Go Back   Corporate Factors - Business & Venture Capital Forums > Top 10 Venture Capitalists / Blogs and News Feeds > Blogs > Venture Blog


Venture Blog http://ventureblog.com/

David is a General Partner at August Capital where he invests in early stage software, infrastructure and Internet related companies. Prior to joining August Capital, David was a corporate and licensing attorney who represented and advised numerous Internet and enterprise software startups. David works with or has worked with such companies as Yahoo, Six Apart, Evite, Tickle, PayCycle, Ofoto, When.com, WhoWhere?, DoneRight and Sonique. David has taught Computer Music at Stanford, legal writing at Harvard Law School and teaches Intellectual Property and Business at Stanford's Graduate School of Business. David has written for the Journal of Law and Business, The Harvard Journal of Law and Technology and was a founding editor of and frequent contributor to Actual Malice, Stanford's short-lived satire magazine. David's musings on life can be found on SaysMe, his personal blog. He is also a contributor to the TEDblog.


Discussion On Enterprise Software is Not Dead Yet

My posts of late have reminded me of the scene in Monty Python's "Holy Grail" on Enterprise Software is Not Dead Yet in the Venture Blog at Corporate Factors - Business & Venture Capital Forums
Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 06-25-2009, 01:42 AM   #1 (permalink)
Administrator
 
Activity Longevity
0/20 15/20
Today Posts
0/0 ssssss100
Points: 2,590
Default Enterprise Software is Not Dead Yet

My posts of late have reminded me of the scene in Monty Python's "Holy Grail" when, despite being left as rubbish on the side of the road, the old man insists "I'm not dead yet." That's my mantra -- not dead yet. It may be a stretch to say "I feel like dancing." But we are definitely not dead yet.

In the tech world, the sector that has perhaps been most left for dead is enterprise software. For some time now the pundits have been declaring enterprise software moribund -- they argue that everything worth building has been built. And what little room there may be for innovation, will best be served by the existing behemoths, SAP and Oracle. Bring on the recession and, the conventional wisdom goes, those of us who have invested in enterprise software might as well close down the companies and recover what little cash we can.

I'm here to tell you that the pundits are wrong. Enterprise software is alive and well. But like all other things in this recession, only the truly strong will survive. And strong is pretty easily defined in this economy -- the strongest enterprise software companies deliver their customers the biggest Return on Investment.

For most companies today, ROI will be measured in total cost savings. Can I cut fat out of my technology budget? In many instances, the heros of the cost savings battle will be SaaS companies. By now it has been well documented that Software as a Service delivers significant savings in Total Cost of Ownership, let alone cheaper annual licenses. The overall savings are so great that enterprises are increasingly looking to SaaS companies to replace enterprise solutions that they were previously hosting behind the fire wall. And, while it is no insignificant task to grow an enterprise SaaS customer base, once that customer base has reached critical mass, it is the gift that keeps on giving -- each month's revenue starts with the previous month's revenue and grows from there. [1] Look no further than Salesforce, Workday, and the likes -- Strong SaaS solutions are going to continue to prosper in this economy.

SaaS companies aren't the only enterprise software solutions out there delivering great cost savings. There are a number of next-gen enterprise applications that do more for less. The sales pitch is easy -- for fewer dollars than you are paying for maintenance on your existing enterprise stack, you can purchase a modern application designed to address your problems using up to date technology. Take my portfolio company Splunk, for example. Rather than continue to pay the likes of SAP, Oracle, HP huge amounts of money for enterprise management, debugging, compliance and search tools, Splunk will deliver greater functionality and flexibility for a fraction of the cost. So it is not surprising that, despite the economic challenges enterprises are facing, Splunk's user-base and revenues are growing significantly quarter over quarter. The same story applies to the open source stack as well (mySQL, XenSource, etc. etc.). Companies will pay to save money. Even in a recession, those enterprise solutions that can credibly argue that they will save you more than they cost will continue to grow.

There is one other class of enterprise software that will fare well through the recession. That software is also sold with an ROI story. But the ROI isn't delivered with cost savings. The ROI is delivered with increased productivity. It's a hard story to sell in a down economy, but the best companies will manage to do it nonetheless. There is no question that those companies that continue to invest in technology through the down cycles will disproportionately benefit when the pendulum swings back the other way. Perhaps the easiest version of the productivity story is Price Optimization. If you can credibly argue that a customer's increased profits will exceed the price it will pay for the software, purchasing the software should be a no brainer. Supply Chain and CRM software were sold on a similar efficiency story in the late 90's and early 2000's and, in many instances, continue to drive significant ROI for those customers who adopted them early.

I don't want to sound too Pollyanna-ish as I continue to bang the drum for technology in this economic downturn. But the best companies will assuredly survive and thrive. And that goes for enterprise software as much as anything. I have no doubt that there are still huge enterprise software companies to be built and I am as anxious as ever to fund them.


[1] It is possible for a SaaS company's revenue to go down month over month, but that would require that its attrition rate be greater than its acquisition rate. For the best SaaS solutions, that is quite unlikely (given TCO, ease of use, etc.) -- they have proven wonderfully sticky. The biggest challenge for SaaS solutions is unquestionably user growth. Once acquired, SaaS customers tend to be in for the long haul.



More...
ADMIN is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Asset Protection - Creditor Proofing
Upcoming Events
No events scheduled in
the next 30 days.
Nav
- Home
- Forums
- VC Blogs
- Register
- Marketplace
- Advertise
- Our Business Boggers
- Videos
- Articles
- Members List
- Search
- Today's Posts
- Mark Forums Read
Register! - Join Now - It's Free

Registration at Corporatefactors.net is completely free and takes only a few seconds. By registering you'll gain:

- Full Posting Privileges.
- Access to Private Messaging.
- Optional Email Notification.
- Ability to Fully Participate.



To Register now click here

Need Business Services?

Starting A Business here

Financing & Venture Capital here

Buying or Selling a Business here

Marketing Solutions here

Advertising Solutions here

Website Solutions here

Corporate Intelligence here

Collection & Bad Debt Solutions here

Due Diligence here

Our Sponsors


Click here to inquire about advertising
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v3.1.0

Sponsored links


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:47 PM.


vBCredits v1.4 Copyright ©2007 - 2008, PixelFX Studios
Copyright ? 2006-2007 Corporate Factors Business Consultants Inc. All rights reserved.Ad Management by RedTyger

Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.2.0