fhs
Volume 12, Number 9 -- April 10, 2012

Hubspan Sees Growth in Cloud-Based Application Integration

Published: April 10, 2012

by Alex Woodie

Application integration is one of those IT disciplines that is begging for simplification. Since the early days of networked business computing, the task of keeping data flowing between applications has been a big pain in the IT department--and a giant source of revenue for service providers. It's also an area that business process service provider Hubspan sees as a big opportunity to address with its cloud-based integration offering.

Hubspan's flagship platform is a cloud-based integration service called the WebSpan SaaS Integration Platform. The product can be thought of as a hosted EDI translator on steroids. But WebSpan goes beyond moving X12 or AS2 messages across the value-added network (VAN) or the Internet, and its 30,000 endpoints in use regularly involve trading communities like RosettaNet and Ariba; product data synchronization services like GS1; and SOAP- or REST-based Web services.

In fact, the offering can handle just about any type of data common to the financial services, healthcare, manufacturing, distribution, and ecommerce industries through a quiver of connectors and adapters for various ERP and CRM systems. Additionally, Hubspan offers its users a collection of tools for managed file transfer (MFT), data validation, choreography, activity monitoring, and multi-party routing.

While providing point-to-point B2B solutions in the cloud is great, what customers are really looking for is a cloud-based solution to their business process management (BPM) needs, says Tom St. Onge, vice president of business development for Hubspan.

For example, Hubspan can help customers address BPM issues surrounding invoicing. Beyond the simple movement of data, an invoicing solution must address the complete lifecycle of that business process, including the acceptance, review, and ultimate acceptance or rejection of that invoice, as well as the connection points into backend systems. Running the invoicing system "in the cloud" provides certain advantages, St. Onge says.

"The process of how it works from a B2B point of view is what people want to put in the cloud, so everybody can access the same process and the same information," he tells IT Jungle. "When you take that business process and throw it up in the cloud, the business process actually becomes the product.

"That's where there's been a lot of interest in the market," he continues. "Because we throw that process and integration layer in the cloud, what ends up happening is you don't have to do point-to-point. You don't have to worry about all these new applications because the business process layer has an any-to-any approach. We have all the ways people can connect in and out of that process."

In effect, Hubspan is selling access to a state-of-the-art BPM engine and EAI tool that would take many millions of dollars for a company to build itself. And because WebSpan is used across 30,000 endpoints and processes millions of transactions, it minimizes the scope of unique integration requirements that will require some custom, hands-on attention, he says.

Lately, Hubspan has been seeing a lot of growth from its partners. Instead of a direct-sales model, where a customer signs on to the WebSpan cloud, Hubspan's business partners will use WebSpan under the covers, and use it to do BPM and transaction messaging over the Internet. This is where the delivery of BPM as just another component of a cloud-based business offering can really make a lot of sense.

One of Hubspan's most promising OEM customers these days is Ariba. The company, once a dot-com darling of the early 21st century, today is a leading provider of so-called "spend management" solutions. In effect, Ariba runs a network that connects upward of 730,000 companies and provides them a uniform way of managing their invoicing, purchase orders, payment processing, procurement, punch-outs, and contract management requirements.

That's right up Hubspan's alley, which is why the relationship between the Seattle, Washington-based company and Ariba has been growing. Two weeks ago, Hubspan announced that since the partnership commenced in 2010, the monthly volume of Ariba transactions has increased by a factor of five.

"The whole business we have with Ariba is growing," says St. Onge, adding that Hubspan has worked directly with some of the Ariba customers to onboard them into WebSpan. There is a particularly brisk business in regions of the world where companies don't have previous investments in integration middleware.

For these types of companies with blank integration slates, so to speak, the advantages of using the cloud are plain. As the technology advances and people become more comfortable with cloud services, much of the down-and-dirty application and data integration work will be delivered as a cloud service, freeing people to pursue more productive things.


RELATED STORIES

Hubspan Unveils Cloud-Based Invoicing

Hubspan Automates B2B from the Cloud



                     Post this story to del.icio.us
               Post this story to Digg
    Post this story to Slashdot


Sponsored By
COMPUTER KEYES

*Full Color Graphical Overlays*

KeyesOverlay rapidly converts standard *SCS printer
files into eye catching PDF documents.

Create graphical overlays in full color (or black and white if preferred) then
easily map your spooled file text with different fonts, sizes and colors!
Design beautiful documents and attractive reports VERY QUICKLY!
Then let KeyesOverlay create document after document
at lightning speed.

Learn more at www.computerkeyes.com
or call 800 356 0203.


Editor: Alex Woodie
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Timothy Prickett Morgan
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
Go to our contacts page and send us a message.

Sponsored Links

Abacus Solutions:  More affordable and flexible alternatives to deliver secondary workloads
PowerTech:  Get PowerTech's PCI Compliance Kit to learn how PCI DSS applies to IBM i servers
COMMON:  Join us at the 2012 Conference & Expo, May 6 - 9 in Anaheim, CA


 

IT Jungle Store Top Book Picks

BACK IN STOCK: Easy Steps to Internet Programming for System i: List Price, $49.95

The iSeries Express Web Implementer's Guide: List Price, $49.95
The iSeries Pocket Database Guide: List Price, $59
The iSeries Pocket SQL Guide: List Price, $59
The iSeries Pocket WebFacing Primer: List Price, $39
Migrating to WebSphere Express for iSeries: List Price, $49
Getting Started with WebSphere Express for iSeries: List Price, $49
The All-Everything Operating System: List Price, $35
The Best Joomla! Tutorial Ever!: List Price, $19.95


 
The Four Hundred
Some Thoughts About IBM's Next Generation Platform

Dell Goes After IBM Mainframe And Midrange Apps

Checking For Cracks In The Technology Foundation

Mad Dog 21/21: Not Weather, Nor Whether But When

Maxava iFoundation Renews Grant Funding For Second Year

Four Hundred Guru
Index Advisor, Part 1

Cut the Gordian Knot

Admin Alert: Readers Check in on Four Simple Rules for PTFs

Four Hundred Monitor
Four Hundred Monitor's
Full iSeries Events Calendar

System i PTF Guide
April 7, 2012: Volume 14, Number 14

March 24, 2012: Volume 14, Number 12

March 17, 2012: Volume 14, Number 11

March 10, 2012: Volume 14, Number 10

March 3, 2012: Volume 14, Number 9

February 25, 2012: Volume 14, Number 8

TPM at The Register
US job creation stalls in March

Gorging Dell crams Canadian legacy-app rebore outfit into cakehole

Oracle gives away updated Ops Center control freak

Fujitsu wins another big super deal in Japan

Dell guns for IBM mainframes with Clerity gobble

General Dynamics, HP fluff up $249.8m Army cloud

Nvidia: No magic compilers for HPC coprocessors

IBM's DB2 database update does time travel, gets graphic

Citrix champions CloudStack, throws OpenStack under a bus

Samsung forging ARM server chips?

Fujitsu fires up first petaflopper PrimeHPC FX10

Thin-client giant Wyse gobbled by Dell

THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

ProData Computer Services
Maxava
HiT Software
Computer Keyes
RJS Software Systems


Printer Friendly Version


TABLE OF CONTENTS
Connectria Hosting Unveils an IBM i Cloud

Help/Systems Widens the Robot's Reach

ManageEngine Pushes the Systems Management Envelope

Hubspan Sees Growth in Cloud-Based Application Integration

SQL Conference Puts Spotlight on IBM i

News Briefs and Product Shorts:

Info Builders Adds SaaS Features to BI Software . . . Micro Focus Updates RUMBA Emulator . . . MuleSoft Taps Avalara for Automated Tax Calculation in the Cloud . . . TIBCO to Buy LogLogic . . . Oracle Unveils New BI Apps for Exalytics Machine . . .

Four Hundred Stuff

BACK ISSUES




 
Subscription Information:
You can unsubscribe, change your email address, or sign up for any of IT Jungle's free e-newsletters through our Web site at http://www.itjungle.com/sub/subscribe.html.

Copyright © 1996-2012 Guild Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Guild Companies, Inc., 50 Park Terrace East, Suite 8F, New York, NY 10034

Privacy Statement