Fusion apps is gone, the only question is how much at the end of this month, and how much will be gone next quarter. There may be one person left behind in each role in FA. Skeleton crew. This plan has been in the works for quite some time. This is happening for 3 well documented reasons:
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Lawsuit over netsuite... have to show it was not just an over priced stock purchase by LE to benefit his bank account.
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Netsuite is the cloud strategy for the future.
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Oracle is targeting mid market and needs to prune competing legacy products.
http://www.siliconbeat.com/2017/05/10/oracles-larry-ellison-made-billions-by-overpaying-for-netsuite-lawsuit/
Under pressure from founder Larry Ellison, Oracle paid too much for NetSuite, and Ellison made more than $4 billion for himself and his family as a result, a new lawsuit claims.
Redwood City’s Oracle in July announced it was buying San Mateo cloud-software firm NetSuite for $9.3 billion. Ellison at the time owned about 39 percent of Netsuite, and together with his family about 45 percent, according to media reports.
In a lawsuit filed this week, the Southern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority, a shareholder in Oracle, alleged that Ellison and his near-and-dear ones hauled in an abundance of treasure from the deal because company chairman Ellison had pushed Oracle’s directors to approve an inflated price, Law360 reported (paywall).
“The big winner was Ellison and his family, who used Oracle’s money to buy NetSuite … and gained personal wealth of over $4.1 billion in the process,” the suit claimed. “Ellison stood on both sides of the transaction.”
Oracle declined to comment on the lawsuit.
- Its the future plan being unfolded.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/oracle/2017/10/05/netsuite-and-oracle-it-started-with-a-shared-vision-for-a-cloud-future/#57e3d8323ebc
It was Oracle’s founder and now CTO and Executive Chairman Larry Ellison whom Goldberg approached when his first company floundered. After struggling to find a system that would allow him to fully monitor business operations there, Goldberg told Ellison he wanted to start a new company. He wanted to build a software system that could help him monitor sales. Ellison, as Goldberg tells it, advised him to focus instead on accounting, then build out the front office and add a web store. Oh, and run the applications over the web, for those companies that didn’t want to manage systems themselves.
“He really saw it,” said Goldberg, now executive VP of development with Oracle. “That was the next computing model. The computing model for the next thousand years.”
Another reason for NetSuite’s success, Goldberg said, was the other part of Ellison’s advice—building software to run an entire business, not just a department. That structure helped to eliminate “the hairball” of disparate, loosely connected business applications that often held companies back, he explained.
That hairball of apps is now seen as fusion apps. Its getting scuttled and quickly.
- https://www.cio.com/article/3101773/best-practices/oracle-buys-netsuite-what-does-this-mean.html
Question 1: What does Oracle's acquisition of NetSuite mean for companies that are looking to move their finance function into the cloud?
Overall, this is not a great development for companies that are in the market for new finance and accounting systems. It leaves organizations with less choice. NetSuite traditionally played in the midmarket space and competed with companies like Intacct, Infor, Epicor and other vendors of traditional on-premises systems. As Oracle began to develop its Oracle Cloud Finance applications (based on the Fusion product line), it originally thought that it would be selling to large enterprises. However, Oracle's success to date with this product has been largely in the midmarket space. This puts Oracle Cloud head to head with NetSuite. As companies look for "choices," they can no longer pit the vendors and products against each other. Less competition means less choice and less negotiating leverage. Fortunately, there are other competitive cloud-based systems that will provide options beyond sourcing applications from just one company.
Question 3: How will Oracle position its now five competing products?
Oracle now has five competing products: Oracle EBS, JD Edwards, PeopleSoft, Oracle Cloud and NetSuite (not to mention Open Air, a professional services solution that NetSuite acquired five years ago). Where will the R&D dollars be invested? Will the company have individual product teams to sell the various systems, or will one sales representative be able to sell all of the products? Will Oracle position NetSuite as its solution for midmarket customers and Oracle Cloud for large enterprises? How will Oracle position these products vis-a-vis those of competitors such as SAP, Workday, Intacct, Epicor and Infor in the small, midsize and large enterprise markets?
These are all excellent questions. ...most of its R&D dollars are in the cloud space. There will be winners and losers in Oracle's corporate structure, and it will be interesting to see how this acquisition plays out — and which products become favorite sons in terms of R&D and market positioning.