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  • SAP Shuts Down TomorrowNow Support Biz

    July 28, 2008 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    After a protracted, painful, and ultimately successful bid to acquire rival PeopleSoft by Oracle that resulted in the contentious deal being done in January 2005, Oracle’s key enterprise application software rival, SAP, made a wiseguy move–and what looked like a clever move– only a few weeks later in acquiring TomorrowNow, a company that provided support to the application suites under control of the greatly expanded Oracle. But the grins at SAP all turned to chagrins in March 2007 when TomorrowNow and SAP were slapped with lawsuits for illegally downloading Oracle’s support materials.

    Last summer, SAP’s chief executive officer, Henning Kagermann, admitted that TomorrowNow’s employees had improperly downloaded and used Oracle’s support materials, and appointed Mark White, the chief operating officer and the former chief financial officer of its SAP Americas division, as the executive chairman of the TomorrowNow unit to clean up the mess. Last week, in a terse statement, White announced that SAP was shutting down the TomorrowNow business. By November, Andrew Nelson, TomorrowNow’s chief executive officer, and other members of the senior management staff were shown the door by SAP.

    Specifically, SAP said that after reviewing the situation, it has decided to wind down the TomorrowNow unit and is working with the 225 customers of the unit to help them move back to Oracle support for their PeopleSoft, Siebel, and JD Edwards software suites or to “smoothly transition to new support options,” as the statement put it when it was released on July 21.

    “Our goal is to assist our customers in transitioning to a new support provider, including Oracle, without a disruption to their support during the wind-down process,” explained White. He did not elaborate on what other support options SAP was helping its customers with.

    SAP said that it will conclude the winding down of TomorrowNow before October 31, 2008.

    At the time of the TomorrowNow acquisition in February 2005, the unit had only 100 customers, so this was a pretty good business for SAP to dive into, in theory. Had it not been for the “inappropriate” use of Oracle materials, as Kagermann so delicately put it last July, TomorrowNow might have 500 customers paying for Oracle support.

    The lawsuit launched by Oracle in March 2007 against SAP and TomorrowNow is still underway in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California in San Francisco. Oracle and SAP have not come to terms on a settlement, or they would have announced that last week, so the lawsuit is proceeding at its snail’s pace. Even though Oracle and SAP Americas are both Delaware corporations, Oracle chose California as the venue for the lawsuit because of strong state laws against computer fraud.

    RELATED STORIES

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    SAP Reports Solid Results for 2007, Aims for Repeat in 2008

    Top Execs at TomorrowNow Depart, SAP Hints at Sale

    SAP Plants Its Flag in Mid-Market Territory with SaaS Apps

    Oracle-SAP Suit: TomorrowNow Acted Improperly, Admits SAP

    TomorrowNow Says Biz is Booming, Opens Mexico Office

    Oracle Sues SAP Over ‘Corporate Theft on a Grand Scale’

    TomorrowNow Takes Steps to Ensure Rapid Response

    TomorrowNow Expanding Third-Party Maintenance Business

    J.D. Edwards Shops Get New Maintenance Options

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    Rimini Street Offers JDE Support Services



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    Tags: Tags: mtfh_rc, Volume 17, Number 29 -- July 28, 2008

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TFH Volume: 17 Issue: 29

This Issue Sponsored By

    Table of Contents

    • IBM Reaches Out to Midmarket Business Partners
    • Sundry July Power Systems Announcements
    • IBM Updates DB2 Web Query Business Intelligence Tool
    • As I See It: Babes in Broadband
    • SAP Shuts Down TomorrowNow Support Biz
    • Reader Feedback on What the Heck Is the Midrange, Anyway?
    • Gartner Predicts Half of Users Dissatisfied with IT Pace by 2013
    • IBM Ultrium Media Pricing: Told You This Story Wasn’t Done
    • Middleware Makers Are Sued Over Server Patents
    • Mike Borman Lands the CEO Job at Avocent

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