ie8 fix
madison

So long SaaS, welcome webware

By | March 27, 2007, 4:19am PDT

Summary: I’ve always hated the SaaS acronym and I’m not alone. Coghead’s Paul McNamara points out that radio isn’t called Phaas - Phonograph as a Service. We should choose a name that looks ahead to the future rather than harking back to what it replaces.

My dislike for the SaaS acronym is long-held. For a while I tried to avoid using it on this blog, but in the end it became too established to resist. I still hate it though, and I'm not alone. Paul McNamara has just posted a great analogy on the Coghead blog to illustrate what's so wrong with it (I liked it so much I borrowed his picture, below):

"We don't call radio 'Phonograph as a Service' (PhaaS) – although if today's 'visionaries' were alive in the '20s maybe we would have. It's true that radio lets you listen to phonograph records over the air. But that’s where the similarity ends. Radio is a whole lot more."

Say no to SaaS logo He's so right. Describing this amazing new capability in terms of what it replaces is as visionary as calling the automobile a 'horseless carriage' — or as McNamara says, "the Horse and Buggy as a Self Propelled Vehicle (HaBaaSPV)". It's backward-looking and it encourages vendors with no understanding or imagination to come out with useless SoSaaS offerings. McNamara continues (my emphasis added):

"When technology changes the patterns of consumption in a fundamental way, then something very important is happening. A new era is dawning and new terminology is needed. Words matter.

"People are able to do things with web-based applications and information services that they simply can't do with software that's installed on a local machines or running in a client-server environment. And because of this, web-based applications will reach market segments that have been beyond the reach of software apps."

McNamara ends by making a pitch for the term 'webware', which is currently being popularized by a CNET site run by Rafe Needleman (disclosure: CNET is ZDNet's parent company). McNamara says:

"Webware emphasizes that web-based applications and information services are fundamentally different from software applications. And it signals a significant demarcation in the evolution of technology. Whereas the term 'SaaS' wrongly places its emphasis on the very technology component (software) that users of web-based applications no longer need to think about. Webware is a revolutionary new approach to satisfying information needs."

A few years ago, webware wouldn't have been acceptable as a term because the Web wasn't taken seriously as a business platform. Webware had too many connotations of lightweight eyecandy. But now I think people are starting to have a different perception and maybe webware will stick as the term. One thing is sure: SaaS is a throwback to the past and will only survive for as long as software vendors can convince themselves that their future doesn't lie on the Web. I give it a couple years at most.

Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily e-mail newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.

Topics

Since 1998, Phil Wainewright has been a thought leader in cloud computing as a blogger, analyst and consultant.

Disclosure

Phil Wainewright

Phil Wainewright's work as an independent consultant brings him into direct or indirect business relationships with several of the companies that he writes about, or their competitors. Phil is committed to maintaining the independent and opinionated stance that his writings are well known for and does not enter into contracts that would limit his freedom of expression in any way. However it is important in the interests of full disclosure to inform readers of those relationships so they can form their own judgement.

Read the complete list of Phil's relationships.

Biography

Phil Wainewright

Since 1998, Phil Wainewright has been a thought leader in cloud computing as a blogger, analyst and consultant. He founded pioneering website ASPnews.com, and later Loosely Coupled, which covered enterprise adoption of web services and SOA. As CEO of strategic consulting group Procullux Ventures, he has developed an evaluation framework to help ISVs and enterprises select cloud platforms, and advises US and European vendors on messaging, positioning and go-to-market. His newest role as an industry advocate is vice-president of EuroCloud.

6
Comments

Join the conversation!

Just In

Throwback to the past?
steven@... 22nd Apr 2007
While I agree that SaaS is a cumbersome acronym, there is also a certain amount of marketing intelligence behind it. Like it or not, desktop software isn't a thing of the past...yet. As such, using a name that combines an old term with a new concept just makes good sense. Consumers are slow to adopt radically new concepts in technology (usually because they don't understand them), but if you can liken those new technologies to "a new approach to current technology", they can understand the concept and adoption is much easier. A good example is the term "electronic mail" or "e-mail". If it had been called "network messaging" or something of that nature, the average consumer wouldn't have understood it's meaning. But "electronic mail" easily conveys the concept of a letter sent electronically. McNamara's example of the "Horseless Carriage" takes this one step further (which is the point I am trying to get to here). The term "Horseless Carriage" referred not only to the fundamentally different "automobile", but also to horse carriages that were "repackaged" with engines. If you carry that over to the term "SaaS" then it could be defined as any software that is delivered on-demand as a service over the web. This would eliminate the need for your term "SoSaaS" and would allow a more specific term ("webware") to be used for software specifically architected to be delivered via the web.
0 Votes
+ -
SaaS is Dead
mlombard@... 28th Mar 2007
I agree SaaS should fade into the distance and the more descriptive name Webware, should be the new tag for this product type. It just makes more sense!
0 Votes
+ -
A Challenge with the Nomenclature
knowledgesum 28th Mar 2007
One of the issues is the lack of consensus on the true meaning of the term ?SaaS.?

Webware may be an interesting approach but it still does not clarify what is really behind the term. Also, to consumer, the term webware may associate with ?freeware? or ?adware.? While there are instances of the former being true, association with the latter may not be so good. Additionally, webware implies a very strong connection to the Internet which, which, based on some recent developments, may no longer be the case for the foreseeable future.

Something that incorporates ?On-demand? may be a better option. On demand describes better the pull nature of services where users can choose to use some services as they need.
0 Votes
+ -
Webware
mmankow 29th Mar 2007
Love the term Webware and hate the term SaaS, but does Webare run on a Webtop?
0 Votes
+ -
Webware & mashware
joost.bekel@... 3rd Apr 2007
Hi Phil, really like this term 'webware'. Guess there are very interesting things going on in this area. Seems like Joe McKendrik (http://blogs.zdnet.com/service-oriented/?p=832) and Dave Linthicum (http://weblog.infoworld.com/realworldsoa/archives/2007/03/is_mashware_the.html) are moving in the same area from a different perspective, with the term 'mashware'.
0 Votes
+ -
Webware!
rafe@... 8th Apr 2007
Glad to see this group discussing the term, "Webware." We see it as a good descriptive term that consumers can easily understand. The way I explain it is simple: "It's software. On the Web. Webware." People get it.

-Rafe (editor of Webware.com)
0 Votes
+ -
Throwback to the past?
steven@... 22nd Apr 2007
While I agree that SaaS is a cumbersome acronym, there is also a certain amount of marketing intelligence behind it. Like it or not, desktop software isn't a thing of the past...yet. As such, using a name that combines an old term with a new concept just makes good sense. Consumers are slow to adopt radically new concepts in technology (usually because they don't understand them), but if you can liken those new technologies to "a new approach to current technology", they can understand the concept and adoption is much easier. A good example is the term "electronic mail" or "e-mail". If it had been called "network messaging" or something of that nature, the average consumer wouldn't have understood it's meaning. But "electronic mail" easily conveys the concept of a letter sent electronically. McNamara's example of the "Horseless Carriage" takes this one step further (which is the point I am trying to get to here). The term "Horseless Carriage" referred not only to the fundamentally different "automobile", but also to horse carriages that were "repackaged" with engines. If you carry that over to the term "SaaS" then it could be defined as any software that is delivered on-demand as a service over the web. This would eliminate the need for your term "SoSaaS" and would allow a more specific term ("webware") to be used for software specifically architected to be delivered via the web.

Join the conversation!

Formatting +
BB Codes - Note: HTML is not supported in forums
  • [b] Bold [/b]
  • [i] Italic [/i]
  • [u] Underline [/u]
  • [s] Strikethrough [/s]
  • [q] "Quote" [/q]
  • [ol][*] 1. Ordered List [/ol]
  • [ul][*] · Unordered List [/ul]
  • [pre] Preformat [/pre]
  • [quote] "Blockquote" [/quote]
ie8 fix
Click Here
ie8 fix

The best of ZDNet, delivered

ZDNet Newsletters

Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox

Facebook Activity

White Papers, Webcasts, & Resources
ie8 fix
ie8 fix