Monthly Archives: May 2007

eSourcing Communications

Avotus recently released a whitepaper on “eSourcing for Communications” and Why You Need More than Ariba (acquired by SAP), Procuri (acquired by Ariba), and SAP‘s Frictionless Commerce.

According to the white-paper, sourcing and procuring business-critical products and services such as voice and data communications requires a solution specifically designed for the complexities of that environment. This is because the communications market is changing and creating new and unique challenges, modern communications system configurations are becoming more complex, and market pricing is difficult to determine without the proper infrastructure and expertise.

Some of the difficulties that the paper points out are:

  • long procurement cycles for new communications contracts
  • incorrect or incomplete implementation of new contracts
  • limited or no visibility into corporate communications infrastructure and usage
  • lack of an automated system to verify, reconcile, and pay communications invoices
  • negotiations with carriers may elicit a rock-bottom price but this price may not necessarily encompass high quality service levels or accurate implementation and billing

Furthermore, it points out that an organization must specify the scope of the project, the exact network connections, technologies, and locations, including demand volume, and terms and conditions, including required performance levels for the services, in order to obtain a worthwhile bid.

The report then claims that general purpose systems, built around a commodity and single-purchase structure, do not have the ability to handle the kind of complex relationships that are typically involved in communications environments.

And although this paper provides a lot of good advice on communications procurement, this is one point where I can’t agree. (Although I understand why they would argue it – since they provide a communication analytics solution.) Here are six reasons why I disagree:

  1. If you break down your needs into the network connections required by technology and by location, then, assuming you specify the required service and performance levels and capture the associated performance levels specified, you can ask suppliers to bid by technology and location and allow an apples-to-apples comparison on bid components.
  2. Most leading RFP technologies allow for the specification of bids on a line by line basis, and the leading ones will allow qualitative factors (such as service or performance levels) and tiered bid structures or discounts to be captured.
  3. A true sourcing decision optimization tool will allow for the construction of a scenario that takes into account all component costs, discounts, and relevant service levels and produce a hypothetical optimal solution by technology and location. This will allow the buyer to determine which provider is the most cost-effective in each location and each technology and evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of each bid.
  4. The best way to get a great deal in communications is to understand where the best deals are to be had, not in network design or vendor selection – since a well-designed network is a cost-effective one and most vendors will be cost-competitive when they want your business. This requires a spend analysis 2.0 tool, not a customized RFX, usage tracking, and invoice management platform.
    Take cell phone usage for example, the utilization across your user-base will lie on some variant of a bell curve – with most of the users being near the middle. The best way to get a great deal is to use a great spend analysis 2.0 tool like BIQ, find out what the median user base is, ignore the low and high utilization users, and cut a great deal on a plan for the majority. For the minority, if they are low utilization users, just don’t give them a phone (and keep shared phones on hand for when they travel and actually need a phone), and if they are high utilization users, figure out if they actually need the phone that much. If they do, get them individual plans on a case-by-case basis, and if there are enough of them, negotiate a different deal with a different carrier.
    For regular phone lines, analyze your historical usage data to better qualify your needs by technology and location, identify your best performing suppliers, and compare the bid results of your top suppliers (as identified by your decision optimization tool) to determine who to negotiate with.
  5. Usage management and invoice reconciliation is important, but it too can be done with a spend analysis 2.0 tool that allows you to build cubes on the fly from all relevant data.
  6. A good spend analysis tool connected to an appropriate marketplace with a database of all standard vendor pricing can be used to gage the true market price.

Nevertheless, they do have a decent recommendation for a telecom procurement cycle:

  1. Design the specific network required
  2. Decide which vendor(s) is (are) capable of providing the required services (at the required performance levels)
  3. Source the network and negotiate the contract(s)
  4. Begin the many coordinated provisioning projects to implement the designed network
  5. Order the services from one or more vendors depending on network scope
  6. Indicate acceptance (or not) of the individual service components
  7. Receive and validate the invoice(s) during the entire life of the network … from the first circuit installation to the last circuit disconnect.
  8. Change network scope through service additions, changes, and disconnects as the business dictates.
  9. Before the contract expires, determine latest scope of inventory, usage, and costs.
  10. Begin the sourcing process again sufficiently before the end of the current contract to ensure adequate time for proper vendor evaluation and selection, should a change of vendors be required.

The Top Three IX: The Blogsphere Heats Up!

More posts hit the blogsphere yesterday. David Bush of e-Sourcing Forum [WayBackMachine] posted his contribution on Adoption, Adoption, Adoption in “Issues in e-Sourcing Adoption and Penetration” and Jean-Philippe Massin of Strategic Sourcing Europe [WayBackMachine] posted his entry on “Enabling Live Spend-Analysis, Sourcing Best-in-Class Supplier, and Managing Change and Cultures”.

And now that the week is half over, I expect a few other bloggers may finally get around to posting their Top Three as well.

Sourcing Innovation Comment Rules

The current version of these rules will always be available through the Comment Rules link on the sidebar under “About Sourcing Innovation”.

The purpose of the comment feature is to allow for a multi-way discussion that can enrich the usefulness of the blog. Comments should add or complement the content being presented, not detract from it or steer the user off on unrelated tangents. Although commenting rules of etiquette should be well understood by now, there are always those that seem to forget. As such, these are the commenting rules of Sourcing Innovation.

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The SAPphire Sensation

As just about everyone in the enterprise space knows, SAP‘s big annual conference, SAPPHIRE, was last week, and, especially since SAP took the progressive stance of again reaching out and inviting bloggers to cover the conference, it received quite a bit of press. Since I was not among the fortunate few invited to Atlanta to cover the conference, I’ve been keeping up with the postings of the bloggers who were in attendance to try and figure out what what SAP has been up to.

A number of leading bloggers, including Jason Busch of Spend Matters, Dennis Howlett of AccMan [WayBackMachine], Jerry Bowles of Enterprise Web 2.0, Craig Cmehil of Craig’s Rantings [WayBackMachine], Michael Cote of People Over Process, Dan Farber of Between the Lines, Thomas Otter of Vendorprisey, and Robin Fray Carey of Social Media Today [WayBackMachine] were in attendance and together posted a considerable amount of coverage and insight (which can be augmented by a few thought pieces from AMR as well).

From these posts (which are direct-linked at the bottom of this post), one learns the following about SAP:

  • SAP has their work cut out for them if they ever want to reach a thought leadership position in the sourcing and procurement space.
  • SAP recognizes that their solution is quite expensive compared to other best-of-breed solutions and that users today want to try before they buy (even though what they have is not yet competitive with some of the other best-of-breed players).
  • SAP has recognized the need for proper spend analytics.
  • SAP’s Master Data Management Solution is not ready for prime-time.
  • SAP’s Duet offering (being jointly developed with Microsoft) is not ready for prime-time either (despite its sale to 250 customers), but 1.5, intended to have better integration between Microsoft Office and SAP business processes, is slated for later this year. However, it may be version 2.0 (slated for release in late 2008) before it lives up to initial expectations.
  • SAP is starting to understand the importance of community in sourcing, procurement, and the supply chain as a whole (and that SDN and BPK will be key to their innovation strategy), and is working on a social computing application called Harmony, currently under a controlled test, as well as doing a lot more development with partners.
  • SAP is still solid on Netweaver as the center of its platform
  • A1S, the upcoming on-demand mid-market platform built on a SOA architecture and pegged for a 2008 release, remains a mystery and source of confusion.
  • No more MySAP, it’s now SAP ERP 6.0.
  • SAP wants 100,000 customers by 2010 (as compared to the 39,000 it has today).
  • SAP will embed the Adobe Acrobat Connect Professional Web conference system in its workforce development product.

The following news is quite interesting:

  • SAP is now offering a 90-day E-Sourcing trial consisting of 3 pre-configured events for only $10,000 that comes with (limited) training and support
  • Their forthcoming spend analytics xAPP solution should have a much better UI than old-school SAP products
  • Most customers only use 30% of SAP functionality

The E-Sourcing offering is likely to get them a lot of traction, but is it likely to win them a lot of business. I expect that many customers who do not have an E-Sourcing solution at present will try it, say “that’s great”, but then start looking elsewhere when they get the quote, since I believe Iasta (acquired by Selectica, merged with b-Pack, rebranded Determine, acquired by Corcentric) and Procuri (acquired by Ariba, acquired by SAP)will offer considerably more on-demand functionality at a considerably smaller price-tag for some time to come. As Jason Busch said, once users sip the Kool-Aid, they’ll want to buy their own refrigerator, blender, mixers, and booze to tailor it just to their liking and although some may have the budget to afford SAPs full offering, I’m betting many won’t.

The xAPP solution is interesting since it sounds like it will compete fairly well with solutions offered by Emptoris (acquired by IBM, sunset in 2017), Ketera (acquired by Deem), Procuri, and Zycus and since it sounds like they have integrated Macromedia UI capabilities, and maybe even Flex, into the application.

The 30% statistic, although something I more-or-less knew as a technology expert, is interesting nonetheless as it comes straight from the source and hammers on the need to carefully evaluate what you are buying, whether you truly need it, and how many seats you really need if you do before you sign the contract. Otherwise, you might end up paying millions more than you need to. And although every large corporation needs a solid ERP system for their master data store, it forces you to think about whether you will get solid value for the price, especially since there are much more affordable enterprise open-source alternatives, such as Aptean Compiere, out there. For some companies, a properly configured SAP instance with the appropriate number of licenses will be worth (much more than) the cost, but for others, it may not be.

I’d like to leave you with a paragraph from Brian Sommers, whose long blog entry of yesterday drives the point home.


The users that should be showcased at these events are the ones who spent a pittance and got a ton of value. Morever, the focus should be on highlighting the customers who were able to figure out a lot of the change management challenges on their own and actually solved them without the use of consultants or a strait-jacketing piece of technology.

The Links:

  • Spend Matters [WayBackMachine] by Jason Busch
    SAP: 3 Sourcing Events for $10K?*
    SAP Gets Serious about Spend Analytics*
    SAP SRM Users: Don’t Feel Compelled to Upgrade to MDM*
    Waiting for Duet*
    SAP’s E-Sourcing Transformation: Part 1 — Setting the Stage*
    SAP’s E-Sourcing Transformation: Part 2 — The Services Ecosystem*
    SAP’s E-Sourcing Transformation: Part 3 — Just the Product Facts*
    Procurement Goes Main Stage at Sapphire*
    Making the Sapphire Procurement Scenario Real*
    SAP needs to Realize that Procurement Extends Beyond the Four Walls*
  • AccMan [WayBackMachine] by Dennis Howlett
    SAPPHIRE 07 – Day 1, the wrap
    Hasso Plattner’s blackboard
    On not seeing A1S
    Will You Trust SAP With Your Business?
    Harmonising inside SAP
    SAPs A1S go to market strategy – the addressable market
    SAPs A1S go to market strategy – potential hurdles
    SAPPHIRE wrap
    AMR sees A1S, confusion reigns
    Flashing Open the A1S Kimono
  •  Craig’s Rantings [WayBackMachine] by Craig Cmehil
    Oracle invades SAP SAPPHIRE
    SDN and SAPedias
    Emerging Solutions brings “Harmony” to the Enterprise

People Over Process by Michael Cote
Sapphire 07: Support, Enterprise 2.0
Sapphire 07: Stable Agility, Web 2.0 Everywhere

Between the Lines WayBackMachine] by Dan Farber
SAP Sapphire gets underway
SAP internalizes social networking for business
MySAP fades into history
SAP aims A1S on demand solution for 2008
Hasso Plattner outlines SAP’s software vision
SAP and Microsoft lay out Duet roadmap
SAP gets on the Enterprise 2.0 bandwagon
SAP CEO: We are not arrogant, we are the market leader

Social Media Today [WayBackMachine] by Robin Fray Carey
Meanwhile, at Virtual SAPPHIRE
Dennis Moore at SAPPHIRE: “No More Waterfalls”
Hasso Plattner: “Virtual is Real”

Vendorprisey by Thomas Otter
Live blogging Leo’s keynote
The name game. My My.
The future of HR systems and thinking?
Henning’s Kagermann’s Keynote
Rio Tinto, SAP, talent management and Youtube
Talking GRC and the office of the CFO gang at Sapphire
Dinner with SAP customers and an old friend
Co-innovation is a strength not a weakness

Enterprise Web 2.0 or
Enterprise Irregulars by Jerry Bowles
SAP Shows the Love for Bloggers
SAP to Enterprise 2.0 Community: We Get It

Enterprise Irregulars by Brian Sommer
Getting to know the SAP Customer

AMR
“SAPPHIRE 2007: Usability and Flexibility Take Center Stage” by AMR Research Staff
“SAPPHIRE: SAP Widens Its Embrace to the Extended Value Chain” by Stephen Hochman, Mark Hillman of AMR
“SAPPHIRE 2007: SAP Lets the A1S “Secret” Out of the Bag” by Simon Jacobson, Jim Shepherd
“SAP is Starting to Take a Leadership Role” with SRM by Mickey North Rizza, Jane Barrett

“Sapphire 2007: An SAP SRM Gem?” by Aberdeen

P.S. David Bush of e-Sourcing Forum [WayBackMachine] offered his opinion of Spend Matters’ ERP week yesterday.

P.P.S. I also hear Jason Wood of Ponderings of Woodrow and Mike Masnick of TechDirt were present for at least part of the conference, so you might want to check their blogs in the coming days as well to see if they posted their thoughts.