02 May 2008
Business software giant SAP is slowing down the rollout of its new hosted applications, as it struggles to reign-in the operating costs of the service.
The German software maker revealed the problems it was having with its Business ByDesign offering at the same time that it released disappointing first-quarter financial results.
Chief executive Henning Kagermann said on a press call that the company was struggling to make the on-demand enterprise resource planning service profitable. "We've had good feedback on the product, but we have to improve how we run it in a hosted environment. At the moment, we have too many manual processes," he said.
SAP had claimed when launching the service that it would attract 1,000 customers in the first year. Kagermann today admitted it would miss that target.
Kagermann also acknowledged that it would take SAP 12 to 18 months longer than expected to hit revenues of $1 bn for Business ByDesign. Orginally, SAP had expected to hit that figure by 2010.
SAP will restrict Business ByDesign availability to just six countries for the rest of 2008. It is also cutting investment in the product by €100m.
SAP posted a 22 per cent drop in profits for its quarter ending 31 March 2008. It made revenues of €622m for the quarter, with net income at €222m. At the same point last year, quarterly net income was €310m. SAP blamed acquisition charges related to its purchase of Business Objects and the strong Euro for its drop in profitability.
The admission that SAP is having difficulties with its multi-tenancy model for Business ByDesign will come as a huge embarrassment.
Earlier this year, Patrick Walravens of financial analyst group JMP Securities had highlighted "fundamental architectural challenges" with Business ByDesign. He suggested that the software may not have been built using a single data model, and that SAP would need to provide a "major update" to rectify that.
Yet when questioned about those assertions on 18 April 2008, SAP's vice president of marketing David Keene had insisted there were no flaws in the product design. "It was designed to always change and grow, without requiring a revolution (like a major update)".
Have your say on this article
Newsletters
Latest stories from Applications
Latest videos
You may also like
Applications jobs
Technology Patent Wars
Case studies from large organisations across all sectors
... And rich media, and flexible working, and peaks in traffic ...
Upcoming Events
Join us for this Computing web seminar, in which the Head of BI at the Co-operative Group Nick Colebourn will be explaining just how he reigned in the Group’s sprawling database estate and how significant savings were realised and data quality improved as a result.
Date: 31 May 2012
Time: 11:00 AM
Live June 13th 11:00am: Register now. During this web seminar we will be looking at the sorts of incidents that can bring data centres grinding to a halt and what can be done about them.
Date: 13 Jun 2012
Time: 11:00 am
Receive the latest jobs direct to your inbox
Are you being paid what you are worth?