SOA muddying the CRM buy vs. build dilemma
By Barney Beal, News Director
27 Sep 2007 | SearchCRM.com
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"What we're moving to is the 'service-oriented bazaar,'" Radcliffe said. "You're going to have to learn a lot more about the applications platform, the middleware [that's] sitting underneath these applications of the future. IT is going to be more complex."
SOA is also blurring the line between build versus buy. That was good news for Joe Levin, senior manager of marketing with Vernon Hills, Ill.-based CDW Corp., which sells computers, primarily to private businesses and public sector customers and has seen rapid growth over the past 10 years. CDW has built many of its own systems and Levin was at the conference for some guidance on whether the company was following the right path when it comes to packaged CRM applications.
"Leveraging best practices is critical and one of the themes I've been hearing here is balance between proprietary and third-party systems," he said.
The major CRM vendors have all begun their own journey toward SOA, Radcliffe said. And with good reason. Ultimately, SOA will reduce the costs of integrating their acquisitions (with Oracle particularly) by easing the maintenance load. Additionally, it speeds up their time to market, allowing vendors to provide incremental functionality improvements without the headaches of major upgrades. SOA also offers faster verticalization and easier integration of processes, applications and other data sources within a vendor's own products, as well as with its ecosystem of partners, with competitors and with custom applications.
SOA and the UI
Finally, SOA is facilitating the development of the next generation of user interfaces (UI), which have evolved from mainframe terminal UIs to client/server to portals and Web browsers to browsers with Web 2.0 technology like A1S, now named Business ByDesign, its new SaaS suite for the midmarket. Oracle also unveiled a new task-based UI as part of its Ultimately, major ecosystem vendors like IBM, Oracle, Microsoft and SAP AG are building out their SOA platforms and encouraging smaller firms to work within it.
"You'll see a lot of the innovation coming not from the big players, but from best-of-breed people who have a much easier way of plugging in to what the big boys are doing," Radcliffe said. "It doesn't mean the end of best-of-breed players. If anything, it means new opportunities at extending what the big players are doing."
Vendors are also starting to capitalize on packaged composite applications, SAP with its Application Integration Architecture using the BPEL Process Manager.
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"The end game is the business process platform, an underlying business services repository where the business logic sits waiting to be used," Radcliffe said. "Are we there yet? Definitely not today. We're on PowerPoint."
But that won't stop vendors from pushing the SOA message. Many organizations will start with CRM as they try to consolidate global instances of the application and look to differentiate from competitors rather than with, say, an ERP application.
"Don't get carried away by the hype," Radcliffe warned. "SOA does have all these wonderful promises. It's going to take many years before a business process platform style reaches this level of maturity, but you do need to start preparing. It's inevitable."
Companies building their own SOA need to begin with pilot projects and choose an SOA infrastructure, Radcliffe advised. Those buying need to consider when their CRM application vendors will be ready for a business process-style SOA, whether they can implement in stages and what the long- and short-term values are. For those compiling an SOA based on existing applications, building their own and using composite applications, they need to see how they can leverage their existing applications, how much infrastructure they will need to buy and determine how it fits with their long-term strategy.
"As we get into next year and the next few years, there will be a hybrid SOA, for example, coexistence of Siebel and Oracle Fusion," Radcliffe said. "Over time you will retire one and bring in the other. Not until 2012 -- and we could be talking a long time before people will have pure, full SOA packages. The reality is it will be this hybrid situation for years to come. "