money. The cost
of operating the system is so high that we can't meet the profitability targets
that our chief financial officer assigned to us."
SAP describes Business ByDesign as a complete on-demand enterprise resource
planning (ERP) suite for the mid-market that includes software for financials,
human resources, supply chain management, business analytics and compliance
management.
The company announced the launch in 2007, and has since been trying to solve
the scalability issues inherent in running the solution through a virtual blade
environment.
Stefan Ried, an analyst at
Forrester
Research who used to head up the product management division for SAP's
Netweaver infrastructure, said that Business ByDesign is unlikely ever to be
scalable because it is not based on a multi-tenant architecture.
"SAP said that the architecture of Business ByDesign is multi-tenant, but it
can't be because SAP has also said that it is powered by Netweaver, which I know
is not multi-tenant," he said.
"And if SAP wants to sell a software-as-a-service [SaaS] solution at a
competitive price point, it has to be scalable."
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