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The Changing Software Partner Ecosystem

By | January 26, 2010, 8:41pm PST

Summary: Resellers of SMB ERP products and other application software partners are experiencing a changing solutions world. Presenters at the Progress Software Global Partner Conference gave some great insights into these changes.

(aka When SaaS Hits the Channel)

If you are an Application Software Partner or Application Partner Reseller, your world is changing.

The days when you could walk into a prospect and help them automate a previously manual process are effectively done. You also can’t find many prospects left that have the capital budget or appetite to take on another on-premise solution. If you’re an old school partner, you’re probably finding it hard to find prospects let alone prospects who would actually become customers.

Why?

There are several reasons. First, the simple automation jobs are gone. They’ve been done to death. Second, any subsequent re-automation effort you might want to pitch will only deliver incremental benefits that are small. These small benefits are unfortunately dwarfed by your still high implementation costs. If your product still requires a lot of hardware, a lot of implementation services, a lot of training, etc. like the Version One technologies did, the prospect is not and cannot be interested. They can’t afford to blow a lot of money on something that delivers so little value. They’d rather use that capital to buy inventory, open a new plant, forestall layoffs, hire a key person, etc. At least those capital uses could deliver value.

Face it – if you’re an old school partner that’s essentially trying to sell the same, or modestly refreshed, solution of 10 years ago, you’re no longer market relevant. You’re passé. You’re also finished.

The prospect today wants the following:

- a much, much better value proposition
- solutions that take far less time to implement
- solutions that cost about 1/3rd to implement
- solutions that are tailor-made for their industry
- solutions that are implemented by experts not green-beans

This week, I’ve had the pleasure of attending some of the Progress Software Partner Conference 2010 sessions (Full disclosure: Progress invited me to speak in a couple of breakout sessions. Progress agreed to cover my travel costs for this event). I found a panel with three Progress partners to be particularly illuminating.

Each partner described the transitions they’ve been making over the last few years. One partner described how their two key verticals were undergoing massive, negative economic turmoil. This partner knew his prospects couldn’t afford a traditional on-premise solution at this time and maybe not for years to come. Instead, this partner re-tooled their applications to be SaaS-based and watched their sales actually grow 300%. Whether this sales jump was on a small or large base is immaterial. What is impressive is that this firm actually had sales increases in two of the most distressed verticals in this country.

Another partner described how their products had reached a measure of saturation in their home country. Single country solutions are as outmoded as on-premise solutions as virtually any firm, mine included, is a multi-national. In fact, I stopped at my bank yesterday morning simply because one of my clients needed more information to pay my firm electronically from the Netherlands. Even the smallest firms are global and any application partner whose solution isn’t global is no longer market relevant. The partner went on to describe how they used a number of development tools to make their solution a global product today. Interestingly, this partner now has resellers pushing his products that are built on Progress’ tools. When application partners get other partners to sell their products, you know the market is changing.

The third partner is in the early stages of their transformation. That said, they did have some interesting pointers. They made it clear that these decisions are real, strategic business decisions. Application partners must model the economics of the new solutions to determine the needed pricing that SaaS products must deliver. To do that, a partner must absolutely know what their internal costs are.

In all, there are some really interesting things happening in the world of application software partners. A couple of years ago, I saw some NetSuite partners developing some incredible applications using the NS-BOS platform. Platform-as-a-Suite (PaaS) is something that application partners at NetSuite, SalesForce.com and other firms are using to build second generation partner businesses. Progress has had SaaS (Software-as-a-Service) tools for about ten years (about the same time as SalesForce.com). The second generation vendors are not reselling the products of another vendor. They’re making their own applications on powerful platforms.

Application partners not only must go global, they also need to go up-market. With many of the large ERP vendors pedaling their wares down-market, smaller vendors need to go where the big money is. To do so successfully, they need products that are fast to build (i.e., built with platform tools), very vertically focused (i.e., not generic products that require lots of tailoring/customization), sold by vertical experts, built to operate in a low capital intensive world (i.e., SaaS) and contain lots of deep differentiating capabilities.

It’s definitely a different world.

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Topics

Brian is currently CEO of TechVentive, a strategy consultancy serving technology providers and other firms. He is also a research analyst with Vital Analysis.

Disclosure

Brian Sommer

I am co-owner of TechVentive, Inc. The company has been engaged on numerous consulting engagements, often for technology firms, service firms and litigators. As a general rule, I do not write about current clients of TechVentive. Should that occur, I will note this in blogs. Readers should assume that I have had client relationships with many ERP and other technology providers. Some of these relationships may be quite small and short-lived while others more significant. One of TechVentive's business units publishes research reports about technology providers. As a result, this business receives small amounts of revenues from a wide variety of software firms, software buyers and others when they purchase copies of reports. Some firms do secure reprint rights to these reports. None of these purchases, individually, represents a significant amount of total revenue for me and the nature of it is hard to predict where it will come from. I also provide some marketing strategy and/or market segmentation work for software firms as I have developed a unique database that segments the largest 4000+ technology buyers in the world. Many technology firms periodically engage me for unique views into this database for future marketing campaigns. I do not blog about these efforts and do not blog about client firms while they are active clients unless some pressing news story erupts. If that event occurs, I will indicate any perceived or real conflict of interest. Occasionally, I will develop unique intellectual property pieces for technology or service providers. If I should blog about a vendor with whom I have recently developed a special information product, I will note this in a blog to avoid any appearance, real or unintended, of bias. For the most part, I have no investments in technology firms. While I've been offered friends and family stock and other inducements in the past, I have steadfastly refused these. I used to be a partner with Andersen Consulting and had no ownership stake in the firm for many years. I frequently refer to this in my blogs and do not hide my prior association with the company. I did purchase a few shares of Accenture and Cognizant stock in late - 2008. I have sold some of those positions in late 2009. Readers should assume that most software conferences that I write about involved some measure of fees waived and/or travel reimbursement. I do not charge vendors to attend these events nor will I accept payment for same. I do get reimbursed for many speaking engagements. I generally note at the end of blogs whether the vendor reimbursed me for travel expenses. Generally, this includes airfare and hotel. I do not request, receive nor accept travel perks such as first class airfare.

Biography

Brian Sommer

Brian is in a unique position to diagnosis the winners and the losers in technology and services. He was the longest running (10 years) and most senior director of Andersen Consulting's (now Accenture's) global Software Intelligence unit - a position that required him to pick the best possible software solutions for hundreds of clients globally. He advised the firm on ERP software market forecasts and helped establish manpower planning estimates by vendor for deployment globally.

Brian continues to remain close to technology buyers and sellers. When he left Andersen Consulting, he co-created a dot-com with blogger and former arch-enemy at Price Waterhouse, Vinnie Mirchandani. That firm helped broker efficient services contracts between software buyers and systems integrators. Since then, he's created TechVentive, Inc. - a company that helps technology firms better understand their markets - and Vital Analysis - the research and publishing arm of TechVentive.

Brian still travels the world and publishes an impressive number of articles, research reports and blog posts annually to help software and services buyers make better business decisions. He can be reached at: brian @ vitalanalysis.com

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