| 41. |
SAP Defies Economic Slowdown, For Now (4 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Feb 13, 2001 Abstract : In January, SAP announced upbeat results for Q4 2000, in contrast to the current market slowdown. However, 8% license revenue growth in North America is much less compared to recent reports from its direct competitors, indicating a possible loss of market share and the fact that not all troubles have been left behind.
Type: Article
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| 42. |
SAP Becoming a (Legal) Polygamist (3 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Jul 21, 2000 Abstract : SAPMarkets, the US dot-com spin-off of German ERP leader SAP AG, is partnering with Commerce One to build and sell software for online trading exchanges. This announcement comes only a month after its partnership with Nortel Networks for CRM product offering. SAP, owing to this alliance, has a chance to put content behind its extensive recent advertising campaign for mySAP.
Type: Article
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| 43. |
SAP for Chemicals: A Packaged Solution for Mid-market Companies (4 Pages)
by Olin Thompson and PJ Jakovljevic
May 30, 2006 Abstract : Packaged solutions for the chemicals industry are available from SAP and selected partners. Still, given a number of other viable solutions, prospective users will have to decide whether SAP would indeed be the best solution without the packaged option.
Type: Article
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| 44. |
SAP Gives Up, Declares Victory. Again. (3 Pages)
by D. Geller
Jul 5, 2000 Abstract : Commerce One and SAP announced that Commerce One will supply the marketplace infrastructure behind the mySAP portal.
Type: Article
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| 45. |
Scala and Microsoft Become (Not So) Strange CRM Bedfellows Part Two: Market Impact Continued (4 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Aug 29, 2003 Abstract : Microsoft's foray into the CRM arena has not been a bed of roses, despite its indisputably large marketing muscle and R&D investment, its strong channel, traditionally attractive pricing policies, and the aura and experience within the market segment. Microsoft CRM remains both a threat and an opportunity for the most nimble mid-market CRM vendors. Microsoft’s entry with CRM evangelism through an array of seminars nationwide has bolstered the market’s awareness of the need for CRM applications.
Type: Article
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| 46. |
CRM is Busting Out Of Its Britches: Operational, Analytical, and Collaborative CRM Are Born (3 Pages)
by Randy Garland
Aug 27, 2001 Abstract : Back in the early 90’s, ‘CRM’ wasn’t even a trendy acronym. You had a few players thinking beyond 'stovepipe' enterprise applications, but not much beyond. Fast forward to 2001. CRM has gotten fat, and the fatter it gets, it becomes more difficult to understand, more expensive to buy, more difficult to implement, and less likely to satisfy - either buyers of the software or their customers. Keep your eye on the ball: your customers, and your business.
Type: Article
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| 47. |
SAP sets up Apparel and Footwear team (3 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Oct 5, 1999 Abstract : At the end of September, SAP AG's U.S. subsidiary set up a dedicated team of technical consultants to assist apparel and footwear makers installing SAP R/3. The move follows a series of unsuccessful R/3 implementations that forced some SAP apparel and footwear customers to put on hold or completely abandon their R/3 projects.
Type: Article
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| 48. |
Delivering the Business Value of Automating Business Processes to Small and Medium Enterprise by SAP
Abstract : Enterprises of all sizes today face common problems dealing with handling increasing business complexity while reducing costs. The solution continues to be the automation of business processes. SAP is an established leader in addressing the needs of large enterprises. Building on that performance and identified best practices, SAP built and launched SAP Business One. SAP Business One was designed to offer small and medium businesses the same business streamlining and efficiencies at a scale and scope appropriate to their needs. IDC recently interviewed a number of companies that have successfully deployed SAP Business One. The purpose of our interviews was to determine what impact the software had on their productivity and cost reduction.
Type: White Paper
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| 49. |
SAP Weaves Microsoft .NET And IBM WebSphere Into Its ESA Tapestry Part Two: Market Impact (6 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Mar 6, 2003 Abstract : With SAP NetWeaver and the Enterprise Services Architecture, SAP will have delivered the blueprint for turning Web services from a concept into business reality of uniting hardware, information, and software platforms & applications.
Type: Article
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| 50. |
SAP for Chemicals Functionality (3 Pages)
by Olin Thompson and PJ Jakovljevic
May 31, 2006 Abstract : SAP has been delivering on its chemicals industry strategy by expanding its capabilities for manufacturing and supply chain management, broadening its composite package applications in areas such as emissions management, pricing management, and manufacturing dashboards, and focusing on mid-market companies.
Type: Article
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