Under fire for not saying enough about future product plans, HR software
giant Oracle said plenty at its recent conference in San Francisco.
During its OpenWorld show late last month, Oracle provided details about the
next versions of its Oracle E-Business Suite and PeopleSoft Enterprise products.
The company also emphasized its Applications Unlimited program, a pledge made
earlier this year to keep advancing various product lines.
But it said little about what to expect in Fusion, Oracle’s project to blend
the best of various applications in a new product line.
Albert Pang, an analyst at research firm IDC, gives Oracle credit for
clarifying its vision at the show. "It’s a major improvement over what it did
last year," Pang says.
But, Pang adds, Oracle has downplayed what features will go into the Fusion
application.
"There’s still anxiety among the Oracle customers about what the Fusion
strategy is going to look like," he says.
In a statement, Oracle said it "communicates product road maps to its
customers through a variety of channels." Among those steps, the company said,
is a set of 1,000 events around the world this year focused on applications.
Oracle and archrival SAP, both of which make software for a range of business
tasks including human resources, are each seeking to dominate the growing HR
software world. Meanwhile, a host of smaller players focused on "talent
management" applications, such as recruiting and performance management, are
growing quickly.
Oracle has expanded in recent years, in part through its acquisition of
PeopleSoft in 2005. Its San Francisco show was its biggest ever, with more than
41,000 attendees and 1,400 sessions.
Among the improvements to E-Business Suite Release 12, Oracle said in a
statement, are new capabilities planned in the Oracle Compensation Workbench
tool that "show all forms of compensation for employees in a single place
regardless of the employee’s geographic location."
Among the changes in PeopleSoft Enterprise 9 is the ability to print
electronic pay slips using the common PDF format. Currently, employees using
PeopleSoft print those slips from Web pages that might not match up well to
printers. Applause broke out in a session when an Oracle official described the
check-printing change.
A document on Oracle’s Web site says Oracle will release Oracle E-Business
Suite 12 and PeopleSoft Enterprise 9 this year. But during the conference,
Oracle said E-Business Suite 12 is scheduled to be available within 12 months
and declined to give details about the timing of the human capital management
component of PeopleSoft Enterprise 9.
Attendees also didn’t hear many specifics about Fusion.
During one session, Oracle officials were asked about the road map to Fusion.
Gretchen Alarcon, Oracle’s vice president of human capital management product
strategy, responded that it was "too early" to spell out what will be included
in Fusion HR applications. She said Oracle had concluded its "gap analysis" of
the differences between its product lines and was in the midst of defining what
the product should be able to do.
Oracle has said it plans to release initial Fusion HR applications next year
and a full suite of products in 2008.
—Ed Frauenheim