Contact Information: Contact: Martin Levy Martin Levy Public Relations 206.851.7256
10 Predictions for the Future of SaaS and On-Demand Software Applications
Market Strategy Trumps Technology; Product Integration and Alliances Amongst SaaS Vendors Will Drive Adoption, Says Founder of On-Demand PPM Vendor Innotas
| Quelle: Innotas
SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwire - November 11, 2008) - Market strategy will trump technology in
determining which SaaS (software-as-a-service) companies will be
successful, while the key to driving adoption will be better product
integration and alliance with other SaaS companies, according to Demian
Entrekin, founder of on-demand PPM provider Innotas (www.innotas.com).
On-demand, or SaaS solutions are far less expensive and quicker and easier
to implement than installed solutions; they are 100% multi-tenant and are
extremely easy to maintain; can be deployed in days or weeks; can be rolled
out on an executive, program and team level to internal and external teams;
and are highly adaptable with ability to add or delete seat licenses to
correspond with fluctuating business needs.
Entrekin recently identified 10 key trends that SaaS companies should think
about as they work toward driving growth and adoption of on-demand
applications in the marketplace:
1. It's the product, stupid!: Due to the emphasis of "Try It Buy It"
approaches for marketing SaaS applications, product management and product
marketing teams are forced to push more of the "whole product" and
"solution selling" concept back into the product itself. Instead,
developers should focus on incorporating business process into product
features.
2. Software without borders: Applications are becoming less and less
restricted to a particular organization and more oriented around user
networks. This has the effect of making the applications more user-centric
rather than organization-centric. Paradoxically, this is good for the
organization since it will lead to better adoption.
3. First impressions, first: SaaS applications have a few minutes to make
an impression, and the first 3 minutes are critical. If you can create a
sense of value in 3 minutes, you're off to a great start.
4. Pinching pennies: COGS and Gross Margins are financial metrics that
should drive the technology strategy; as Deming might have predicted, the
ability to support a reliable, scale-able service at a low cost is becoming
a bigger and bigger advantage.
5. Tier 1 support reigns: Now that there is less and less room for fancy,
high priced consultants to answer the fancy, high priced questions, Tier 1
support will take on a bigger and bigger responsibility to represent the
company and answer tough questions during the sales cycle. Will a good FAQ
cut it? We doubt it.
6. More product alliances: SaaS vendors will dedicate more resources to
integration partnerships with other SaaS vendors. Right now, they talk
about it but they don't do it very well. Alliances may be the key toward
gaining some share of the elusive "channel" for SaaS vendors.
7. Video trumps text: SaaS products will begin to use more and more video
for training, support, documentation, etc. It's cheap and easy and more
interesting to look at. Text based tools are being replaced by A/V.
8. SaaS for SaaS: SaaS companies are going to start outsourcing more and
more parts of their own operations. This is important because they can get
the same kind of leverage from full service hosting providers that they
provide to their customers. These kinds of arrangements will also lead to
natural SaaS aggregations of applications into end-to-end partnerships.
9. Grid computing muddle: Utility computing remains an open question and
will be driven by the cost to provide the service. In some cases, you may
be able to get your monthly operating costs per user down to a low enough
price that grid computing won't offer enough of a benefit. In other cases,
it might provide just the kind of cost advantage that makes it worth the
effort. In either case, SaaS vendors should build applications that are
"cloud compatible" so that they can take advantage of grid computing when
it makes good risk/reward sense.
10. Tech takes a back seat: There are fewer and fewer technical hurdles to
get a SaaS application to market than when we started this in 1999. Now
the emphasis is shifting more to marketing strategy; the technology, while
obviously essential, is taking more of a back seat.
Innotas was placed by Gartner (www.gartner.com) in the Visionaries Quadrant
in the June 16, 2008 Gartner analysis, "Magic Quadrant for IT Project and
Portfolio Management" by Matt Light, research vice president, and Daniel
Stang, principal research analyst.
About Innotas
Innotas provides the only on-demand Project Portfolio Management (PPM)
solution specifically designed to meet the needs of IT and IT Services
organizations. With Innotas, managers and team members improve
collaboration and can more effectively and efficiently manage IT
initiatives, projects, and resources. For CIOs and executives, Innotas
delivers deep visibility, automation, and analysis of the project
portfolio, and improves resource planning and utilization. Our customers,
including Crayola, Forbes, Hamilton Beach, Jo-Ann Stores, WorldVision and
many others, span a wide range of industries including financial services,
healthcare, retail, technology, telecommunications and energy. For more
information please visit www.innotas.com or contact us at +1 415.814.7700.