Why Oracle May Really Be Doomed This Time

I was laying awake early this morning thinking about Oracle.

Back when it was starting its $20 billion buying spree of companies in 2006, analysts all said the strategy would fail. There were a lot of compelling arguments why.

People said that the assets of a software company are the engineers and the engineers would go elsewhere. People argued that Oracle fundamentally didn’t know how to write good application software, and they couldn’t buy their way into changing that DNA. People argued that stitching together the disparate systems of PeopleSoft, Siebel, Oracle into Project Fusion would create a Frankensteinian mess of unshippable bloatware. I once wrote a BusinessWeek profile of John Wookey– the man tasked with Fusion in the wake of all the purchases– called “The Hardest Job in Silicon Valley.” It’s telling that he’s now at Salesforce.

At the time, I was far more bullish on Oracle’s chances than all of these naysayers for a few reasons. First off, a horrible business application was all relative. The entire category  sucked. Oracle’s applications were worse than SAP’s, but no one relished using SAP either.

PeopleSoft and Siebel were far better with their so-called “best of breed” applications that focused on HR software and customer relationship management. But even they were too hard to use, configure and required employee training. There were famously millions of seats of Siebel software sold in the late 1990s and early 2000s that were never used.

Second, Oracle had nailed the hard stuff: The underlying technology layer. SAP simply couldn’t compete on database or middleware technology. There was so much pent up anger that companies had been forced to spend billions on consultants to make enterprise software work together. By the mid-2000s there was a huge push to streamine things to one vendor: One person to call and scream at if things went wrong. One vendor that couldn’t pass the buck. If you were going to go with one vendor, Oracle was simply the better option because the underlying technology was just better and that’s the stuff that had to work.

The third reason was that Larry Ellison just got what the market wanted at that moment, and he played it perfectly. He knew that this was a moment in time in the software application wars where the best product simply didn’t matter, because everyone had resigned himself or herself to the fact that enterprise software just chronically under delivers on what the sales guy promises.

What customers wanted instead was convenience and stability. So much work and money had gone into implementing these programs, and no one wanted to rip them out, no matter how much they hated them. They would happily just keep paying on-going maintenance fees to stick with the status quo. By mopping up the cash-rich but growth-challenged enterprise giants, Oracle could amass an installed base and bottom line that would be the envy of the tech world.

Even a lot of the employees stuck around longer than analysts expected. Because there just weren’t much better alternatives in an enterprise world that was becoming a two-horse race between Oracle and SAP on applications, and a two-horse race between Oracle and IBM on the database front.

The wild-card was the looming threat of software as a service and open source software. But while both were superior options for Web business and smaller companies, both were seen to be risky bets for large, staid organizations. Ellison saw the promise of SAAS– that’s why he personally invested in Salesforce and Netsuite. But he knew Oracle didn’t need to make any knee-jerk reactions because companies didn’t want innovation back then. They wanted predictability and stability.

The best product didn’t matter.

The reason I’m suddenly turning less bullish on Oracle is that I believe that is finally changing. There are a few reasons why:

1. Time: Companies can put off installing new technology for a long time, but not forever. We are finally reaching the point where enough time has passed that the wounds of those horrible 1990s software implementations have healed. CIOs know they can’t keep those stodgy old systems forever.

2. Millenial entitlement: The reason Oracle’s rollup strategy won was because companies were pummeled into a place of Stockholm-syndrome-like acceptance. When I was covering Oracle in the mid-2000s, I spoke with customer-after-customer, and I can’t say any ever loved the software they spent millions on. No matter what vendor they used. Most just sort of threw up their hands and said that so many salespeople’s promises had been broken over the years, that they were just resigned to the reality that no enterprise applications would be easy, intuitive or do what they promised. It’s kind of like cable companies. We just know they suck, and we don’t really expect more.

But this is one place where Millenial entitlement is a good thing. Millenials are coming into the workforce and the generation has an amazing capacity to demand the world revolve around their desires, whether that’s reasonable or not. Millenials will just start demanding better software from the companies they work for, and if they don’t get it, they’ll start installing their own skunkworks implementations.

3. Technology: The technology underlying cloud-based systems has gotten more sophisticated, and computing itself has changed with the rise of iPhones, Androids and iPads. Applications can do things now that they just couldn’t in the late 1990s.

As a result, some of those early promises of application software that failed, may actually be possible. Take collaboration software for instance. Billions have been spent on horrible collaboration software, but for many teams something as simple and elegant as Yammer running on a  browser or a phone just works. Ditto, Jive and Asana. It actually does make teams collaborate better and lessens the crushing load of email, in my experience.

Now, these tools don’t work for all workplaces and getting into real enterprise level will still be a long land-war. Longer than most people expect right now, I think. But these younger companies are starting with what technology can do now, versus what it could do a decade ago.

4. Options: This ties into time and technology, but the options on the market are finally starting to get substantially better. So much better, that employees who work at a company with newer tools will balk if they go to a new job with olders systems. CIOs are finally starting– starting– to see that truly intuitive “consumerized” technology that employees will actually use may be worth the pain of switching.

Any single one of the reasons wouldn’t have been enough to turn the tide, but taken together, it’s a watershed moment for enterprise software. Not only could it dramatically change how we all work, but it could translate to billions and billions in returns for Silicon Valley just as we enter a lull or mini-shakeout in consumer Web sites. Because enterprise adopt technology so much slower than consumers, I’m increasingly convinced we are at the cusp of something that only comes around once every a decade or two.

Typically I think big public companies are inept, but I would not count Oracle out. Ellison has long shown he viscerally gets where the stock market, the customer and the technology are going. He may be better at this than anyone leading a technology company today. He has pulled off stunning and dramatic turn arounds of Oracle in the past. He can force the company to shift out of sheer force of will, uncowed by the near term pain he may inflict on customers, employees or Wall Street in the process. That’s something that only Steve Jobs and Jeff Bezos can do well.

But to win, Oracle will have to change its strategy as dramatically as it did in 2006 when Ellison famously announced that software innovation was dead and just started to buy everything. Buying once-hot companies like Taleo and RightNow isn’t going to cut it this time when there are better products in the market like Workday and Salesforce.

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megaventory 5 pts

Although it's been a bit since it aired this post inspired me to write an insight in our own blog

 

http://blog.megaventory.com/2012/03/blurry-line-between-enterprise-and.html

 

The gist is that software technology is increasingly accessible - both to consume and to develop - and the market has loudly spoken: clean, lean, specialised, low-complexity applications is what everyone wants.

[...] the company went public and doesn’t serve on the board. Still, you have to wonder: With Oracle is buying cloud vendors, and NetSuite is starting to compete on larger deals, will Nelson have his own Marc Benioff [...]

[...] stifter af det nye tech-medie Pando Daily, som bebuder problemer for de gamle under overskriften “Why Oracle May Really Be Doomed This Time”. Hun har tidligere været ude med riven efter Oracle, og det er interessant læsning. May the [...]

What about learning English, dear Sarah? Not only one is supposed to be LYING and not LAYING, whether awake or asleep, in the morning, but MILLENNIAL is definitely spelt with double N, while you wrote MILLENIAL not once but 4 times! How come that a non-English-native speaker like me would never make such gross mistakes while a journalist (in other words, a WRITER, in the sense of someone who writes for a living) does not know her own language? Before writing about technology (or rather before writing about ANYTHING), one should learn to WRITE.

A very good article, I disagree on one of your points though. I believe that Oracle turned themselves into an application company not solely because they saw that vertical integration was what the market wanted, but because they had no choice if they wanted to survive. With Microsoft SQL Server grabbing database market share from one side and IBM DB2 from the other side they had to transform the company from a database technology company to an application company. The challenge they and others face today is the cloud. We are experiencing yet another major revolution in our technology and not every company will prosper in this new world. I spoke recently to a CIO at a major University who told me that within five years his systems would have moved to the cloud. Premature? Too Aggressive? Perhaps, but a vision of the future. Companies are less concerned about their data remaining in house then you may think and with encryption you will always retain the keys.

Well, I agree the cloud will be a challenge for Oracle, but not the type of challenge many think. For Oracle, as this blog is about Oracle's future, it will go along with the buzz words and hype of the cloud, but it will eventually release its own version of the cloud and it will likely be a totally in-house cloud that is secure, owned by the company (client/customer or Oracle), maintained by the company or Oracle or SaaS staffing. I do not see Oracle recommending to a company to move their data to unknown, possibly hostile, locations. Any sane company will look at its costs, perform some risk management, and in today's hacking, espionage, security bugs (especially with Microsoft), privacy, intellectual knowledge issues (patents, trademarks, copyrights, service marks, branding....) will conclude to keep its "property" in the walls of the company. I do agree that many companies are less concerned about their data remaining in house AND THAT IS SIMPLY BECAUSE THE OWNER, BOARD, AND/OR PRESIDENT of said company was never really briefed about the real security issues and ramifications of moving the data off-site. If the CIO does his home work, or other officer of the company - I am sure that the company not so concerned will take a second look. I would say to you, about the 'University' CIO, that a) a university has some secrets to keep, but they are NOT totally 1:1 to a Private or Public Firm competing in today's world economy with stock holders to answer to, b) educational institutions are somewhat being forced to find savings anywhere they can, even at the expense of other concerns, c) universities are created to experiment -- public and private companies are not. For the record, I am a cloud user and I advocate for the technology, XEN / KVM actually, but not to be used in the manner current cloud companies market and profess to the world. It would be interesting if you asked the University CIO to define "the cloud" to you? Is he/she stating that the university in question is moving all of their data and systems off site to "outsource" their IT department? Or is he talking about using virtualization and keeping a cloud on campus property? Also, has this particular CIO considered what he would do if the Internet was interrupted? Ahh, do not say that the Internet was never interrupted, as it was for ~15 to ~30 seconds last year, but more likely a local connectivity issue would shutdown a 'usual cloud configuration', thus stopping ALL work for the user of such a cloud. Finally, Yes, the cloud presents great opportunity, new and neat and cool technology to play with, but the cloud also presents huge risks, which many still do not recognize. I suspect some will find these risks after implementations.............. Oracle will be there for their clients and customers. *** Disclosure: I use to be an avid Oracle user from the beginning to 6i to 9i, but then moved to pure LAMP, using MySQL (which Oracle owns now) and I am considering re-establishing my company as a reseller for Oracle products, simply because of this discussion. One of the above respondents mentioned how "a bug" messed up an Oracle implementation - not because Oracle products suck but because the Oracle DBA sucked -- there was an education gap. I see great opportunity for DBA's who truly know how to utilize high technology in the growing data and on-line real time markets that we have. I am such a DBA, System Integrator. I find the original article interesting and the views of all truly eye opening. Have fun while you work..... P.S. Having the keys to the encrypted database does not help if you do not have access to the database or if others have access to the database to break said encryption.

Hi Robert I think you are out of date on SQL Server's security capabilities. These are now industry leading and enterprise class: http://www.microsoft.com/sqlserver/en/us/solutions-technologies/mission-critical-operations/security-and-compliance.aspx

Hubi, Hi - No I am quite up to date on what is available out there for databases - and yes, the latest greatest versions of the databases of Microsoft and Oracle are certified to the hilt. But as noted by "the bug" event above, it is not the database that may be of issue, who says you need to crack a database anyway to get access to the data within -- Is IE certified with HIPPA and PCI, Are the applications using the database certified, Is the network certified, and, as this discussion was prompted by us talking about "the cloud" - is the "the cloud" certified for PCI and HIPPA? And back to the main point of this blog - Oracle, as an engineering company, understands all of these issues. So, If all of this is so very secure, why for a simple example is ID Theft on the rise from break-ins via companies. My points throughout and above are not to question the individual components of the technology and their ability to thwart attackers -- but the issue of using the cloud for outsourcing the "keys to the kingdom" so to speak -- the 'data' of the company. So my comments were not made to upset any Microsoft users, although I do like UNIX/Linux (Open Software)/Proprietary systems better w.r.t. security, but to support my conclusion that we have not seen the end of Oracle's achievements quite yet. That's all.

Let them drive the customers to Skunkworks-type operations. I'm all about Skunkworks. Our whole claims clearinghouse system is a skunkworks operation. So is Epic.

And yet again history repeats itself... Healthcare IT is going through the 1990's of enterprise applications... let's hope the millennial force is with us :-) and that it doesn't take 3 decades to innovate something better.

Sarah, I think the points about the acquisition strategy are fine. But there is a parallel organization at work in Oracle building Fusion. I believe that the weakness that you list (cloud strategy and about the expectations of the new gen of workers) are both addressed by this set of apps Watch out. There is a lot more play in this company.....

[...] was reading an article today where the author suggests that Oracle may be doomed. I have no doubt they are doomed. The question is: how long do they [...]

[...] Sarah Lacy - Why Oracle May Really Be Doomed This Time – via @rstephens But to win, Oracle will have to change its strategy as dramatically as it did in 2006 when Ellison famously announced that software innovation was dead and just started to buy everything. Buying once-hot companies like Taleo and RightNow isn’t going to cut it this time when there are better products in the market like Workday and Salesforce. [...]

Great article Sarah simply because it makes us think about things. ORACLE dead? probably not. Oracle's previous business model dead/on its last legs? - More likely. IMHO, an all Oracle stack simply helps Larry fund his next Americas Cup effort! Larry Ellison is an investor. He will simply start buying whatever he thinks will help lift Oracle. You may be able to compete with Oracle but, can you compete with Larry's wallet? As for a 2-horse database/data warehousing race, you are neglecting to mention Teradata who still has double digit revenue growth. Name 1 client who switched to Oracle from Teradata and there are 20 who went to Teradata.

"two-horse race between Oracle and IBM on the database front?" Really, name a business using IBM DB/2 in any meaningful fashion beyond middleware for another IBM product like Director? It's a two horse race between Oracle (which now owns MySQL in addition to its crap database) and Microsoft.

If Steve Jobs can still do 'that' well, he is/was an even more formidable man than I realised. Makes me wonder whether this article is just recycled. Sloppy.

Ive heard so may horror stories about Oracle. What a grim place to work, in my opinion. What I think they fail to understand is that its people that make companies, not just technology. Oracle is often touted as having zero culture. Theyve bought some great companies but the reaction of those people that I know in Rightnow, Endeca, ATG, Fatwire etc is "oh God no, Oracle just bought us".

Oracle will change the strategy when time come and will acquire saas/cloud companies. Oracle has the advantage of waiting to see which way tide will turn.

I don't follow the comparison between RightNow and Salesforce. I've developed for both of them and recommended each to different clients because they serve different purposes. It's like saying a school bus is better than a pickup truck because it can carry more students. Sure, a pickup truck COULD carry students, and a school bus COULD carry a load of firewood, but that's not what either vehicle is designed to do. Salesforce COULD be used for customer support, and RightNow COULD be used for sales, but there is no sense in trying to force them into the same market space. Most of the time, they are not competing products unless the customer is only trying to pick one (in which case, RightNow seems to be winning out more and more, but it's still pretty even).

Just reading some of the comments I feel there is a bigger shift here. Oracle and SAP were designed around data. Data drove the company and everything clustered round the data warehouse. Now process drives the company. A company is based around a process to turn a product or service into cash for shareholders. Understand and own the process and things like databases become commodities to be inserted where you need them, for as long as you need them. So Ellison's task in reinvention is like the man asking an Irishman for directions - "I wouldn't start from here".

It really is frightening how wrong Ellison has got it. We have a product which takes out the need for expensive Siebel licensing in call centres. We knew it would be popular as it saves millions every year. But I've been shocked by how viscerally prospects have reacted. The expressions of hate for everything Oracle. The desperation for a way out. It will take more than a makeover to get these people to buy again.

[...] Lacy argues that enterprise application software is due for a change. Her reasons seemingly boil down [...]

[...] we’ve traditionally seen in the enterprise space.  Sarah Lacy points out that the old way of consolidation and competition is no longer relevant, even with a shiny new portfolio of cloud applications. I’m inclined to agree, as the world has [...]

Typo fixed version: Robert, This quote from you is GOLDEN: “Why would any company CEO or Owner put their crown jewels into someone else’s hands wether moved from place to place via ssh/ssl or not.” Web 2.0, SaaS, and the Cloud are ultimately going to test our “intelligent species” claims. At the current time, looks like we are gonna have a “truth machine” fault re., said claim Oracle has challenges ahead, and these are going to be as a result of DBMS technology value proposition forks triggered *by* Internet and Web induced inflections such as: 1. Data Volume 2. Data Velocity 3. Data Variety (Heterogeneity) 4. Data Location Disparity 5. Intensional Data Definition & Exploitation replacing Extensional Data Definition and Exploitation. Items 1-5 redefine the nature of data data driven applications. Oracle’s current model doesn’t put it in place to dominate a market where DBMS needs are redefined along the lines outlined above. Of course, that could all change in the future!

Robert, This quote from you is GOLDEN: "Why would any company CEO or Owner put their crown jewels into someone else's hands wether moved from place to place via ssh/ssl or not." Web 2.0, SaaS, and the Cloud are ultimately going to test our "intelligent species" claims. At the current time, looks like we are gonna have a "truth machine" fault re., said claim :-) Oracle has challenges ahead, and these are going to be as a result of DBMS technology value proposition forks triggered Internet and Web induced inflections such as: 1. Data Volume 2. Data Velocity 3. Data Variety (Heterogeneity) 4. Data Location Disparity 5. Intensional Data Definition & Exploitation replacing Extensional Data Definition and Exploitation. Items 1-5 redefine the nature of data data driven applications. Oracle's current model doesn't put it in place to dominate a market where DBMS needs are redefined along the lines outlined above. Of course, that could all change in the future!

I like the article. Thanks. The comments are interesting, too. Sarah, I think I'd take your list and add, or tweak, a few things: The idea of a new IBM isn't as 'exciting' as it sounds. It worked for IBM because the market didn't have the choices that exist today. Further, you can't charge the most and have bad support. Oracle's customers are complaining more than ever about support--maybe because they're *really* mad about cost, maybe not. The comment made about their cash-cow database business is spot on. Now, though, there is a database from EnterpriseDB that is based on the 'tried and true' PostgreSQL open source database, and includes Oracle compatibility--technology good enough that they licensed it to both IBM and Netezza. What's more, EnterpriseDB's Postgres Plus Cloud Database allows customers to use open source PostgreSQL or the Oracle compatible Postgres Plus Advanced Server in the cloud with market leading functionality. Partnering with Red Hat, HP, EMC and others, I think EnterpriseDB, and maybe other companies like them, will force Oracle to re-think (or more quickly adapt to) the future of their RDBMS business. (Full disclosure, I work for EnterpriseDB)

Sarah Lacy, First - you really need to start to dream and think about other things in life. :) Anyway, I see how you arrived at your opinion, but do not agree at all - Oracle and Larry will be with us for a long long time. In fact, my opinion is that the cloud world and its associated SAAS, as modeled today, will vanish far sooner than Oracle. The applications you listed yammer, Ditto, Jive, and especially Asana will not make their numbers and too go bye bye -- IF the CEOs, CFOs, CIOs, and COOs listen to their security teams. Any CIO who recommends an external cloud system for a high tech, financial institution, bank, manufacturing, chemical, hospital, etc. type of business should be fired before implementation and the damage it will bring to the company. All responses to your article so far have not considered the current rape going on of U.S. companies intellectual knowledge, such as processes, procedures which one would be posting on Asana or confidential information that would be posted on yammer and the like. The U.S.A. is under extreme internet attack from within and from without; and the attack from within is greater then from over seas. The cloud commercial model with respect to SAAS is a joke, and I am very familiar as to how it works from the start of Qemu, Xen, KVM, VMware, Hypervisor, and many other virtualization technologies. It is not the technology that is at issue, the applications you listed are very cool tools, but their use as implemented is foolish for any company wishing to maintain its confidential information, intellectual knowledge, sources, all types of lists, sales, customers, vendors, etc., and any procedures in making anything! Espionage, break-ins, and simply the trust of the "cloud companies" you may be doing business with to have SAAS are all questionable. Have you seen how these tools, again very cool, are implemented and how many other websites and people are involved to allow them to work their magic? Not to mention that ALL of the information posted to ANY cloud system is then OUT OF THE CONTROL of the company which owns it! Fancy "terms of use", "security policies", pledges, and the like do not cut it as some of the large corporations will unfortunately find out the hard way... Then there is the issue as to who the people along the path a company's information travels over the internet are and where the information is really being posted to any cloud system - as there are many web sites used by the above tools and I have just started to investigate the owners of each piece of the process.... I personally would not trust my employer's information to Asana, not that the owners of Asana have bad intentions, but simply because Asana cannot insure, protect, or control the information provided/posted to its systems. Bottom line: Reviewing the security landscape, cloud computing, SAAS, and such cool tools all have limited life spans far shorter than Oracle's and hopefully the damage done by their use will not be like the current economic disaster caused by Wall Street and Washington -- OH! the people who own these cool tools are predominantly Wall Street... hmm, these tools collect information, the wall street people thrive on information, hmmm where is my information really? Who is mining this information at these cloud companies? Finally, Why would any company CEO or Owner put their crown jewels into someone else's hands wether moved from place to place via ssh/ssl or not. Yes, the cool tools have many advantages, but these tools will be re-packaged for smart companies who will implement them IN-HOUSE in total control of their information systems and these same companies will survive, the others ---- large or small will go bye bye. Oracle has its own cloud systems in-house, as most high tech companies..... Regards,

I began in IT consultancy in 2000, "the .com year". After 12 years I have realised that the huge and determinant interests that the drivers and key stakeholders in this sector, have compromised billions of dolars from Small & Medium business that had the hope that technology could arrive to "solve" their internal problems. However, processes were not being revised, end users were not requested to be part of the source of information to understand how businesses were operating, and many consultants worked with the belief that users should not be taken into account and that the only one they had to pay homage was the IT Manager, a kind of advanced end user rather than an expert in combining business needs, processes to develop the business and ITCs to give technological support to the main purposes of the company. I have seen lots of companies spending thousands of dolars in software applications that never were installed and used. When this happened in big companies, the "error of that purchase" could be covered quite easily, but when that happened to S&M organisations, with limited resources, the situation turned so critical for them. Now things are quite different, and if you are the responsible of spending budget to implement IT solutions, you have hundreds of sources of information that can assist you in your final decision and choice. Your analysis regarding how the most high-tech companies treat their own information and how are the in-house systems they use to storage, use and securize their valued information is for me the key.

What the heck does 'streamine' mean? The inability to proof-read? Oh, and I deal with Oracle software on a regular basis and from what I can see it is the most overblown crap on earth. Do they really need 1,000 different products? That would be their downfall if anything.

The problem with Oracle products is that they're really hard to use. Take a look at their database system vs any free or non-free database system out there (that is still being used). However, what Oracle has that smaller companies don't have is the trust of the corporate world, and that's what keeps Oracle going. Oracle is shielded against "customer sentiment", because corporations don't have sentiments. Every manager wants his subordinates to use what his manager told him to use...

"I was laying awake early this morning thinking about Oracle." I'm so very very sorry, glad you got it out of your system though :)

[...] So writes Sarah Lacy in her blog. [...]

[...] Why Oracle May Really Be Doomed This Time – It's become popular to start writing off the software dinosaurs – this is another recent crack at it, suggesting that Oracle will be done away with by a new generation of users and cloud/SaaS. It's a story that's been told before, but the conviction is increasing … [...]

Oracle will be just fine. After 30 years in IT one thing that I have learned is that the biggest piece of crap with the best marketing always wins. That is why IBM and DB2 remain at the top of the heap.

Let me state the obvious... 1) Consumerization/Consumer Device Connectivity wrt. Oracle, is a Red-Herring Having got your attention, I need to indicate my definition/scope of consumerization. I am not talking CRM in the B2C space. So not a Seibel, mySAP, Salesforce.com, etc. product. But rather the first step... interconnectivity of individually owned devices (e.g. laptop devices, PDAs, cellular devices) to the organization's systems. So beyond the e-store or e-care portal of the 1990's. So we are back to revisiting the end client format. Remember the internal client format anlaysis of the 1990's ....fat (Windows with SMS) versus thin (CITRIX or brower)? Well, here we go again ... the current external client intelligent software is: windows (e.g. Nokia), android ( e.g. Samsung), RIM (Blackberry). Apple (iphone), etc. As well, while working for a wireless telco, I remember worrying about device presentation formats in the early 1990's (e.g. WAP enabled). So the systems impact would be the use of these devices and their related presentation layer. Access to the organization's systems would be required, whether consumerization was there or not. Type of data stored should be similar. Rather than using an organization's CSRs, the systems can now be directly accessed by the customer. (A 1990's concept). 2) Oracle is the not the bad guy In dealing with the selection of large "bet the business" software applications, be they CRM, ERP, document management, etc., the IT choice is commonly that of a lesser evil. However another issue, is that most organization tend to bite off more than they can chew. Slowly they are learning to minimize/mitigate the implementation risk. So the problem isn't the software, but the size/scope of the implementation. Another customer engagement example... a global consulting/audit firm was implementing an ERP and document management system at the same time. Each of which can be considered a "bet the business" situation. If one of the top 5 consulting firms doesn't understand the complexity issues, how can normal you or me understand? In an RFP scenario, often business desire trumps IT concerns (e.g. functionality versus technical concerns). This is often measured in business benefit (time to market, competitive advantage, business cost) excluding IT concerns (e.g. implementation risk, implementation timeline, IT cost, integration & support issues). Without a proper CxO mandated EA process, corporations will continue to fear the large applications, of which Oracle is now a major contributor. Fortunately with the market penetration of EA through concepts such as SOA and various EA frameworks such as FEAF, TOGAF, GS-Method, Zachman, E2AF, etc.; the Enterprise Architecture bandwagon is now viewed as a business & IT essential verus a luxury. Oracle is not the evil sister!!! I have dealt with other "bet the business" applications that were far worse. e.g. There is one major software provider, in the telecom space, that continuously makes promises that are never met; resulting in most implementor's revenue streams being impacted for several months. Yet, they continues to be the defacto billing standard in this space. Even though I evaluated SFDC back in the ealy 2000's, for a public sector customer, I feel that any cloud computing concept requires some additional thought in its design. As such, private versus public clouds will become more predominant, due to their ease of integratiuon with existing legacy bases. Even though IT departments are getting nailed with spending (business alignment, governance, etc.), one should not think that going with an ASP solution is cheaper. I remember a Gartner quote that the cost of integration is 9 times that of the intial software acquisition cost. Integration of public clouds to private clouds provide additional complexity to this integration issue (security, data synchronization, etc.). Cloud Computing feels like the pendulum swinging... back in the 1980's the fad was outsourcing your IT shop. In Canada, firms such as Canada Systems Group, EDS, DataCrown, Systems Dimesnions Ltd were quite prevalent. Then they disappeared. There are still remanants (e.g. IBM's SO, Cap Gemini), which are credible organizations,. As well, development outsourcers such as IBM SO/LGS, Tata Consultancy Services, etc. 3) Oracle Solutions will continue to thrive When evaluating CRM solutions, the CRM bible is provided by ISM. Until ISM excludes the Oracle products from their top 10, organizations will continue to pick these solutions. (Seibel & Peoplesoft). No other company has more than one product in this top 10 list. As an RFP evaluator, one of the key technical requirements is that of a providers continued viability. One check is the providers parallel revenue streams. Seems to me, that Oracle has more than one... RDBMS, ERP and CRM products.

[...] went public and doesn’t serve on the board. Still, you have to wonder: With Oracle is buying cloud vendors, and NetSuite is starting to compete on larger deals, will Nelson have his own Marc Benioff [...]

I think were all losing sight of the big picture. It's all about Engineered systems which Oracle will win hands down in the "Stack Wars". This is all about making the bad better. I welcome you to join us in dabate at: Ora Eng Systems http://twitter.com/ora_eng_systems

Good thinking and writing.

Too much of thinking leads to Analysis Paralysis. Do you think companies are blindly investing billions of dollars in buying other companies without any sense? If one can think 100 ways sitting outside a company then people who are really managing companies must be thinking 1000 ways and especially whose companies are nearer to their heart!

I am puzzled by your repetitive use of the word 'millenial'. We all know the word 'millennium' comes from the Latin words 'mille' and 'annus', and means a thousand years. The word 'millenial' comes from the Latin words 'mille' and 'anus', and means something else.

[...] space to bypass the need for credit cards. There’s even some talk of Oracle being in trouble from companies like Workday. And that’s just a few of [...]

I completely agree, software company can be bought, software is service rather than a product, in other words any software is just the culminated result of the people working on it.

Agree 100% on all these astute observations. Nothing revolutionary, but a very good synopsis of the marketplace. However, you do not need to lose your bullish outlook on Oracle. First, because Ellison has more tricks up his sleeve. Second, because companies and industries are slow and on different cycles when it comes to investing in technology, esp. technology thats replaces older systems. And finally, because we are in a recession and IT investment will take some time to reach pre-recession levels, and a long time to reach pre-2002 levels. So in short, Oracle has little to worry about, precisely for the reasons you mentioned: 1. They are the only provider of one sole integrated solution. 2. They already have a stanglehold on the market which they won't easily give up. 3. Ellision is aware of the developments and Oracle will improve and grow to accomodate them. Thank you for this excellent article. Roger

[...] software simply because there are no alternatives is ending fast. Large enterprises like IBM and Oracle, known for moving slowly along the path of progress, are in danger if they don’t start [...]

[...] Enterprise software tools and applications are way too complex to configure and use (Siebel or SAP anyone?), and take forever to be deployed or updated (how many corporate users are still on Win XP and/or I.E.6?). Nobody settles with using old and unnecessarily complex technology anymore. [...]

What an excellently written article – I nearly agreed with it for a while! But with my private iPad here on the Starbucks café table, here I am reviewing my Oracle employee data. I don’t think Larry Ellison should feel threatened. The future technology landscape will simply allow ERP systems like SAP and Oracle to be accessed in different ways and for their rich reservoir of data to be turned into much more meaningful information. The reason why ERP vendors are not doomed is because every business needs to have tight control of some quite complex things; its finances, its staffing, its physical assets, its customers and its supply chain. Every application that tries to do that will disappoint – not because the software is intrinsically bad, but because the requirement is intrinsically messy. For example, not very many people (millennial or otherwise) understand how to align a complex payroll schema with changing tax laws – and that’s a very small part of the total ERP system value. ERP vendors will continue to innovate and acquire to meet the business need. But the requirement is very complex, always changing and most technical answers will disappoint. As, will most sales promises and most CIOs tasked with delivering a simple solution, I’m afraid. Oracle and SAP may be threatened by new entrant ERP vendors and Open Source alternatives, but not by millennial skunk works or handheld display devices. My ICT budget is fairly representative and less than 4% is spent on end user devices. The big spend is on enterprise applications, enterprise infrastructure and enterprise integration. Its easy to get carried away with how commoditised smartphone access to the enterprise will change the core. It won’t, but it will make it more accessible. So, like Sarah, I am also convinced we are at the cusp of something exciting. My crystal ball though shows that handheld business intelligence apps will be the way that we finally start exploiting the information magic that’s sitting waiting for us inside our ERP behemoths.

Hey Sarah, I have to say this is the best article I have read on this subject by a long, long way! You hit it spot on! As someone who has made a living in this space for over 15 years I completely concur with every point you make here. I think however, that there is a great opportunity for a pure SaaS solution especially in the EPM space (The oracle-Hyperion and SAP-Business Objects categories). Unfortunately, with the mindset of today's tech entrepreneurs - and who can blame them - they probably would create their companies with the primary goal of getting acquired by these behemoths. What happens then? They get swallowed up and thier innovation stymied so the status quo can be retained for just a bit longer. See what happened when SAP bought the brilliant Xcelsius software as an example. As a standalone, I have no doubt they would have been at the forefront of Business Intelligence 2.0 with their wonderful visualization software available across all types of devices (tablets, smartphones etc.) Today it doesn't even run on Windows 7! Keep up the good work...will be subscribing to you from now on!

[...] articles appearing lately about changes to the Enterprise software landscape.  Here is one called Why Oracle May Really Be Doomed This Time and another one called The End of ERP. Both suggest that the era of the huge software installs is [...]