• NetSuite Finds Partner, Needs to Tackle Verticals

     

    I had an advance briefing yesterday from NetSuite who are announcing this morning a new partnership with Hein & Associates. Hein is a full-service public accounting and advisory firm with offices in Denver, Houston, Dallas, and Irvine, California. This…

  • The iPhone and Business; Netsuite Banks on a Happy Union

     

    It was only a couple of years ago that Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer, fatefully dismissed the iPhone as a device and as a concept – for those who haven’t seen it, check out (for posterity’s sake if nothing else) the video below;

    Fast forward two or three years and we have the situation where an iPhone application is a non-negotiable requirement for someone delivering software – seemingly every day another consumer application launches it’s iPhone app – it seems if you’re a consumer facing service and don’t offer an iPhone app you’re destined to be jeered into oblivion by the crowds (or at least Fake Steve Jobs).

    Beyond the consumer stuff however we’ve seen a significant number of business applications develop a specific iPhone offering. Into this fray rides Netsuite who recently announced the launch of its application for iPhone and iPod touch. The Netsuite application delivers up the expected dashboard and information overviews including;

    • NetSuite Dashboards including KPIs, report snapshots, trend graphs, scorecards, reminders, and recent records. The dashboards are interactive, allowing users to drill down and explore trends with the touch of a finger.
    • NetSuite Calendar with support for accepting or declining events and marking tasks complete.
    • Lead, Prospect & Customer records tailored to mobile sales, field service and executive leadership, including access to associated contacts, marketing campaigns, opportunities, quotes, orders, purchase history, financial history, cases, and issues.
    • Productivity tools that leverage native capabilities of the device, such as click-to-call from any NetSuite record containing a phone number, click-to-email from any NetSuite record containing an e-mail address, and click-to-map (via Google Maps) from any NetSuite record containing a physical address.

    What interested me more than the functionality however was to look at the uptake for the iPhone app and look at Netsuite’s reasons for building an iPhone specific application. In the month or so since the release of the application, around 5000 people have downloaded the app – it’s early days and hard to take too much from that – but it’s a significant number of downloads.

    As for the decision to create an iPhone specific application specifically, and leaving other mobile device development to their mobile partners, Netsuite have made primarily a marketing move, I put this to Netsuite, and asked them for their reasoning behind the move, they told me that in their opinion;

    Apple is driving a lot of innovation in the smartphone market right now… By developing for the iPhone platform ourselves and working directly with Apple, we were able to deliver features like the NetSuite executive dashboard and provide visibility across the whole ERP cloud-computing suite, while our mobile partners have so far largely focused on CRM-centric solutions. We haven’t ruled out developing other mobile solutions ourselves, but there’s plenty of room in the NetSuite mobile ecosystem for both in-house and partner-delivered solutions, tailored for different types of businesses and users.

    It’s an interesting answer but one which doesn’t really address the reasons to focus on the iPhone in particular. No doubt Netsuite have looked at their customer mix and decided that whether for marketing reasons or functional ones, the iPhone is a good bet.

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  • Ouch, Netsuite gets a roasting….

     

    Seems some customers of NetSuite’s on-demand business software are a little less than happy at the sales tactics, the product delivery and the customer service. Some customer comments include; NetSuite is a catastrophe: sales people promise the moon but…

  • Netsuite IPO blazing…

     

    Netsuite’s IPO seems to be going all guns blazing. The modified Dutch auction (similar to that employed by Google during their IPO) has already seen the estimated listing price raised to between USD19-22. The interesting thing is that the…

  • And some more analysis – Xero, NetSuite, NetReturn, MYOB et al

     

    I’ve been doing a bit of “research” about this entire SaaS accounting thing and thought I’d share a few developments with y’all. In June 2005, MYOB became the Australasian distributor for NetSuite. NetSuite, of course, is the SaaS accounting…

  • AllCloud gets funding, makes an acquisition and installs a new CEO

     

    AllCloud has, for the past 10 years, been in the business of helping large organizations move to the cloud. They play at both the infrastructure and the application levels having partnerships with cloud providers such as AWS, Google Cloud,…

  • May the (Financial)Force be with you – Wipro’s cloud kid, Appirio, signs up to pimp

     

    I’ve been writing about FinancialForce ever since… well, ever since it has existed, to be honest. The company, a by-product of a love fest between European ERP vendor Unit4, and CRM behemoth Salesforce has been going now for nearly…

  • Rootstock acquires Kenandy – Salesforce ERP rollup

     

    It seems we’ve come full circle, at least as far as Kenandy is concerned. I was attending Salesforce’s DreamForce conference back in 2011 when the company was founded by the well-known (at least in ERP circles) Sandra Kurtzig, someone…

  • SAP Hybris – Transforming without boiling the ocean

     

    I’m writing this blog post while waiting for a flight from Barcelona to Dublin. I’ve spent the last couple of days at the SAP Hybris event in Barcelona and, as is always the case with Hybris events, it has…

  • Sage channels Salesforce and goes all platform on us

     

    (And, yes, the random image with the post is indeed Sage, the herb) Interesting positioning from Sage, the vendor that, after spending years with its head in the sand, is finally jumping fully into cloudy thinking. Sage is a…

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