ZDNet’s SaaS (Tang) epiphany
May 18, 2006
David Berlind on the ‘Between the Lines’ blog at ZDNet tells of the unique pleasure of sitting next to SuccessFactors’ own Marty Pitkow (pictured) on an airplane the other day. And believe it or not, Marty helped him experience a SaaS epiphany.
How, you might ask? Well as it turns out, David was on the way back from the Gartner Symposium where one analyst recommended (link to another ZdNet article) that it was time for companies to “not own, but rent” applications – among some other visionary proclamations. And so David had SaaS on the brain – but talking to Marty drove the point home.
Perhaps not surprisingly, I agree with David’s conclusion – that SaaS is ultimately a no brainer. Here’s an excerpt:
Think about it. How many businesses need the headaches of:
- downloading, installing, configuring and making operational a mission critical application
- updating that application every time some important patch or update becomes available
- figuring out how to Webify that application so that it can be used from just about anywhere
- backing up the data on a regular basis
- worrying about availability, redundancy, and other issues related to fault-tolerance
- providing end-user support
More IT people. More hardware (or hosting). More costs. More headaches. And these are benefits that can accrue to businesses of any size.
Enough said. It’s worth a read, if only because he figured out a way to draw an analogy between SaaS and Tang. That’s right, Tang.
Tags: HR, SaaS, Software as a Service, SuccessFactors News
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2 Responses to “ZDNet’s SaaS (Tang) epiphany”
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Max, hate to disagree with you, but I think what SaaS offers and especially what SuccessFactors offers is so much more than those bullets.
You can basically get those bullets from any ASP/hosting provider. However, SaaS vendors like SuccessFactors are blurring the lines between HRIT support and business partnership.
I have a whole SaaS series next week. I look forward to your input.
That’s wierd. I sat next to Marty recently on a 3-card poker table and I learned that there actually is a gambler out there with worse luck than me!