Ellison commits to upgrades of PeopleSoft, JDE apps

REDWOOD CITY, Calif. — Oracle CEO Larry Ellison began a campaign here to assure PeopleSoft customers that the money they’ve sunk into their applications hasn’t disappeared with his company’s purchase of PeopleSoft.

“”We’re going to preserve your investment in J.D. Edwards products, in PeopleSoft

products and in Oracle products”” to 2013, Ellison told customers and industry analysts here.

He promised the company will continue to develop J.D. Edwards World 8.11 to version 8.12, finish developing PeopleSoft Enterprise 8.9 and complete version 9.0, and develop a new release of Oracle E-Business Suite (EBS).

In addition, the company will create a successor product to EBS with a merged feature set from all three applications.

“”We can do both,”” he maintained. “”We have the wherewithal to develop all three lines while developing a successor merged product.””

“”We’ll have a graceful upgrade to Project Fusion at some point in the future,”” he promised. Nor will there be any pressure from Oracle on customers to migrate to the new suite. “”You pick the time when it’s convenient to upgrade,”” he said.

The switch will be “”an automated upgrade”” from any current PeopleSoft and JDE product that will carry over all their data, he said, “”not a conversion”” to a new application.

He also dismissed concerns that Oracle will pressure PeopleSoft and JDE customers to move from other companies’ databases to Oracle. While Oracle will welcome companies switching, “”we’re not going to nudge you to do that.””

Support for IBM, BEA and Microsoft products on PeopleSoft and JDE platforms will continue until 2013, he said. Specifically, PeopleSoft and JDE upgrades set for this year will continue as scheduled.

In 2006 PeopleSoft 9.0, JDE Enterprise One 8.12 and Oracle EBS 12 will be released. Support for JDE XE and 8.0 will be extended until February, 2007.

The first elements of Fusion technology will be made available in 2006 in data hubs and transaction bases, with individual applications out the following year. The full Fusion suite is expected to be released in 2008.

Fusion will be a Java-based product which will take advantage of Internet technologies,”” he said, a leap over industry-leader SAP.

“”SAP had their chance over the last 18 months,”” said Ellison.

Not frozen

Asked if he’s asking PeopleSoft/JDE customers to “”stay frozen”” until Fusion is finished, Ellison disagreed. “”We’re not asking anyone to stay frozen,”” he said, emphasizing that PeopleSoft and JDE upgrades will continue. But at a time of their choosing they will move to the new suite.

Paul Hamerman of Forrester Research said it’s a sign the company is serious about boosting the importance of its applications work to at least the level of its database.

“”Applications have been a sideline for Oracle,”” he said, noting that historically applications have accounted for only 20 per cent of the company’s business. But having spent US$10 billion on PeopleSoft, shareholders will be expecting some return.

Wookey’s promotion “”will be key for Oracle to step forward in applications,”” said Hamerman.

As a signal to the new employees, Jesper Anderson, formerly PeopleSoft senior vice-president, has been selected to lead Oracle’s new applications strategy team to develop product and business strategy. Oracle’s Cliff Godwin will head the Project Fusion team.

According to a release put out earlier this month, AMR Research believes the combined Oracle-PeopleSoft would have had applications revenues in 2004 of US$5.5 billion, making it the second largest applications vendor behind SAP with 12 per cent of the worldwide enterprise applications market.

“”Whether Oracle can continue to cut into SAP’s share will depend entirely on the successful integration of the two companies,”” said Bruce Richardson, AMR’s senior vice-president of research.

But he also said speeches from Oracle executives were missing details on pricing for maintenance and support of PeopleSoft and JDE products. “”The nitty-gritty stuff still remains to be answered,”” he said in an interview. “”Those are going to be answered one-on-one with customers.”” He also wondered how realistic the 2008 date is for Fusion.

Would you recommend this article?

Share

Thanks for taking the time to let us know what you think of this article!
We'd love to hear your opinion about this or any other story you read in our publication.


Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

Featured Download

Howard Solomon
Howard Solomon
Currently a freelance writer. Former editor of ITWorldCanada.com and Computing Canada. An IT journalist since 1997, Howard has written for several of ITWC's sister publications, including ITBusiness.ca. Before arriving at ITWC he served as a staff reporter at the Calgary Herald and the Brampton (Ont.) Daily Times.

Featured Story

How the CTO can Maintain Cloud Momentum Across the Enterprise

Embracing cloud is easy for some individuals. But embedding widespread cloud adoption at the enterprise level is...

Related Tech News

Get ITBusiness Delivered

Our experienced team of journalists brings you engaging content targeted to IT professionals and line-of-business executives delivered directly to your inbox.

Featured Tech Jobs