Despite being the core of the greatest growth market the tech industry has ever known, cloud vendors face significant challenges.
Search Results: SaaS (640)
Oracle and its fast-growing IaaS business face a very different challenge, as chairman Larry Ellison says demand is far outstripping supply.
Oracle claims that its Autonomous Data Warehouse has three significant advantages over category-king Amazon and shiny new object Snowflake.
Ready to turn its dreams of transcending traditional ERP into reality, SAP to bring the full promise of the Intelligent Enterprise in 2021.
On December 1, 2020, Salesforce acquired Slack for $27.7 Billion. Guest author Jiri Kram’s thoughts on what preceded and will happen next.
Going head-on against Google Cloud and SAP, Oracle plans to roll out a broad set of industry-specific cloud solutions.
The three vendors whose cloud revenue is growing most rapidly are Google at 44.8%, Oracle 33% (estimated), and Microsoft 31%.
In a CX event earlier this week, Oracle Chairman Larry Ellison made two striking disclosures about Oracle’s growing relationship with Zoom.
SaaS and Cloud solutions are transforming the financial process and all of this is underlined by the emergence of Artificial Intelligence, creating a new function for CFO’s to become continuous strategy managers as opposed to daily financial managers. Fuelled by new data aggregation and digital reporting enabled by new and emerging solutions by organizations like HighRadius, today’s CFO can spend less time searching for information and more time planning and architecting the future of the business with other C-level executives.
By spanning both IaaS and SaaS layers of the cloud, Larry Ellison feels Oracle will offer unique value to business customers.
Customer case study – learn how Caplugs, a global manufacturer of product protection, implemented Business Central SaaS in 4 different countries over 12 months. Localizations, master data management, data migrations, 3rd party integrations, RPA, user training and lessons learned are just some of the topics that will be covered. If you are considering launching Business Central and want a global platform offering a single pane of glass back to corporate, this is the session for you!
This session will be available for CPE credits pending completion of session survey post event.
Level: Intermediate
When we were setting up Dynamics NAV environments, it was always on-premise. There was no decision to make on where to install the system. Enter the era of Business Central, a new platform with new cloud-based options. Many companies have questions …
What option is best for us? Should we go SaaS (Software as a Service)? Should we remain on-premise? Are those my only options?
During this presentation, we will explain these options, highlighting the positives and negatives of both approaches. You will come away ready to make an informed decision on where to set up your Business Central environment.
This session will be available for CPE credits pending completion of session survey post event.
Level: Intermediate
Some companies rush to deploy using the Microsoft Cloud offering because it is perceived as a quick and easy option. However, this may not be the best solution. In many cases, the on-premises option in Azure can offer lower costs and more control of the solution. Join us for this session where we’ll discuss the pros and cons of using the Business Central SaaS/Cloud model and the on-premises subscription model hosted in Azure.
Did SAP suffer a mortal blow with Q3 results or will the company be able to rally behind the customer-centric vision of CEO Christian Klein?
New Oracle CX businesses promise to “…to empower whoever gets to the customer first and enable new customer-centric business models.”
Can Microsoft and Google compete fiercely enough to win in revenue and collaboratively enough to keep peace with their major partners?
As we head into Q4, here are my thoughts on the 5 world-shaping tech vendors making up the top half of the Cloud Wars Top 10 rankings.
ServiceNow has a $90-billion market cap, which is about exactly half of world-class enterprise-software companies SAP and Oracle.
My rationale for giving credence to Larry Ellison’s claim—and, more important, his belief—that Oracle can rise to the top of the IaaS market.
Oracle CEO Safra Catz indicates more and more of Oracle’s huge global customers are moving their database workloads to the Oracle Cloud.



















