Born and raised in Nebraska, Zach Nelson began his career in IT shortly after
graduating from Stanford University. After a series of senior executive roles at
leading IT vendors such as Oracle and Sun, he joined on-demand software
specialist NetSuite as
chief executive officer in 2002.
Under his tenure, the company has seen rapid expansion, with Nelson last year
overseeing one of the biggest IPOs in recent years.
NetSuite is riding a growing wave of interest in utility computing, a concept
that first caught Nelson’s imagination after he joined McAfee in 1996. One of
his key tasks was to enable the delivery of the vendor’s security software over
the internet. His relationship with on-demand software deepened during a brief
stint at peer-to-peer network security services specialist MyCIO.com.
But it was not long before Nelson wanted a new role, one that would challenge
him and the industry. “It was very clear to me that SaaS [software as a service]
was the future,” he recalls. “It is easy to deliver, and easy to manage. It
really was a no-brainer.”
However, there were other criteria to consider when it came to finding such a
position. “NetLedger [as NetSuite was then called] was a suite of applications
that could be delivered over the internet, but it also had good financial
backing from Oracle chief Larry
Ellison, who is the company’s majority shareholder. Importantly, it was also
very close to my home just three miles away. This is the job I was born to
have,” says Nelson.
However, others were less sure. “I spoke to a lot of people before I took the
job. Most of them said that businesses would not choose to buy their software
over the internet. But I knew Larry, and I knew he was serious about it,” he
explains.
“In those days there were a lot of SaaS startups, but their venture capitalist
money dried up. It takes five years and approximately $50m to $60m to build a
company, and we knew that Larry would fund us.”
This backing has been key to the company’s impressive growth. In 2001, the
company recorded annual revenues of £1.5m, while last year revenues stood at
£54m, a figure that Nelson described at the time as “pretty amazing”.
But this kind of growth was never taken for granted. Nelson recalls that
there was a lot of scepticism about the on-demand model in the early days, with
many customers finding it hard to come to terms with the idea of losing control
of their systems.
“Customers in 2001 were concerned about the security of their data, they
didn’t like the idea of having their applications hosted off site. But attitudes
have evolved over time,” Nelson says. “Consumers do everything online, including
managing their own security, and when they know that [through NetSuite] they get
a FTSE 100-grade datacentre for just $99 a month, they see it as a big positive.
You can open a browser window and run your business. A lot of companies want
their data out there in the cloud.”
But customer concern about control was not the only hurdle NetSuite had to
clear in the early days. “We were pushing two rocks up a hill. One that read
SaaS, and one for integrated enterprise suites,” Nelson says, referring to
doubts some firms had about NetSuite’s all-in-one enterprise apps system.
“Because of their historical buying patterns, customers thought they needed
different pieces, but it is just a question of education. They can run their
businesses on a single application,” he says.
Nelson believes that too often IT managers can get bogged down in details and
information that they do not need to worry about. “They know what software they
are running and what version. They really don’t need to worry about that sort of
stuff,” he says.
But as the SaaS market has matured, so firms’ various qualms about the model
have faded. “The new business leaders have been brought up on computers and the
internet. They are used to working in a browser, not in a Windows application,”
Nelson argues. “You often see the son or the daughter of the outgoing boss
coming in and making the changes.”
This growth in the ranks of senior executives who are comfortable with SaaS
is obviously crucial to the long-term viability of NetSuite, which despite
rising revenues has yet to turn a profit.
Nelson is unsurprisingly evangelical about the benefits on-demand systems can
bring to firms, especially those with limited in-house IT resources. “Efficiency
gains are hard to measure, but you don’t have the complex training issues that
you used to have. SaaS takes a lot of the grunt work out of systems we remove
the cost of managing those applications. Because it is a single system, our
users get a 360-degree view of the business, and a single view of their
customers,” he says.
“Our focus is on helping companies run their businesses, and because of that
we are working on creating versions of NetSuite for different types of
companies. We take on all the arcane aspects of a business, and deliver a whole
new set of processes,” Nelson explains.
NetSuite’s
NS-BOS
platform enables third parties to create these solutions and build the
extensions that meet the specific needs of firms, adds Nelson.
“We would never have enough developers to do that ourselves, but by enabling
third parties we have increased our developer pool,” he says. “Even small firms
need solutions. We have one customer that provides floor cleaning services. They
need a solution that tells them what type of floor they are dealing with and
what its square footage is. When someone asks me for an example of other firms
using our solution, I am not short of candidates.”
One of the most significant events in NetSuite’s history was its recent IPO,
an exercise that raised huge sums for the firm. However, this was not the
primary goal. “The IPO was something of a branding exercise for NetSuite. We
want to be the SAP of the mid-market, but reaching all those firms is hard. It’s
easy for the FTSE 100, there you just hire 100 sales people and send them out
knocking on the relevant doors,” Nelson says.
The IPO certainly succeeded in raising the firm’s profile. “Our market
capitalisation was the largest since Google’s for any venture-backed company,
and we raised $161m selling just 10 per cent of the company,” he says.
Nelson says some of this money is being used to build new datacentres, adding
that none has been earmarked for acquisitions. “Our core is the integrated
application so it is hard to consider technology acquisitions it is very hard
to merge code,” he says.
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