Tag Archive for 'SaaS'

“Cloud Computing - A wave of opportunities for SMEs.” NASSCOM EMERGEOUT Conclave, 28th Aug 09

EMERGEOUT concalveHaving ridden the wave successfully on both the occasions – Delhi the first time, followed by Chennai, the third edition, would be hosted in the city where it all started. EMERGEOUT 2009 scheduled for 28th August in New Delhi is presently in its new avtar and growing stronger by the day. This time the theme, is “Cloud Computing - A wave of opportunities for SMEs”. There has been a paradigm shift in the thought process and CIOs are now mulling over on how to reduce capex cost and adopt a variable structure by engaging on a “pay as you use” model.

Technology as a business enabler, is fundamental to strategic decision making and adoption of a new model is feasible, only if there is real value. With technological obsolescence looming large, it is becoming progressively more difficult to assess what really works in the long run. How can SMEs leverage on the Cloud Computing model to effect a positive change in their business. For the service provider one question that begs to be answered – is it a viable revenue model? What is the total size of the market for On-demand Computing both at domestic and international level? How should we re-orient ourselves, to keep up with the Global Delivery Mechanism and ensure that we retain our leadership position. This really is a teaser and once we delve into the subject, you will appreciate even a one-day conference format is insufficient to address all the angles.

Some of the topics which would be addressed at the conference are:

* The Future of Software as a Service(SaaS) and Cloud Computing
* How SaaS and Cloud Computing are changing the IT industry and the Opportunities they present
* India market and the SaaS/Cloud Computing landscape
* Some case studies on companies who have adapted SaaS
* Demystifying SaaS, PaaS, IaaS business
* The Benefits of SaaS and doing business in the Cloud- User & Vendor Perspective
* VAS leveraging the SaaS platform
* Showcasing the NASSCOM EMERGE 50
* The Cloud with the SILVER lining

This conclave would provide the perfect platform to discuss and deliberate on this entirely new wave called the Cloud-Computing and its potential to change business. It will also address on the challenges faced as well as showcase some of the successful cases where the model has been adopted. If you are planning to switch over from your legacy system or start afresh, using  this model, then it would be well worth your time to be there in New Delhi on 28th August for the third edition of EMERGEOUT 2009, as we look into the future. I can tell you, this will be a unique opportunity to listen to some of the thought leaders of the IT Industry ideate on this subject. Look forward to meeting you..

Online vouchers - SaaS approach

Recently I was approached by some people who were interested in developing a software for the administration of their daily office work. They wanted it really cheap. Now these are the poeple who started using computers at their workplace recently. Now they have realized that a software can give them some advantage in the competition. In the coming years, many such small businesses would be willing to have such small and cheap software for their businesses. Most of these businesses would essentially be needing a software which can manage their bills/vouchers and provide a facility to all the accounting/end-of-day-settlement for their cash collection. Given the evolving nature of SaaS model and that avaialability of cheap softwares that SaaS model leads to, online voucher management system should be an attractive venture of near future.

After doing some research I could find that their are very few players in this line of bisiness. I’m not very sure of the size of the marketwe can see in future for such a busines but it would definitely be huge.

Has anyone here done any market research in this particular segment? Anyone on this forum has even a wild guess on what would be the size of such a market?

Indian SMBs to spend $1.26 billion for Internet services in ‘08

A report by market research firm Access Markets International Partners estimates that Indian SMBs will spend $1.26 billion on Internet-related products and services in 2008, an amazing 35% increase from the last year. Considering the fact that data security and compliance is generally the third or fourth factor in the priority-list of SMBs (after things like infrastructure and accessibility), I am just wondering how much of it can be tapped by non-intrusive and hassle-free models like security-as-a-service? SMBs are still sticking to contemporary offerings due to the lack of awareness. Even a small chunk of the pie will be plentiful. Security companies need special action plan for India now.

Two new web security (SaaS) startups

I was just waiting for something like this to happen. Purewire and ZScaler will be upping the ante in the lucrative managed services market. The companies are backed by security superstars like Jay Chaudhary and veterans from CipherTrust and ISS. Prices range roughly from $1-$5 (per user per month) and $30 (per user per year) for ZScaler and Purewire respectively. Way to go!

Sramana’s Challenge: Kyunki ‘SaaS’ Bhi Kabhi…

Just about an year ago, I started thinking about the last big thing in security. This industry has reached a stage where disruptive technologies have virtually hit the glass ceiling. The market has violently regurgitated from any attempts to shove myopic product solutions down their throat. While industry old-timers sulk at it, I believe it’s a justifiable act. However, there are still a few acid-tripped security startups aiming to sell pure-play product solutions which only solve a part of the problem. I think their belief lies in the fact that there are still a few paranoid clients and pseudo-geek CISOs, who will buy their FUD-mongering and save themselves from the impending security doomsday. I think they are badly mistaken.

On a more calmed down note, customers have realized their mistakes and are suffering from existential angst. They understand the current threat landscape, the actual security risks looming over their business - they see the bigger picture and they know what they want. What customers don’t want are solutions which fragment the security problem into minuscule, mind-numbing, schizoid entities like botnet mitigation, security incident and event management, change control, client-side security, intrusion prevention, virtualization security, spam protection, endpoint protection, network behavioral analysis, identity management, fraud prevention, threat intelligence, compliance management, yada yada yada. Customers have failed to quantify any tangible RoI on such expenditures, they have had a hard-time managing the gamut of deployments over their networks, and above all - they don’t have any god-damn clue on how to gleam actionable information out of these products. They have stopped being carried away by this cryptic industry. So consolidation was a very obvious Darwinian step.

Mind you, the consolidation is happening in two ways. One, the established bigger security vendors are acquiring smaller companies and creating wholesome, turnkey solution offerings which cover everything under the security umbrella (Symantec, McAfee, Cisco). Secondly, enterprise software and solution providers, which are generally exposed to maximum risk are integrating these security technologies right into their very frameworks (EMC, Google, HP, IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, VMware). Thirdly, the coming innovation will be in the solution offerings and not in the underlying technologies. Fourthly, the security outsourcing industry is lagging by around 5 years.

So now comes the million-dollar question. What about ground root entrepreneurs and Schumpeterian innovators? I think, there are some opportunities on the horizon. The opportunities lie in re-innovating product technologies which failed just due to their higher operational costs and lack of business clarity. A quote from my last post which will help in elucidating this point:

…enterprise security expenditures became more and more justifiable in business terms due to regulatory compliance, cyber-crimes becoming a grim reality and the changing threat landscape. So now, security was not some obscure handy-work limited to network administrators; its need had trickled down towards the pin-striped pants of the management.

Opportunities also lie in security solutions which can leverage the cost-arbitrage. With the ongoing consolidation, security solutions have become more and more service-centric and productized-services is the way to go. When it comes to services, we can definitely exploit the well-proven Indian offshoring model. The case in point being, that although the bigger security players are merrily striving to provide wholesome solutions, integrations of such diverse acquired technologies leads to a lot of quality-loss thus raising the cost of the service offering.

Let me a take a few ideas very specifically. A few months ago when I read this seminal article by David Cowan, my immediate thought was, “Why not try outsourcing+SaaS!!?”. An excerpt from my brief commentary.

Absolutely credible and intuitive assessment of the consolidated and de-productized information security market by David Cowan of Bessemer Venture Partners. David has hit the bullseye here, beautifully explaining the current and underlying bottlenecks ailing the business of information security. Personally, I feel this is a brilliant take on the future of the IT security industry. People have already shunned the idea of another killer security product and information security outsourcing (infrastructure management/MSS - whatever) is going nowhere.

Now, imagine the proven Indian offshoring model combined with SaaS! Companies like Wipro, which has a well-established security consulting services arm, has this whole market for the taking if they can streamline their messy operations. However, this is a tough bet for ground root entrepreneurs as it requires an elaborate operational setup and infrastructure.

And just a few weeks ago, when I read the Challenge to Indian Entrepreneurs posted by Sramana Mitra (written in Feb’07), I became more and more certain.

In the recently concluded Philippe Courtot interview series, we discussed at length the various ways in which India and China could undercut US companies, and Philippe acknowledged that in his business (Qualys is an outsourced managed security service provider, a SaaS play), it is quite possible that an Indian company could come up with a vastly lower cost structure, and customers would switch immediately, if they are convinced about the reliability of the service.

Just to set the economics in perspective, Qualys has invested $65 Million to build an infrastructure that “is at the scale of the planet” to monitor, audit and report network security problems.

Let me throw a challenge in the direction of the Indian entrepreneurs: Go figure out how to build this same business for $30 Million, and I can tell you, you will have an absolute winner in your hands.

There hasn’t been a better time to disrupt the current dystopian order. In fact, a few Indian companies like iViz an Aujas (both backed by IDG Ventures) are trying something similar to Qualys. But they have a long way to go. Their product technologies are in nascent stage, they are trying to re-invent the wheel in solving most of the problems, they lack in technological maturity needed to understand the services model, they don’t have solid sales and marketing channels, and above all, they don’t have the kind of Übermensch team which is needed to pull this off. There are only a handful of people in India which have worked on such intrinsic areas like security product management, so talent is a big scarcity. I think, there is a timeline of about 1.5-3 years - until when the bigger consolidated players fix the rough edges of their offerings - where such startups can still think to leverage this big opportunity.

Okay, one more idea for the taking. I think, service-provider/tier-1/backbone security is one market which is still in the experimental phase. There are some great opportunities lying there. Indian companies like Guavus and others like PacketAnalytics are working on it.

Then, opportunities also lie in capturing the contemporary security services market by transforming them into the fashionable on-demand model combined with offshoring. Example being - Veracode for application security.

That day is not far-off when some Indian entrepreneur will make Sramana and SaaSu-Maa jump with joy. Whad’ya say? :)

Happy SaaSu

The Death of Indian Outsourcing

“Are you kidding? No way!”

In 2008, the IT and IT enabled services (ITES / BPO) industries are supposed to be the major drivers of India’s economic growth. According to Nasscom, the two industries combined will employ 4 Million people, account for 7% of GDP, and 33% of foreign exchange inflow.

Death of this industry is far from anyone’s mind.

Let me tell you a story. <!–more–>

There is a tiny company in Silicon Valley called InsideView. It helps customers in sales lead generation, qualification and opportunity identification research using technology and a software-as-a-service (SaaS) business model.

In November 2007, InsideView acquired a company called TrueAdvantage which did the exact same thing manually, with a team of 150 people in India. TrueAdvantage had 2500 customers, all of which are being transitioned over to InsideView’s software-driven solution. All 150 people at TrueAdvantage have been laid off for no fault of their own.

The human tragedy may sound familiar to the Michigan auto-workers who have been losing their jobs to China, or the IT/Call-center workers in the US whose jobs have been off-shored to India. They have all been laid off for no fault of their own.

The reality is that wages are rising in India. The cost advantage for off-shoring to Indian used to be at least 1:6. Today, it is at best 1:3. Attrition is scary.

Jobs that are low-value-add and easily automatable should and will disappear over the next decade. People talk a lot about India moving up the value chain. Yes, some of that has indeed happened. An industry that started gaining momentum with the Y2K porting projects has blossomed beautifully into one that offers a much more comprehensive spectrum of services.

Yet, India, for all its glory, is still the world’s back-office. The IT / ITES industry is a “services” industry. In simple terms, the Indians don’t do the thinking. The customers do. India executes.

As a result, India has not learn’t to come up with technology products of its own. Barring a few exceptions, the huge amount of venture capital chasing India finds it difficult to be deployed. There is way too much money, way too few deals. Instead, tech-sector VCs are now diverting capital to retail, real estate, hotels, etc.

The $30 Billion IT / ITES services industry, meanwhile, is slowly and surely, losing its competitive advantage.

You see, most of the 4 Million people that the industry employs have already “arrived”. They have breezed through the milestones that their fathers had to toil all their lives to reach. A phone. A watch. A TV. A car. A house.

They are complacent. They will not take risks. They have “outsourced” thinking to their customers.

As the 1:3 cost structure becomes 1:1.5, it will soon become inefficient to use Indian labor. Why not Oklahoma or British Columbia? For many Europeans, Eastern Europe has already become more compelling than India. The pure labor arbitrage equation will no longer balance.

In a decade, what would happen to the newly minted affluent class created by the Indian IT boom?

Companies like Infosys and Wipro, assuming that they want to preserve their business momentum, will need to diversify their portfolios away from pure body-shopping and process competencies to technology driven advantages. The obvious place for them to go is Software-As-A-Service (SaaS). Their current market caps and cash reserves are high, so an easy way for this transition would be via acquisitions. Wherever SaaS and manual BPO services overlap, they should cut the manual and replace with SaaS to the extent possible.

To give you an accurate picture, none of this is happening quite yet. In fact, Infosys is hiring tens of thousands of new employees in India still. The mood is upbeat. The golden goose is still laying large, warm eggs, enough to feed the 4 Million and their families.

Meanwhile, the workforce is getting comfortable in their cubicle chairs, just as the turkey gets comfortable before Thanksgiving.

Great read: SaaSy security suits small businesses

Absolutely credible and intuitive assessment of the consolidated and de-productized information security market by David Cowan of Bessemer Venture Partners. David has hit the bullseye here, beautifully explaining the current and underlying bottlenecks ailing the business of information security. Personally, I feel this is a brilliant take on the future of the IT security industry. People have already shunned the idea of another killer security product and information security outsourcing (infrastructure management/MSS - whatever) is going nowhere.

Now, imagine the proven Indian offshoring model combined with SaaS! Companies like Wipro, which has a well-established security consulting services arm, has this whole market for the taking if they can streamline their messy operations. However, this is a tough bet for ground root entrepreneurs as it requires an elaborate operational setup and infrastructure.

Read here.