SAP’s proposed purchase of
Business Objects for €4.8bn
(£3.3bn) complements the German application giant’s strategy to expand into the
lower end of the corporate market.
SAP has already spent more than $500m (£245m) on the launch of its ByDesign
service for small and medium-sized companies.
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The purchase of Business Objects – which has a strong customer base among
smaller firms and an established software-on-demand strategy – is a sensible
addition, according to Ovum analyst David Bradshaw.
“SAP has to build up the on-demand market and Business Objects has been a
close partner with Salesforce.com, which is strong in this area,” he said.
But the company will need to work hard to secure its position in an
increasingly competitive arena.
“SAP is late to the on-demand market and will have to have a clear suite of
linked-up services to be successful,” said Bradshaw.
The Business Objects takeover is a departure from SAP’s usual policy of
organic growth only – that is, relying on sales rather than acquisitions. As
such, it may be seen as a response to rival Oracle’s recent $20bn (£9.8bn)
spending spree, including customer relationship management supplier Siebel.
But SAP chief executive Henning Kagermann says the deal is part of plans laid
as long ago as 2005. “The acquisition is in keeping with our strategy to double
our market by 2010,” he said.
“We will accelerate growth in the business user segment, while complementing
the company’s organic growth strategy.”
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