The human capital management software market was always going to be a turbulent place in 2012.
But last week, the stakes were upped significantly and the battle for the hearts, minds and wallets of HR directors everywhere took another turn when German software giant SAP swooped on SaaS-based HCM and talent management supplier SuccessFactors in a $3.4 billion takeover bid that changes…well, everything.
HCM applications have been installed in HR departments for a long time now, with PeopleSoft being the dominant provider. But the vendor was taken over by Oracle way back in 2005 and, although SAP has made some inroads with its own HCM offering since then, the market has remained relatively stable.
What has started to change the status quo somewhat, however, is cloud computing. Cloud in the form of SaaS – whereby organisations access functionality over the internet and pay for it as they need it rather than forking out for a software licence upfront – has already revolutionised the customer relationship management market. And now it appears to be HR’s turn.
But both Oracle and SAP have now entered the SaaS sector themselves and this week’s bid by SAP for SuccessFactors makes it plain that HRDs are going to hear a lot about cloud computing and HCM over the coming months.
Ray Wang, founder of Constellation Research, believes that the rationale behind SAP’s bid is clear. “SAP believes the combination of SuccessFactors and SAP will create a comprehensive HCM solution, marrying strength in enterprise applications with people-focused cloud applications,” he notes. “SAP has 15,000 HCM deployments (not customers) that could benefit from one-stop shopping.”
Nonetheless, it was important that the vendor did something to freshen up its portfolio, Wang observes.
While the acquisition will boost SAP’s SaaS portfolio, it “does call the future of SAP’s own planned SaaS HR products into question”, however, Eager adds.
Thomas Otter, vice president at rival research firm Gartner, is somewhat more upbeat. “The acquisition of SuccessFactors will give SAP a leading talent management suite. This addition will also help SAP defend its venerable core human resource management system product and create significant cross-selling opportunities,” he says.
But Otter also notes the acquisition’s premium price tag, pointing out that “$3.4 billion is more than 10 times SuccessFactors’ annual revenue and is a steep price to fill a niche in SAP’s human capital management portfolio”. This is not least because the total revenue generated by the talent management market during 2011 was roughly $3.5 billion.
Ultimately, however, Otter’s advice to customers and prospects is simple: “Lock in terms and conditions now as SAP tends to raise prices post-acquisition. Expect some turbulence in the 2012 road map as politics delay decision-making. Don’t commit to Employee Central until you see a clear road map commitment from SAP,” he warns.
For talent management customers, meanwhile, the message seems to be ‘look before you leap’. “Do not expect significant enhancements in ERP talent management functionality beyond SAP ERP HCM 6.0 Enhancement Pack. Assess SuccessFactors on your timescale. Just because SAP plans to buy SuccessFactors, that doesn’t mean you have to,” Otter cautions.
But he believes that there may also be some limited short-term disruption for existing SAP HCM software users. “It will take time to work out whether Employee Central will be a long-term replacement for core HRMS. But there are viable alternatives for both core HRMS and talent management options available from other vendors,” Otter notes.”
Thus, the overall analyst message appears simple enough: the HCM applications market is bracing itself for a long-overdue shake-up and HRDs are likely to be inundated by vendors keen to win them over to their respective causes.