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Market Research Report

SOA blurs boundaries between application vendors and systems integrators

Published by Ovum, Ltd.
Published December, 2007 Product code 62620
Content info 12 PAGES
Price
US $ 1072 PDF by E-mail (Single User License)
US $ 2680 PDF by E-mail (Global License)


SOA blurs boundaries between application vendors and systems integrators published by Ovum, Ltd. in December, 2007. This report consists of 12 PAGES and the price starts from US $ 1072.

Introduction

Abstract

The proliferation of modular and standards-based service-oriented architectures (SOAs) promises to make corporate IT operations more agile and adaptable. However, the SOA trend is also catalyzing changes within the vendor community that could create conflicts among long-time partners. One of these changes is the emerging strategy of many systems integrators (SIs) to use SOA methodologies to create reusable assets. These software assets encapsulate best practices and business processes that the SIs formerly offered only via custom consulting projects.

As SIs shift more of their consultant-based expertise into SOA business services and other software, they are likely to encroach into territory that was once the exclusive preserve of applications ISVs. The largest of these ISVs  which have ambitious SOA-based initiatives of their own  should be able to reach mutually beneficial arrangements with the SIs, which have long been their partners. However, the prospects for second- and third-tier ISVs are less certain, and potentially bleak. These smaller vendors may be able to leverage SOA standards to offer best-of-breed complements to broad solutions sold by the major ISVs and SIs. However, many ISVs may be driven from once-safe vertical market and specialty niches by new business services competition from SIs.

Table of Contents

Key messages

  • SOA will change vendor business models and relationships
  • Major application vendors have little to fear
  • Smaller vertical-market and specialty ISVs face increasing threats

SOA sparks new industry dynamics

Vendors have rushed to SOA-enable and revamp product offerings

Major ISVs adopt SOA

SAP, Oracle and Microsoft have built up an ecosystem of partners

Platform-centric Microsoft remains heavily dependent on partners

Microsoft relies on partners to extend its applications into vertical niches

Oracle seeks to balance SI interests with its product ambitions

Oracle taps into SOA to tackle application portfolio integration challenges

SAP expands partnering outreach to supplement its process expertise

SAP is following a two-track SOA model

Salesforce.com builds leading SaaS-based ecosystem

Salesforce.com uses SaaS/SOA synergy to ease integration issues

Uncertain future for small ISVs and SaaS vendors

Small players must adopt and adapt to SOA to survive

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