Key SaaS software executive leaving SAP
by GadgetGizmodo
John Wookey, formerly of Oracle, is departing the company after three years
By Chris Kanaracus
IDG News Service (Boston Bureau)
BOSTON (04/18/2011) â" SAP executive John Wookey, who was charged with developing a SaaS (software as a service) strategy for large enterprises, is leaving the vendor after about two-and-a-half years, the company said Monday.
SAP executive Peter Lorenz, to whom Wookey reported, will oversee the large enterprise SaaS division until a successor is named, said spokesman Jim Dever.
Wookey is leaving for personal reasons, Dever said. âHe actually is going to spend some time with his family and figure out what he wants to do beyond that.â
âThis certainly doesnât change our commitment to the on-demand business,â Dever added. âWeâve hit a number of milestones.â
Wookey, whose title at SAP was executive vice president of Line of Business On Demand, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Monday.
A high-profile hire for SAP, Wookey arrived at the company in November 2008 following a stint at rival Oracle, where he was an early driver of that companyâs long-gestating Fusion Applications. At SAP, Wookey had been working on a series of SaaS applications meant to serve as extensions to the companyâs flagship Business Suite.
One of the first products to emerge from Wookeyâs team was the CRM (customer relationship management) application Sales on Demand. More are expected to be discussed at SAPâs Sapphire conference in Orlando next month.
His departure is âa significant loss for SAP,â as he had put together a star team including ex-Oracle and ex-Salesforce.com employees, said analyst Ray Wang, CEO of Constellation Research. Wookey also âput together the right esprit de corps to move forward,â Wang added.
âI definitely considered him in the top five most important people at SAP,â said Jon Reed, an independent analyst who closely tracks SAP. âWookey had a lot of creative ideas but his work wasnât done, so thatâs the concern.â
While SAPâs large enterprise SaaS strategy was probably not going to generate major amounts of revenue this year, it is key to positioning the company as something other than âa legacy vendor living off maintenance revenues and hoping for the best,â Reed said.
Along with the large-enterprise SaaS strategy, SAP is selling Business ByDesign, an on-demand ERP (enterprise resource planning) suite aimed at midmarket companies as well as divisions of larger ones.
The applications for large enterprises are now based on ByDesignâs underlying platform, after first being targeted for a different set of technologies.
Chris Kanaracus covers enterprise software and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Chrisâs e-mail address is Chris_Kanaracus@idg.com
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