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Work-life balance

One's own responsibility toward family and career determines the balance. What is SAP's responsibility to existing customers when it comes to striking a balance between SW manufacturer and cloud operator?
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April 4, 2019
NoName
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This text has been automatically translated from German to English.

My wife noticed:

"You've been home a lot lately. Are you preparing for semi-retirement and early retirement, as apparently some of your SAP colleagues are now doing, perhaps not entirely voluntarily?"

No, because I'm actually planning to do this CIO job for a few more years, which I still really enjoy. To make sure I last for many more years, I've resolved to pay more attention to my work-life balance. It's a question of responsibility to myself, to my wife and also to my company and its employees.

My friend Gerd Oswald has, with a lot of luck, survived several serious health attacks and is now sitting full of beans on the SAP Supervisory Board. I don't want to let it get that far and so I'm at the fitness club at least three times a week.

SAP is currently trying to strike a completely different balance - or to put it better: I'm not sure whether SAP is aware of the responsibility of oscillating between a software manufacturer for on-premise applications and a cloud provider for enterprise applications. Of course: life is change. But SAP was an ERP SW vendor for forty years in an almost perfect ecosystem.

The responsibilities were optimally divided: SAP produced ERP applications and the necessary middleware; IBM, Microsoft, Oracle and others supplied the matching databases; numerous hardware manufacturers created the infrastructure; and SAP partners took care of the customizing.

For many years, there was a harmonious balance between SAP, the IT companies and consulting firms. The SAP community was in an almost optimal work-life balance.

Sybase, Hana and cloud computing changed everything! Instead of continuing to optimize the successful path, SAP recklessly questioned the ERP unique selling proposition and became involved in topics where other companies already had a blatant lead.

With Sybase, SAP entered the database business and overnight had to argue quite differently to IBM, Microsoft and Oracle. With Hana, SAP established a monopolistic system in the community: In the future, the ERP infrastructure will consist exclusively of Linux and the Hana database platform.

This also reduced the hardware to Xeon and Power servers. In addition, the ERP world market leader decided to also become a cloud provider. Further development and adaptation of the company's own and purchased applications in the direction of the cloud would have been logical - becoming a competitor to the hyperscalers would not make sense from a business point of view.

Not only did the work-life balance in the SAP community get out of hand as a result of Sybase, Hana and Cloud, I also have to ask myself the question today: Is SAP aware of the responsibility that the ERP group is shouldering here?

After all, it makes a big difference whether I am an ERP software manufacturer or a database inventor, trading platform (Ariba), software operator (cloud computing) or consultant (trusted advisor). Manufacturer or operator? SAP obviously doesn't strike a balance here.

SAP LaMa is now running completely out of control. Three emergency patches within four months for the Hana database platform are intolerable.

A cloud offering that is not scalable in all directions (breathing system) runs counter to the idea of "cloud computing". We are not the only IT departments saying goodbye to the HEC and relying on on-premise; the Hana Enterprise cloud exit is also being discussed at my SAP regulars' table.

SAP is in no way aware of its new role as an intended "hyperscaler". SAP CEO Bill McDermott wants more revenue as a salesman, but without more responsibility.

This balance cannot be achieved. If SAP wants to have long-term and sustainable success with cloud computing, the cultural change from SW manufacturer to SW operator must succeed and a new work-life balance must emerge in the SAP community.

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Working on the SAP basis is crucial for successful S/4 conversion. 

This gives the Competence Center strategic importance for existing SAP customers. Regardless of the S/4 Hana operating model, topics such as Automation, Monitoring, Security, Application Lifecycle Management and Data Management the basis for S/4 operations.

For the second time, E3 magazine is organizing a summit for the SAP community in Salzburg to provide comprehensive information on all aspects of S/4 Hana groundwork.

Venue

More information will follow shortly.

Event date

Wednesday, May 21, and
Thursday, May 22, 2025

Early Bird Ticket

Available until Friday, January 24, 2025
EUR 390 excl. VAT

Regular ticket

EUR 590 excl. VAT

Venue

Hotel Hilton Heidelberg
Kurfürstenanlage 1
D-69115 Heidelberg

Event date

Wednesday, March 5, and
Thursday, March 6, 2025

Tickets

Regular ticket
EUR 590 excl. VAT
Early Bird Ticket

Available until December 20, 2024

EUR 390 excl. VAT
The event is organized by the E3 magazine of the publishing house B4Bmedia.net AG. The presentations will be accompanied by an exhibition of selected SAP partners. The ticket price includes attendance at all presentations of the Steampunk and BTP Summit 2025, a visit to the exhibition area, participation in the evening event and catering during the official program. The lecture program and the list of exhibitors and sponsors (SAP partners) will be published on this website in due course.