Subscribe

SAP speeds up cloud shift

With the cloud services market set for steady growth, SAP may take advantage of Germany's reputation for data privacy.

By Reuters
Barcelona, 25 Nov 2013

German business software group SAP may speed up a shift towards providing its products over the Internet in order to tap demand for cloud services and take advantage of Germany's reputation for data privacy, it said on Friday.

SAP and rivals such as IBM and Oracle are dashing to meet surging demand for cloud computing, which allows clients to reduce costs by ditching bulky local servers for network-based software and storage in remote data centres.

With the cloud services market forecast to grow 18.5% this year to $131 billion worldwide, according to research firm Gartner, competition is fierce and software firms face a challenge to adapt.

"We have a situation now where we see the move to the cloud, particularly in certain markets like North America, happening even faster, and this is a great opportunity for us to revisit whether we should accelerate the move to the cloud," SAP co-CE Jim Hagemann-Snabe said at a Morgan Stanley investor conference on Friday.

He said accelerating the shift could make it a little harder for SAP to meet its 2015 sales target of EUR20 billion, but could be beneficial over the medium term.

"This would have impact on the 2015 level, I don't expect enormous impact but it would have some impact because you are delaying some revenues. However, in a (2017) time frame you would have more than that back, so I think it would be the right thing for the company if we had the opportunity," he said.

In the first nine months of the year, SAP generated EUR547 million in cloud subscriptions and support revenues. It has a target for revenue of EUR750 million from this field for this year, while aiming for EUR2 billion by 2015.

As well as IBM and Oracle, SAP faces competition from smaller rivals like Salesforce.com and Workday, and the group spent $7.7 billion last year to buy Internet-based computing companies Ariba and SuccessFactors.

Questions about the security of data stored in cloud, and often on servers in many countries, have intensified this year after accusations about spying by authorities from the US and other countries.

Hagemann-Snabe said the fact SAP was based in Germany, which has some of the most stringent data protection laws, was "absolutely" an advantage in winning new business in Europe and countries such as China.

"I think we have the benefit of being global in the sense that we actually have data centres in all regions," he said.

"With the investments that Germany, in particular (German Chancellor) Merkel, have done in the relationship (with China), SAP is actually a preferred vendor, so we see an opportunity to use this situation to accelerate our business."

Share