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Ariba, IBM deal shows emerging prominence of cloud ecosystem-based collaboration and commerce

By | June 1, 2010, 6:58am PDT

Summary: To encourage more ecommerce, the IBM-Ariba deal matches B2B buyers and sellers via LotusLive collaboration and social networking services, all through cloud delivery models.

The more you delve into how cloud computing can reshape business, the more clear becomes the importance of ecosystems.

No one cloud provider is likely to forecast and deliver all that any business needs or wants. More importantly, the role of the cloud provider is less about providing complete services than in enabling the ease and adaptability of acquiring, delivering and monetizing a variety of services in dynamic combination.

We’re now seeing that the marketplace of cloud-hosted APIs is rich and exploding. But it’s a self-service, organic market model that’s emerging– not a top-down ERP-like affair. And that is likely to make all the difference in terms of fast adoption.

Do providers like Apple, Google and Amazon produce the lion’s share of services themselves — or do they provide a fertile garden in which others create services and APIs that make the garden most valuable to all participants, inviting more guests, more development, more collaboration?

The organic model is also likely to repeat in ecosystems that allow buyers and sellers to align, and business processes between and among them to flourish. The business-to-business (B2B) commerce cloud is now being built. Recent acquisitions, like IBM’s buy of Cast Iron and intent to buy Sterling Commerce, point up the “business garden” goals of Big Blue. Cast Iron allows the cultivation of hybrid clouds, clouds of clouds and rich services integration. Sterling brings EDI-based networks into the fold.

IBM clearly likes the idea of playing match-maker between traditional and new business models.

IBM clearly likes the idea of playing match-maker between traditional and new business models. And this cloud garden party effect aligns perfectly with IBM’s tendency to avoid providing packaged business applications in favor of the platforms, middleware, process enablement and collaboration capabilities that support others’ discrete applications.

Last week’s announcement then of a cloud collaboration partnership between IBM and Ariba furthers the emerging prominence of cloud commerce ecosystems. To encourage more ecommerce, the IBM-Ariba deal matches B2B buyers and sellers via LotusLive collaboration and social networking services, all through cloud delivery models.

Conference capstone

The announcement came as a capstone to the Ariba Live 2010 conference in Orlando. [Disclosure: Ariba is a sponsor of BriefingsDirect podcasts.] I had fun at the conference spouting off on cloud benefits, and tweeting up some of the mainstage events under #AribaLive.

Ariba plans to integrate its Ariba Commerce Cloud with IBM LotusLive to help buyers and sellers communicate and share information more fluidly and effectively, leading to faster, more confident business decisions, the companies said. Ariba plans to integrate IBM’s LotusLive with Ariba Discovery, a web-based service that helps buyers and sellers find each other quickly and automatically helps match buyers’ requirements to seller capabilities.

Both Ariba and IBM are recognizing the power and huge opportunity of being at the center of cloud-based commerce. And being at the center means allowing the participants to do the actual driving, to enable the community to seek and find natural partners via social interactions. We’re likely to see the equivalent of app stores and social networks well up for B2B commerce, scaling both down and up, in the coming months and years.

What’s now good for consumer commerce is soon to be good for the business side of the equation. It’s simply the most efficient.

“The successful combination of LotusLive and the Ariba Commerce Cloud will provide such a matchmaking comfort zone in which networks of partners, suppliers and customers can easily work together across company boundaries to help do their jobs more efficiently and cost-effectively, and perhaps even develop lasting relationships,” said Sean Poulley, Vice President, IBM Cloud Collaboration, in a release.

As Ariba Chairman and CEO Bob Calderoni says, what’s now good for consumer commerce is soon to be good for the business side of the equation. It’s simply the most efficient.

After IBM set its sights on Sterling, I at first wondered if IBM and Ariba might find themselves competing. But last Wednesday’s deal shows that ecosystems rule. One-in-all cloud provider aspirants should take note. The way to making the network most valuable is by empowering the business (both sellers and buyers) to carve out what they want to do themselves.

IBM Lotus collaboration services plus Ariba’s cloud and commerce network services seem to be striving to reach the right balance between providing a fertile arena and then getting out of the gardeners’ way.

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Dana Gardner is president and principal analyst at Interarbor Solutions, an enterprise IT analysis, market research, and consulting firm.

Disclosure

Dana Gardner

Dana Gardner is president and principal analyst at Interarbor Solutions, LLC, a New Hampshire-based IT analysis and new media content production and consultancy firm that he founded in 2005. He produces a series of podcast/videocast/transcript/blog content shows, called BriefingsDirect[tm/sm], some of which are sponsored and which he blogs on. Such sponsored shows are declared individually as such and by what organization or company. When Dana blogs on ZDNet on companies that he does have, or has had, consulting and/or sponsorship relationships, he declares that in each blog entry. There is no connection between the negotiation of such sponsorships and the opinions expressed by Dana here on ZDNet. To date, the following organizations/companies have sponsored, or do sponsor, some BriefingsDirect content, or have consulting relationships with Dana: Active Endpoints Akamai Technologies Aster Data Systems BP Logix Business Technology Quarterly CA Compuware Electric Cloud Genuitec Gerson Lehrman Group Greenplum Hewlett-Packard iTKO JustSystems North America, Inc. Kapow Technologies LogLogic Nexaweb Technologies, Inc. The Open Group Paglo Panda Security Platform Computing Progress Software rPath Sailpoint Splunk TIBCO Software Weblayers Workday WSO2 ZDNet As a matter of CNET Networks and Interarbor Solutions policies, when Dana covers an organization that is also a sponsor of a BriefingsDirect-produced podcast, videocast or any other content, a disclosure will be included with the coverage. Updated (1/4/2010): Instead of providing a disclosure on just those editorials (blog posts, etc.) that intersect the above listed companies, we have changed the policy to include a link to this full disclosure at the end of every one of Dana's blog posts. In the case of audio or video-based coverage, such disclosures will be provided within the editorial content itself.

Biography

Dana Gardner

Dana Gardner is president and principal analyst at Interarbor Solutions, an enterprise IT analysis, market research, and consulting firm. Gardner, a leading identifier of software and cloud productivity trends and new IT business growth opportunities, honed his skills and refined his insights as an industry analyst, pundit, and news editor covering the emerging software development and enterprise infrastructure arenas for the last 18 years.

Gardner tracks and analyzes a critical set of enterprise software technologies and business development issues: Cloud computing, SOA, business process management, business intelligence, next-generation data centers, and application lifecycle optimization. His specific interests include Enterprise 2.0 and social media, cloud standards and security, as well as integrated marketing technologies and techniques.

Gardner is a former senior analyst at Yankee Group and Aberdeen Group, and a former editor-at-large and founding online news editor at InfoWorld. He is a former news editor at IDG News Service, Digital News & Review, and Design News.

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RE: Ariba, IBM deal shows emerging prominence of cloud ecosystem-based collaboration and commerce
Phentermine 22nd Aug
@gaberdiye03

The following Phentermine isn't i'm pathetic? You consider this is.
Its great to finally see that a company is out there actively trying to eliminate my largest pet-peeve about business software in the Cloud. It is this kind of vision that will truly make the collection of all the tools that we use today (both Cloud & On-premise) more powerful then stand-alone options. This will drive open standards, domestic & international commerce, and innovation further then any of us could ever imagine. Kudos to IBM's LotusLive and Ariba for breaking down the barriers in this web 2.0 world!
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Message has been deleted.
gaberdiye03 Updated - 23rd Jun
NetApp said today that it is enhancing its partner program by integrating service providers into its offerings, a move that?s intended to help its resellers help their customers move to a cloud-computing environment.
Enterprise data centers today are increasingly evolving to a hybrid model that blends traditional in-house IT with application and infrastructure services delivered externally via the cloud.
supports best-of-breed providers as they build and deploy enterprise-class cloud services on NetApp. It offers a range of go-to-market benefits to connect them with enterprise customers.
For the service providers, it means they can build their cloud offerings on NetApp storage and data management products and access NetApp?s technical, service, marketing and sales tools.
For resellers, it means being able to offer cloud services without having to invest in the infrastructure and resources to make that offering.
To illustrate the power of the partnerships, Rackspace - a NetApp partner - this week announced a distribution agreement with Ingram Micro ?to bring managed hosting and cloud computing offerings to the distributor?s growing base of North American channel partners through the new Seismic Cloud Conduit Program.?
Calendar confusion aside, here?s what Microsoft unveiled today at the SMX Advanced show in Seattle.
There?s a new subsite going live today on Bing ? bing.com/social ? that Microsoft is calling ?the first search experience integrating the full Facebook firehose with non-pages content.
(Twitter real time content is going to be integrated there, too.) The new social search subsite will detect trending topics and surface top links that are being shared, without making non-Fan-Page content traceable back to an individual user.
Microsoft also is updating its Bing Webmaster Tools later this summer.
Microsoft is calling the update a re-engineering from the ground up, and is promising to offer more data, better charting and an improved user interface.
The tools will remain Web-based and make use of Silverlight. They will help webmasters monitor performance in crawl, index and traffic.
When federal regulators in Washington approved Googles acquisition of AdMob, they did so largely because Apples arrival in the game - with its new iAds business - created a competitive environment in mobile advertising. According to a Financial Times report, regulators are interested in the change of terms that Apple has imposed on developers regarding advertising on apps developed for its ipad bag blog sutudeg education news and products.
But just a few weeks later, regulators are reportedly eyeing the mobile ad business again - but this time it?s Apple on the hot seat.
@gaberdiye03

The following Phentermine isn't i'm pathetic? You consider this is.
@sirotans@... What he's saying is having the source makes attacks faster to spread, what he isn't saying is that THERE ARE MORE ATTACKS POSSIBLE.

It's sort of tangential to the 'is it safer' question.

If there are far fewer successful attacks because the code is reviewed better. or the attacks are far more minor, then it follows that open source is better, even if attacks take 3 days less to spread.
This will drive open standards, domestic & international commerce, and innovation further then any of us could ever imagine. k l m

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