German
business software maker SAP said it was revamping its management to
sharpen its focus on cloud computing as demand for the service which
saves clients money grows.
SAP and rivals such
as IBM and Oracle are dashing to meet surging demand for cloud
computing, which allows clients to ditch bulky and costly servers for
network-based software and storage in remote data centres.
The
company said it was now grouping all of its development activities and
putting executive board member Vishal Sikka in charge of them from June
1. It also named board member Gerhard Oswald to oversee its new HANA
Enterprise Cloud product.
"In record time, we
went from being a startup in the cloud to being one of the largest
companies in the cloud," co-CEO Jim Hagemann Snabe said during a
conference call.
SAP splashed out $7.7 billion
last year to buy Ariba and SuccessFactors to push into the cloud
computing market, which research firm Gartner has said is expected to
grow 18.5% this year to $131 billion worldwide.
But
it suffered a setback at the start of 2013, when top sales managers in
Asia left, giving rivals an edge just as demand for cloud computing was
on the rise.
The German company vowed last
month to get its Asia-Pacific business back on track after the problems
pushed its first-quarter earnings and revenue below expectations.
On
Friday, it unexpectedly announced that Lars Dalgaard, the former
SuccessFactors CEO who was widely expected to lead its cloud computing
business, was leaving SAP to become an investor.
SAP
said Dalgaard was stepping down from the management board and leaving
the company effective June 1 but that he would continue to act as an
adviser to its cloud business.
"We're not
letting Lars go. He is still our strategic cloud adviser. We're not
turning off his e-mail and he can keep his PC," co-chief executive Bill
McDermott said.
Ariba CEO Bob Calderoni will
now take on more responsibility for SAP's overall cloud business, though
he has not been appointed to the executive board.
SAP
just launched a cloud-based version of its HANA tool, which helps
companies analyse large quantities of data quickly and competes with
Oracle's new Exalytics product.
0 comments:
Post a Comment