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TomorrowNow chief lambasts Oracle

Tony Hallett silicon.com

Published: 30 May 2007 15:12 BST

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TomorrowNow, the SAP subsidiary at the centre of a major legal dispute between its parent and Oracle, has questioned the latter's ability to provide good-value support to its customers and to innovate in software over the long term.

Andrew Nelson, TomorrowNow's chief executive, said: "[Oracle] is aware of the companies coming to us [for support]. We've got blue-chip customers from all around the world."

The support specialist has little or no contact with Oracle but prides itself on personnel that understand various enterprise apps intimately, often having worked at those vendors at times over the past decade.

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Its customers in the UK include Allied Bakeries, DHL and Hyundai.

Nelson said: "With PeopleSoft, JD Edwards and Siebel, we've got, in every one of those, at least one of the top 20 maintenance-paying customers in the world."

In March this year Oracle alleged SAP had hacked into its customer support centre and downloaded copies of its proprietary software code. In the lawsuit both SAP and its TomorrowNow unit were named as defendants, facing a raft of serious complaints.

The analogy TomorrowNow execs like is that of servicing a car. Most car-owners use a third party rather than a manufacturer's dealership network, often because it is cheaper. However, despite the low-cost boast — with savings of up to 50 percent on Oracle's own support — many point to TomorrowNow as a way for SAP to transition large customers onto its software over the long term.

Oracle was unavailable to comment immediately for this story.

Nelson added: "I don't envy [Oracle's] position. I think they need to decide whether they're going to become a holding company, long term, or whether they're serious about being in the innovative applications business."

At the time Oracle's purchase of PeopleSoft — which had earlier swallowed JD Edwards — was going through, there was talk of a suite of combined products by the name of Fusion.

TomorrowNow's Nelson added: "Oracle customers no longer value pre-funding a Fusion application that they no longer understand, that's uncertain to them and that they're not sure they will ever use".

"Oracle has to respond to that. The challenges they've created through their M&A strategy... they've really dug a hole for themselves."

Bought by SAP at the start of 2005, TomorrowNow has a presence in around 40 countries and made its name supporting applications created by JD Edwards and PeopleSoft. More recently it has also turned its hand to Siebel apps. All these software names are now part of the Oracle stable, though it also looks at other packages such as Baan.

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