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Feature:

Best in Shows: Notes From Key Workforce Management Conferences and Conventions

  

Oracle OpenWorld 2006


October 22-26, 2006, Moscone Center, San Francisco

Event: Oracle OpenWorld 2006
Date: October 22-26, 2006, Moscone Center, San Francisco

What: A conference put on by software giant Oracle that brings together Oracle customers, partners and the occasional competitor. Given Oracle’s fierce rivalry with SAP and smaller niche vendors in human resources software, as well as questions about Oracle’s upcoming Fusion applications, the event promised to be of interest to HR and HR technology executives.

Conference info: For more information, go to www.oracle.com/openworld/index.html.

Conference notes: Day 2— Thursday, October 26, 2006

Applications on the horizon: Much of Oracle's focus at the conference has been on upcoming releases of both its PeopleSoft Enterprise and Oracle E-Business Suite product lines. Those versions, Oracle says, are proof of its Applications Unlimited program, the commitment Oracle made earlier this year to continue improving various product lines even as it works to meld the best features of its products into a single application line dubbed Fusion.

E-Business Suite Release 12, which is scheduled to be available to customers within the next 12 months, is all about globalization, as Oracle tells it.

"Designed to support businesses in today's global economy, Oracle E-Business Suite Release 12 enables customers to think globally to make better decisions, work globally to be more competitive and manage globally to lower costs and increase performance," the company said in a statement.

The software covers a variety of areas, including financials and HR. Among the improvements, Oracle says, 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 or organizational boundary."

Oracle declined to provide details about when PeopleSoft Enterprise 9.0 will be available. But the company portrayed the coming product to be chock-full of improvements based on customer requests.

Among the changes is greater ease in handling different sorts of benefits that companies give employees these days. Another is the ability for employees getting electronic pay slips to print them out using the common PDF format. Currently, employees using PeopleSoft print those slips from Web pages that don’t necessarily match up well to standard printer paper.

As a sign of how much customers want that change, applause broke out in a session when Oracle's Aaron Green described the check-printing fix.

"I love it. Thank you," said Green, director of product strategy for Oracle’s human capital management team.

Most charismatic speaker—Aaron Green: Green, while not a senior Oracle official, was a crowd-pleasing speaker with a comedic edge. He drew chuckles during a discussion of how PeopleSoft Enterprise 9.0 will handle employee benefits better. He admitted that he himself had gotten a notice recently from his employer about benefit costs.

"As it turns out, my costs are increasing," he said.

Bugs crawling, but conference helping: A Q&A discussion on Oracle’s PeopleSoft HR products revealed that PeopleSoft users have their share of glitches and hoped-for improvements.

Eleanor Roberts, HR application support manager at the California State University, said that PeopleSoft Enterprise 8.9 isn't ideal for handling cases where people have more than one job. She said each time a job is added, the person's hire date changes. Are there changes, Roberts asked, related to this issue in version 9.0?

"No," Green said simply, eliciting laughter.

The hire-date glitch wasn't a problem in an earlier version of the software, Roberts said after the panel concluded. Even so, Roberts described the 8.9 product as excellent. And she gave high marks to the conference, citing the wide variety of sessions.

Ed Frauenheim


Conference notes: Wednesday, October 25

Conference theme: Oracle is very big: OpenWorld reveals how large Oracle’s world is. Having swallowed major software companies like PeopleSoft and Siebel Systems in recent years, Oracle’s showcase user conference is now massive. More than 41,000 attendees are here, the equivalent of a small city.

This is the biggest OpenWorld Oracle has ever put on, with more than 1,400 sessions planned, and more than 450 partners displaying products. The event could not be fully contained by San Francisco’s Moscone Center conference facility, so Oracle persuaded the city to close off a block of a major thoroughfare for added space.

Oracle says the impact on San Francisco is estimated at $60 million, including $10 million to $15 million in taxes paid directly to the city.

In your face yet on the periphery with Fusion: The show has a certain aggressive tone. Gigantic posters that are probably 30 feet tall tout Oracle’s No. 1-ness in various categories. (The claim to be No. 1 in human capital management is a bit questionable. AMR Research says Oracle leads, but Gartner Dataquest gives the crown to SAP.) And the pounding, high-adrenaline music that accompanies keynote speakers is at an ear-splitting level.

The noise hit a crescendo Wednesday morning, when two Ducati motorcycles roared through audience aisles and onto the stage as part of a guest appearance by the CEO of Ducati Consulting.

But a presentation about Oracle’s much anticipated Fusion applications had a decidedly different feel.

John Wookey, Oracle’s senior vice president for applications development, devoted part of his keynote speech Wednesday to Fusion application products, which are expected to start hitting the market next year. Judging by the presentation, Fusion applications will be unassuming critters.

A demonstration of an application that would be used by a sales representative to create a quote for a customer showed that Fusion takes up just a slice of the rep’s desktop screen. According to the demo, the sales rep could easily move between the Fusion application and other applications such as Google Docs & Spreadsheets. And after e-mailing a quote to the customer, that customer would see a panel on his or her computer allowing them to begin an instant-messaging session with the sales rep.

For nearly the entire demo, the Fusion application remained a small window on the computer screen.

"We’re part of the desktop; we’re not the desktop," Wookey said.

This approach, Wookey said, is a deliberate move by Oracle to adapt to people’s work habits. Oracle research into user experience found that people like to use tools they are familiar with, such as word processing programs and Microsoft Outlook.

Applications invisible with Ellison: Not surprisingly, Larry Ellison’s keynote speech Wednesday afternoon attracted hordes of conference-goers. But many began to trickle out midway through the iconic CEO’s speech. That may have had something to do with the fact that his talk was of interest almost exclusively to the database crowd. Ellison introduced a new support service for the Linux operating system as part of a push to expand the use of that technology with database software.

One of the digs on Oracle is that it doesn’t give enough love to its applications business. That business is growing much faster than the company’s database and middleware revenue. Still, Oracle’s database and middleware revenue is nearly three times as large as its applications business.

So perhaps some of those departing early from Ellison’s speech were frustrated that he focused so tightly on the database world. In any event, they missed a lighthearted moment from the man sometimes portrayed as a cold-hearted egomaniac. Dressed in his trademark black turtleneck and a gray sport coat, Ellison at one point welcomed onto the stage several penguins. (Penguins are the mascot of the Linux operating system.) "This is the crew I’m sailing with today," Ellison joked, a reference to the massive BMW Oracle yacht parked outside the auditorium. "Just kidding, guys," he said.

Then he laughed goofily and added: "They’re so cute."

—Ed Frauenheim
 


Next Article: 6. Pensions & Investments' Seventh Annual West Coast Defined Contribution Conference
October 8-10, 2006, the Fairmont Hotel, San Francisco

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Feature Contents
Top of Feature

1. Recruiting 2006 Conference and Expo.
November 8-9, Jacob Javits Center, New York City

2. HRO World Europe Annual Conference
November 6-8, the Conrad Hotel, Brussels, Belgium

3. The National Business Coalition on Health Annual Conference
November 5-7, the Astor Crowne Plaza Hotel, New Orleans

4. HR.com Employers of Excellence 2006 Conference
October 24-27, 2006, Red Rock Casino Resort, Las Vegas

5. Oracle OpenWorld 2006


6. Pensions & Investments' Seventh Annual West Coast Defined Contribution Conference
October 8-10, 2006, the Fairmont Hotel, San Francisco

7. Human Resource Executive's Ninth Annual HR Technology Conference & Exposition
October 4-6, 2006, Navy Pier, Chicago

8. The Motivation Show 2006--Business Solutions That Motivate People
September 26-28, 2006, McCormick Place South, Chicago

9. The Conference Board 2006 Human Resources Outsourcing Conference
September 19-20, the Drake Hotel, Chicago

10. 19th Annual Benefits Management Forum and Expo
September 17-19, Hyatt Regency Hotel, Chicago

11. World Business Forum 2006
September 12-13, Radio City Music Hall, New York City

12. OnRec Expo 2006—Global Summit for Online Recruitment
September 12-13, 2006, at the Donald E. Stephens Convention and Conference Center, Chicago

13. The Conference Board 2006 Hot Topics & Hot Issues HR Forum--Dilemmas, Demographics & Direction
July 18-19, 2006, at the Marriott Marquis Hotel, New York City

14. Workforce Innovations 2006
July 11-13, 2006, Anaheim Convention Center, Anaheim, California

15. Society for Human Resource Management
June 25-28, 2006, Washington, D.C.

16. World Business Forum Chicago 2006
June 6-7, 2006 at Navy Pier, Chicago, Illinois

17. 2006 Workstream User Conference
May 23-24, San Francisco Hilton Financial District, San Francisco

18. The Conference Board 2006 Leadership Development Conference—Developing a New Cadre of Global Leaders for Top-line Growth
May 24-25, 2006, at the Coronado Island Marriott, Coronado, California

19. Vurv Revolution 2006
May 21-24 at Disney's Grand Floridian Resort, Lake Buena Vista, Florida.

20. SAP Sapphire '06
May 16-18, 2006, at the Orange County Convention Center, Orlando, Florida

21. Consumer Directed Health Care Conference and Expo and the National Health, Wellness and Prevention Congress
May 8-10, 2006, at the Hyatt Regency San Francisco

22. WorldatWork Total Rewards Conference & Exhibition 2006
May 7-10, 2006, at the Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, California

23. HRO World Annual Conference
April 26-27, 2006, at the New York Hilton & Towers, New York City

24. 2006 Human Resource Planning Society Annual Global Conference
April 23-26, 2006, at the JW Marriott Starr Pass Resort & Spa in Tucson, Arizona.

25. The 2006 World Health Care Congress
April 17-19, 2006, at the Marriott Wardman Park Hotel, Washington, D.C.

26. International Association for Human Resource Information Management
April 9-12, 2006

27. Lawson Software Conference and User Exchange (CUE) 2006
April 9-11, 2006

28. The Conference Board 2006 Senior Human Resources Executive Conference–Strategic Workforce Management and Growth
April 6-7, 2006

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