Archive for January, 2009

22
Jan
09

Delivered Innovation Sponsors Saper Law Offices ‘Open Source Symposium’ In Chicago

Leading SaaS application developer Delivered Innovation to sponsor full day conference bringing members of the open source community together for detailed discussions involving the legal and intellectual property implications of producing or using open source software.

CHICAGO, IL – January 22, 2009 – Does open source play a role in your company? Whether you use or produce open source software, understanding the business and legal ramifications behind open source is critical.

Saper Law Offices is hosting the Saper Law Open Source Symposium in Chicago to bring together members of the open source community for an in-depth discussion of important legal topics related to open source software. Leading Software-as-a-Service developer Delivered Innovation is sponsoring the event.

The full day conference will feature panels of experts ranging from independent software developers to software giants such as Microsoft. Attorneys from Saper Law will lead discussions on licensing and intellectual property issues, and speakers from the academic community will address the influence of policy on the open source movement. New open source licensing compliance software will also be debuted in an afternoon demonstration.

“We support the leadership role that Saper Law has taken in driving awareness of key legal issues in the local technology community,” notes Michael Topalovich, founder and CTO of Delivered Innovation. “The Open Source Symposium is a must-attend event for anyone involved with open source in their organization.”

The Open Source Symposium will consist of three morning panels, a lunch break, and three afternoon panels. The current conference schedule includes the following panel topics:

  • Using and Developing Open Source Software for Education and Research
  • Leveraging Open Source Software to Build Commercial Software Products
  • Open Source Business Models for the 21st Century
  • Legal Implications of Using Open Source Software
  • Open Source Licensing and Implementation, a Developer’s Perspective
  • Demonstration of Open Source Compliance Software

The Saper Law Open Source Symposium will take place on Tuesday, February 17 from 8:30AM-5:00PM at the DePaul Center, 8th Floor, 1 East Jackson Blvd, Chicago, IL.

For more information, visit http://www.saperlaw.com/oss

To register, visit http://saperlawopensourcesymposium-deliveredinnovation.eventbrite.com/
About Delivered Innovation

Delivered Innovation designs and develops custom Software as a Service (SaaS) situational business applications using cloud computing technologies such as Platform as a Service (PaaS). In addition to developing SaaS applications for Salesforce CRM and the Force.com platform from salesforce.com, Delivered Innovation also provides SaaS go-to-market strategy services to help entrepreneurial individuals and companies create new revenue opportunities with SaaS applications. For more information, visit www.deliveredinnovation.com.

About Saper Law Offices

Saper Law Offices features intellectual property and business attorneys with significant transactional and both federal and state litigation experience. Recent court cases have involved trade secret misappropriation, intellectual property infringement, defamation, and commercial disputes. Areas of specialization include: Trademarks, copyrights, trade secrets, corporate, Internet, entertainment, defamation, intellectual property licensing, advertising, and media.  For more information, visit www.saperlaw.com.

20
Jan
09

Mary Hayes Weier: 6 Things SaaS Needs To Do In 2009

Mary Hayes Weier: 6 Things SaaS Needs To Do In 2009

Software as a service has made headway in the past few years as an alternative to traditional licensed software, but it can’t yet be called a game-changer in the enterprise software market.

While this statement is true for all intents and purposes, it nearly does a disservice to Mary’s piece by narrowly framing what ended up being a very concise and prescriptive article on the adoption challenges SaaS faces in the context of the enterprise market – in reality, these challenges are nearly universal across all market segments.

  1. “SaaS continues to gain momentum, but pure-play SaaS companies such as salesforce.com, NetSuite, Workday, and even Google aren’t likely to steal a big chunk out of the enterprise software market within the next few years.” So be it.  We’re talking about a disruptive technology, so the goal isn’t to attack market incumbents in their backyard, it’s to drive adoption to entirely new technologies that will eventually become sustaining technologies that surpass the incumbents over time as demand for legacy technology diminishes.  We don’t need “…solid, believable commitments from Microsoft, Oracle, and SAP” for SaaS to gain widespread adoption; in fact, it’s probably best if the beheamoths stay out of the way and let the disruption happen on its own.  They’re too big and too entrenched to embrace SaaS (or any type of truly disruptive technology) internally, so there’s no point in waiting for them to get on the bus.
  2. …for SaaS to make major headway and lure over the resistors, it needs to achieve a near-perfect record of uptime and availability.” Ain’t it the truth.  Raise your hand if you’ve heard, “I want five 9’s of uptime!” from the obligatory IT guy on a call, when said IT guy couldn’t define five 9’s nor had he ever achieved anything close to it in his own shop.  But it is what it is, and even if Salesforce only goes down for 40 minutes a year, those 40 minutes will be brought up by IT every time there’s a perceived encroachment on their turf.   Mary could not have said it any better when she writes, “Everyone knows that there is no such thing as 100% uptime, but a lapse in service is even more unsettling when an IT manager can’t dispatch his or her own staff to fix the problem. Such lack of control creates a psychological barrier to SaaS for some IT managers, and to overcome that barrier, SaaS needs to be near perfect.” So let’s just put the argument to bed and achieve the “five 9’s” of uptime.
  3. “Companies are turning to SaaS to lower costs and complexity. But unless a business doesn’t mind keeping that software service separate from the rest of its operations — which typically run on on-site, licensed software — it has to integrate the SaaS with its onsite applications…and for SaaS to truly succeed, SaaS providers must do more to make integration easy.” Absolutely.  This is arguably both the biggest challenge and the biggest opportunity for SaaS providers at this stage in the game.  If you’re not going to rip out enterprise software in favor of SaaS, you need to integrate with it.  This is why situational applications have such enormous appeal right now – they combine the power and flexibility of SaaS, but do so with a “take only what you need” approach to integration.  It’s an incremental approach to adding value that has much more appeal than trying to add additional layers of complexity through comprehensive integration architecture.
  4. “What’s needed from the analyst community are more detailed research reports on the total cost of ownership of various SaaS applications with comparable on-site software applications…If SaaS providers visited potential customers armed with objective, in-depth research that supported their claims of SaaS’s superior TCO over licensed software, they’d have a more convincing argument.” Amen.  You hear the ROI and TCO arguments made to seemingly no end, yet the quantitative and objective support for these arguments is thin at best.  Hopefully Gartner has this high on their agenda, because the last piece of research that they released on this topic was fairly high-level, and is now almost 16 months old.
  5. “The SaaS model is clearly a difficult one on which to make money, since SaaS providers don’t get the millions of dollars in up-front licensing fees that they can then pour into operation and research and development.” Ugh.  This is the elephant in the room.  We’re all struggling with this one, and struggling even more mightily in a brutal selling environment.  At the end of the day, the purging that our economy is going through right now is forcing us to find innovative ways to survive, and ultimately one had to believe that this will necessarily lead to innovative (and of course profitable) SaaS business models.
  6. “…in many cases, SaaS is more about choices in configuration than software code that’s been tweaked beyond recognition to fit the needs of a specific customer. That’s why SaaS providers will need to convince customers that options in configurations are an acceptable alternative to customization.” We’ll go out on a limb here, but in most cases this one is inextricably linked to the same psychology as the downtime argument.  Just as IT departments think they can do a better job of keeping the lights on, many organizations think that their business processes are completely unique and that every software deployment must be completely customized.  That’s an argument for another day, but ultimately the responsibility is on the SaaS community to demonstrate the value of multitenancy before the argument can be made that the collective wisdom of the community provides best practices that are built into SaaS releases and given back to the community in what amounts to a virtuous feedback cycle.

Great article, we highly recommend heading over to InformationWeek for a read.

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20
Jan
09

Delivered Innovation To Participate In Situational Application Resource Center

Situational Application Resource Center website brings together a consortium of cloud computing and on-demand technology thought leaders to provide insight into SaaS applications and other solutions that can rapidly address situational business challenges.

CHICAGO, IL – January 20, 2009 – In challenging economic times, businesses of all sizes need every advantage they can get. The Situational Application Resource Center provides a wealth of information on cloud computing technologies that can offer such advantages to forward thinking organizations.

Delivered Innovation, a leading SaaS application developer, has joined the Situational Application Resource Center as a charter participant and will be contributing content and strategic insight to help business leaders and decision makers leverage cloud computing for competitive advantage. The company designs and develops custom SaaS applications on the Force.com platform from salesforce.com, and also offers a wide array of development services to customize Salesforce CRM deployments.

“Most companies find themselves in the same boat, trying to navigate through rough economic waters,” explains Michael Topalovich, founder and CTO of Delivered Innovation. “Cloud computing technologies like situational apps provide companies with strategic weapons to take advantage of new growth opportunities while competitors are riding out the storm.”

Situational applications are limited-scope software tools that address specific business requirements, and are characterized by targeted functionality that usually extends or replaces software functions in larger enterprise applications.

Cloud computing technologies such as Software as a Service (SaaS) and Platform as a Service (PaaS) have enabled situational applications to be developed and delivered far more rapidly than traditional software projects. In many cases situational applications are developed and managed directly by business users, without having to rely on the IT department.

“Delivered Innovation is a great example of a new breed of SaaS developers that leverage situational application platforms to deliver highly customized software solutions. These solutions are possible because the barriers of traditional application development are being broken down by cloud computing,” notes Jonathan Sapir, CEO of SilverTree Systems and the creator of the Situational Application Resource Center.

The Situational Application Resource Center includes information on evaluating and implementing situational applications, as well as educational resources for other cloud computing technologies. Site content includes tutorials and best practices, guest blogs from leading authors such as Jeff Kaplan, and links to additional situational application resources.

In addition to Delivered Innovation, participating companies include: SilverTree Systems, Coghead, Caspio, LongJump, and THINKstrategies.

The Situational Application Resource Center can be found at: www.powerinthecloud.com.

About Delivered Innovation

Delivered Innovation designs and develops custom Software as a Service (SaaS) situational business applications using cloud computing technologies such as Platform as a Service (PaaS). In addition to developing SaaS applications for Salesforce CRM and the Force.com platform from salesforce.com, Delivered Innovation also provides SaaS go-to-market strategy services to help entrepreneurial individuals and companies create new revenue opportunities with SaaS applications. For more information, visit www.deliveredinnovation.com.

About SilverTree Systems

SilverTree Systems leverages cloud-based application development and delivery platforms to deliver on-demand solutions that are risk-free, affordable and guarantee immediate value. SilverTree also builds extensions for these platforms, including the integration of external desktop, enterprise and cloud data sources and web services. To learn more, visit www.silvertreesystems.com.

15
Jan
09

Attend The Saper Law Open Source Symposium

Saper Law Open Source Symposium

Local intellectual property attorney Daliah Saper and her firm are hosting an event in Chicago on February 17 that focuses on the intellectual property implications of open source.  From the event page:

This all day conference brings together members of the open source community for an in depth discussion of the business and legal ramifications of using or producing open source software. The panel of speakers will range from independent software developers, to CTOs of established businesses, to representatives of software giants like Microsoft. In addition, Saper Law attorneys will delve into licensing and intellectual property issues while university professors will lend the policy reasons behind the open source movement. New software that assists businesses and their attorneys with open source licensing compliance will also be debuted at the event.

Delivered Innovation will be represented and is actively promoting the event.  Hope to see you there!

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14
Jan
09

Phil Wainewright: Hooray, 2009 starts with a SaaS backlash

Phil Wainewright: Hooray, 2009 starts with a SaaS backlash

Tongue-in-cheek title, but serious message.  Obviously as a company that designs and develops SaaS applications we have full faith in the SaaS model, but we’re not foolish enough to believe that the SaaS model has been fully fleshed out and won’t run into speedbumps now and again.  The point that Phil makes here with his references to SaaS detractors is that the argument against SaaS is starting to sound a little desperate.  We want there to be open debate and dissent when it comes to SaaS, but what we’re seeing in general is one part misinformed, one part misleading, and ten parts schadenfreude; yes it is a major black eye when Salesforce experiences a 40-minute outage, but to see so many people cheering about it is nothing less than juvenile.  SaaS is not going away…we don’t for a minute think that SaaS will uproot every on-premise software installation in the world, but we do think that it will be the predominant delivery model for IT services moving forward.  It’s your right to disagree with that, but the argument that we’d like to see made is why on-premise software installations are the better solution over the long term than SaaS…not alarmist and passive-aggressive resistance to the inevitable.

14
Jan
09

Jeff Kaplan: Predictions for On-Demand Services in 2009

Jeff Kaplan: Predictions for On-Demand Services in 2009

Jeff Kaplan of THINKstrategies describes a highly compelling vision for the coming year in cloud computing and SaaS in this guest piece on SandHill.com.  While we agree with the ten points that Jeff makes, and while we share in his optimism and passion for SaaS, there are a few items that we see in a slightly different light:

  • “…as a result, SaaS, cloud computing and managed services providers no longer have to view the IT organization as the enemy in their efforts to sell their solutions.”  While it’s true that SaaS providers may not encounter the angry, active resistance to SaaS and cloud computing that was present in early sales cycles, the corporate IT community still has a long way to go before it embraces SaaS with open arms.  Our take on this is that we’ve seen a slight upgrade in IT resistance from active aggression to passive aggression; it may be a career limiting move to oppose the inevitable cloud computing sea change, but that doesn’t mean that IT departments aren’t rooting against it from the sidelines.
  • “The traditional workplace is becoming a thing of the past…”  Yes, it is.  It absolutely is.  But the rate of workplace evolution is going to grind to a halt this year as survivalist and protectionist attitudes prevail in this environment of fear and loathing.  We’ve already heard outsourcing being called out as a root cause of the current economic situation a number of times, and regardless of where you stand on that issue, the fact of the matter is that SaaS and cloud computing are technologies that are provided outside of the walls of a company, and because of this they will be unfairly linked to the anti-outsourcing sentiment and suffer some level of fallout in the ensuing policy debate.  SaaS and cloud computing adoption necessarily require a branch in thinking from traditional technology service delivery, and based on the waves of executives descending on Washington for bailouts rather than looking inward and thinking critically about rising above the challenges we face, we don’t see  mainstream corporate America having the will to think outside of the collective comfort zone.  There will be exceptions, and we want to find those exceptions and work with them to help them dominate their markets as a reward for their courage and vision.
  • “IT/business decision-makers in user organizations of all sizes will shift their procurement strategies from best-of-breed vendors to strategic suppliers who they believe have a better chance of surviving today’s economic crisis. This will make it hard for niche vendors to compete against more prominent players with broader portfolios and stronger brands.”  Yes and no.  Granted the sustainability of a potential supplier is a huge concern right now, but unfortunately the niche players are the ones that are driving the lion’s share of innovation in the SaaS space right now.  Salesforce.com has really stepped up to the plate and taken a leadership role in educating the market and driving SaaS adoption, Amazon continues to drive the viability of cloud computing, and a handful of other large players are making meaningful contributions, but for all intents and purposes most of the big fish in the cloud computing pond are experiencing the same deer-in-the-headlights response to the economic slowdown, and while SaaS and “The Cloud” may be part of the big picture roadmap, anything that does not generate revenue today will see tomorrow pushed back until it is “safe” to restart investments in next generation technologies.

Great article, Jeff.  Keep up the SaaS advocacy.

13
Jan
09

Nicholas Carr: NPR Interview

Nicholas Carr: NPR Interview

Not much new ground covered if you’ve already had the opportunity to read Carr’s book The Big Switch: Rewiring the World, from Edison to Google , but an interesting interview from the perspective that this book came out a year ago and the recent mainstream traction of the cloud computing movement has elevated Nick Carr and other early visionaries to the forefront of cloud computing punditry.

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13
Jan
09

Stacey Higginbotham: Here Come the Specialty Clouds

Stacey Higginbotham: Here Come the Specialty Clouds

Highlights:

  • Some interesting applications of the cloud computing paradigm, including gaming and “virtual Blu-ray players”
  • The concept of specialized hardware serving specialized cloud computing platforms
  • Important challenges and barriers to adoption: achieving economies of scale to attain commodity pricing for specialized clouds, endpoint / consumer bandwidth constraints, and localizing cloud computing resources to overcome latency issues
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07
Jan
09

Power in the Cloud: Situational Application Resource Center

Power in the Cloud: Situational Application Resource Center

Our friends at SilverTree Systems have introduced the Situational Application Resource Center, a collection of information that is dedicated to furthering a very compelling cloud computing technology that is being defined as ‘Situational Applications.’

Situational applications are essentially rapidly developed applications that are designed to immediately address a business challenge – i.e. solving a business process inefficiency, extending the functionality of enterprise systems such as CRM or ERP without having to customize the core application, or addressing market and customer opportunities as quickly as possible.  Situational applications also represent an opportunity for ISV’s to develop and market “Long Tail” applications to niche / “micro-vertical” markets that have traditionally been underserved by the broader software industry due to high development costs and prohibitive barriers to entry.  Delivered Innovation partnered with Coghead in early 2008 to take a number of situational applications to market, including the Marketing Lucidity Lead Model and Marketing Budget Management; we are also in the process of delivering the Lead Model and Marketing Budget Management on the Force.com “Platform-as-a-Service” (PaaS) by Salesforce.com.  These are applications that provide highly specific functions for marketing budget and lead generation planning that would not have been viable just two years ago due to the high costs of developing such applications…costs that would have been passed through to our customers and in turn priced out the very customers we built these applications for.

Cloud computing platforms such as Coghead and Force.com have set in motion a “virtuous cycle” for SaaS applications and situational applications targeted to business users and companies that traditionally would not have been in the market for such applications because of the costs and technology requirements involved.  Because we don’t have to purchase servers, software, and network infrastructure upfront, we can focus our capital on building very specific and highly robust application functionality.  Because the data model, user interface, and business rules / application logic are all provided as standardized components by the PaaS provider, our development time is slashed by almost 75%, which contributes to our ability to rapidly deliver new value to our customers at a significantly reduced price point.  Because our price point is significantly lower than it would be in a traditional ISV model, we can create new markets for our SaaS applications.  When customers are introduced to the concepts of cloud computing, SaaS, and situational applications, they in turn find innovative new ways to apply the technologies to their businesses, creating value far beyond what we had originally envisioned.  And the customers that understand the game-changing implications of these new technologies want to build new situational applications to accelerate improvement and growth in other areas of their businesses.  All of a sudden, we’re looking at the potential of Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) being fully realized, and companies are applying a building-block philosophy to technology and business processes.  It’s beautiful.

Please visit the Situational Application Resource Center today to contribute to the movement and find ways to deliver value to your customers and the community.

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05
Jan
09

Roger Smith: Cloud Maturity Models Don't Make Sense

Roger Smith: Cloud Maturity Models Don’t Make Sense

The interesting thing that we learned from this piece was that people were already trying to apply maturity models to cloud computing…something that seems nearly impossible when the very definition of ‘Cloud Computing’ is still many moons from being refined and standardized.  We agree with Roger Smith wholeheartedly on his assessment that slapping together a ‘Cloud Computing Maturity Model’ doesn’t make much sense right now…and to a certain degree we think that while certain maturity models (namely CMMI) have their place, in general it’s starting to feel as if we are reaching the point of ‘ maturity models for the sake of maturity models’.  And anything done for the sake of itself in the technology world keeps us from pursuing the bigger picture – i.e. managing projects for the sake of adhering to the PMBOK rather than focusing on meeting the needs of the customer, or managing IT for the sake of ITIL compliance rather than focusing on adding value to the business.  There are enough superfluous certifications for the IT world to chase, let’s not stifle the potential of The Cloud by trying to shoeshorn it into rigid, standardized definitions that can’t possibly keep up with the explosive innovation that we’re going to be seeing for some time to come.

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