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Event Summary

FRx Software (www.frxsoftware.com) is a prominent provider of financial analytic applications to mid-market and corporate businesses. FRx has largely remained on its established track after being acquired first by one of its erstwhile greatest partners (former Great Plains Software) in 2000, and particularly after its new owner subsequently ended up under Microsoft's roof in 2001 (see Microsoft And Great Plains - A Friendship That Turned Into A Marriage) to finally become a part of Microsoft Business Solutions (MBS).

It appears that the truly differentiating traits of the group of products recently renamed Microsoft Business Solutions for Analytics, have established the FRx financial reporting application as arguably a de facto financial analysis and reporting standard in the mid-market. This fact has also convinced Microsoft to continue to enhance the product for its loyal customer base and resellers, many of whom ironically belong to MBS's fierce competitors. Its flagship product, Microsoft Business Solutions for AnalyticsFRx (formerly FRx Financial Reporter), is used by more than 115,000 sites worldwide, primarily in the mid-market segment, to help them with financial reporting processes. Thus, the "if you can't beat them, join them" adage might be best described by FRx Software's continued autonomous operation despite changing owners twice during the last few years.


This is Part Two of a four-part note.

Part One discussed the event.

Part Three will continue the market impact and detail vendor challenges.

Part Four will cover competitors and make user recommendations.

Market Impact

Clearly, FRx Software has had more than an interesting voyage since its inception in 1989 when its first product was developed and commercialized. At that time, the company's strategy was to create a product that would empower financial professionals to develop financial reports without necessarily requesting the services of external programmers or IT staffers. The former Platinum Software (now Epicor) and IBM were both the first customers of FRx Software and the exclusive distributors for the erstwhile product. In 1993 Platinum Software purchased FRx Software and became its exclusive distributor before divesting FRx in 1994. FRx Software was re-founded and established more than thirty strategic partner-distributor relationships, most of which are still very much active.

As mentioned earlier, both Great Plains and then MBS have continued to act as one of FRx Software's most powerful resellers to the mid-market, ever since acquiring it in March 2000. In early 2003, FRx Software aligned itself more directly with the parent company, Microsoft Corporation, and became known as FRx Software Corporation, a Microsoft company and a part of MBS. FRx Software is headquartered in Denver, CO, with consulting offices located across the US, and an international presence established with its partner assistance centers in Australia, Singapore, and the UK. Our estimate is that FRx Software nowadays also contributes around 5 percent of the total MBS revenues of ~$550 million.

While ERP and accounting back-office systems and analytics have been inseparable ever since the idea of business automation via IT way back in the 1960s, they have nonetheless had different user experiences, evolutionary paths, and so on. Namely, although ERP systems have positively transformed many enterprises' business processes, many users have still been left feeling as oversold to, due to the overwhelming notion that these systems inhibit access to the vital information jailed' in them. Many will have inevitably felt that mixing real-time back-office transactions with astute reporting is like mixing oil and water.

For a detailed discussion of how financial reporting, budgeting, and planning are a cornerstone of enterprise performance management (EPM), see Financial Reporting, Planning & Budgeting As Necessary Pieces Of EPM.

Business intelligence (BI) and analytics provide an environment in which business users receive information that is reliable, consistent, understandable, and easily manipulated (i.e., flexible). Therefore, C-level executives and middle management have always had a need to understand their business' performance regardless of good or bad economic times—while the output from BI might change, the need is always there. New disclosure rules are prompting companies to share information faster (for example, accelerated filling of 10Q quarterly statements and 10K annual reports, reporting sales of stock by executives [insider trading] within days of the transaction, expanded lists of "significant events" to include changes in debt ratings, inclusion of financial results of partnerships in earnings reports), and sophisticated data-collection and data-analysis applications come in handy in that regard.

The creation, maintenance, and dissemination or publishing of financial statements (for example, profit and loss [P&L] statements, balance sheets, and cash flow reports) have traditionally been maintenance-intensive tasks, with users expending significant effort just to meet basic requirements. Not to mention that everyone amongst the top brass always wants something more, such as different views, complex comparative reports, and drill-down analyses, but still all within the familiar form of the financial statements. Unfortunately, the financial reporting programs delivered with the traditional back-office financial management and accounting applications have proven only their rudimentary or pesky nature. Consequently, financial savvy users, having a strong preference to see results in the traditional P&L statement or balance sheet form, have long sought for ways to improve the report creation and maintenance process. On the other hand, the formatting and calculation constraints of the above statements, which require user-defined sorting and grouping, have also been nearly impossible for generalist BI providers to fully accomplish.

For the above reasons, FRx Software has been in the right place at the right time to establish an enviable market position as a slick financial reporting engine for a variety of different financial software packages. An army of accountants, financial managers and business analysts has been infatuated with the product. Most ERP products have a rich database but translating the data stored within the database to information useful for making enterprise decisions has proven difficult. With the availability of FRx Software's analytic solutions, several dozen ERP providers can provide their customers with a valuable tool for harvesting the business value out of their database. The list of current back-office solutions whose GLs have been integrated with FRx is impressive, and the following are just some of the more prominent ones: Advanced Data Systems; Best Software; Epicor Software; Expandable Software; Flexi International; Geac Enterprise Solutions; IQMS; Made2Manage Systems; MAPICS; McKesson; Ross Systems; Softrax Corporation; and naturally MBS Great Plains, Solomon, and Axapta (integration with Navision is under way).

MBS for Analytics

MBS for Analytics FRx (formerly FRx Financial Reporter), with its spreadsheet-like interface, can also consolidate financial data from disparate accounting systems even if they use different code structures, fiscal years, or server sites. By pulling information already set up in the GL, the product automatically understands the fiscal periods, chart of accounts, detail transactions and various types of balances. Due to built-in accounting intelligence, it even recognizes concepts such as current and year-to-date amounts, debit versus credit balances, positive and negative variances, and posted and un-posted transactions. Furthermore, users can leverage the rows, columns, and formulas that they may have created in Excel and import the information with all data intact, directly into FRx. The key tenets of FRx's flexibility have been the following three building blocks:

  1. Row format, which lets users specify the data source and what they want to do with each row of a report. By using a link to the GL, users can select individual accounts, a range of accounts, or a list of non-continuous accounts to be included in a report. Once created, a row format can be saved and used again as required.

  2. Column layout, which lets users specify the data source and select the type of column they want from a list. Combined with row format, column layout lets users include period actuals, budget information, or other types of data in a report, either from the GL or from another data source, like a spreadsheet. Math formulas across columns can be applied too, as to identify variances, projections or percentages. Like with row format, once created, a column layout can be saved and used again.

  3. Reporting trees, which let users create a hierarchical picture of their organization to understand or change their organizational and reporting structures. An auto-build function constructs reporting trees directly from the organization's chart of accounts, while intuitive drag-and-drop functionality enables users to create alternative structures and multiple roll ups of various accounts without having to make costly modifications to their GL or charts of accounts. Once created, a reporting tree can be saved and used again.

In addition to the on-the-fly report creation option, application servers provide report scheduling and automatic e-mail report distribution. Using one of many customizable report templates, users can often get started creating relevant financial reports right away, using the building-block approach and auto-build functionality, without much help from IT resources or other technically-minded personnel. To that end, the FRx Report Designer module allows users to create, view, distribute, and manage financial reports from their desktop. Point-and-click capabilities let users extend their analyses and access to reports by exporting them to a variety of traditional or graphical output options, including: Excel or other spreadsheet, ASCII, FRx DrillDown Viewer, Microsoft OLAP cube, or XBRL, and via a selected delivery method. Customized fonts, formatting, and formulas remain with the report when it is exported from FRx to other formats, which preserves presentation quality and functionality of the original report. These reports can be posted to the Web or be sent via e-mail to be accessed immediately by on-site and off-site users alike; a connection to the GL is not required.

FRx Report Launcher is the module that helps users select pre-designed reports, specify the output option and generate the needed reports as required. Through the above-mentioned FRx DrillDown Viewer module, users and even authorized trading partners can often answer their own questions about the data by "drilling down" all the way to the transaction detail level, perform necessary analysis, and make better, more informed decisions. Because security rights are predefined at the reporting tree level, each recipient can access only the information that is appropriate to his or her viewing rights. Thus, users can make important, proactive decisions to address the economic highs and lows, without having to wait until the books are closed. Financial reports of all types can be called up from the Report Catalog, automatically updated with the most current information, generated using a variety of traditional or graphical output options, then distributed to decision makers over the Web or through e-mail to facilitate the timely analysis that today's turbulent market demands.

Optional modules include: FRx Report Server, which allows users to schedule reports for automatic generation and distribution; FRx WebView, which allows users to publish, store and manage FRx reports over the Web; FRx WebPort, which offers publishing non-FRx reports, such as Excel spreadsheets, PowerPoint presentations and Word documents to the Web; and FRx instant!OLAP, which generates Microsoft SQL Server Analysis Services OLAP cubes as an additional method of exporting data from FRx. Last but not least, the product offers currency translation as an add-on component for organizations that might need it. The module allows entries made in the GL's home currency to be translated into specific currencies for reporting purposes.

The product also comes in different editions. The FRx 6.5 Desktop edition is best suited for companies that have multiple departments and cost centers, have multiple companies with consolidation requirements, or maintain budgets in spreadsheets. Generation occurs on a local workstation with the ability to distribute reports via the organization's network or via e-mail.

The FRx 6.5 Professional edition however, is targeted to companies that have a large number of reports to process on a daily basis or at month-end, have a large number of users who generate and review reports, need a Web-based storage and report distribution mechanism, or a need to create OLAP cubes for additional analysis. It comprises all the functionality of the desktop edition, plus FRx WebView, FRx Report Server (one instance only), and FRx instant!OLAP.

The FRx Enterprise 6.5 edition is the third application rounding out the product suite. It gives companies the flexibility to create the most efficient solution for complex, distributed reporting requirements with a large transaction volume. With the enterprise edition, companies can automate procedures unique to their business environments to give them more control over consolidations, statutory reporting, budgeting and analysis. It comprises all the functionality of the professional edition, plus FRx Report Server (four instances) and FRx WebPort.

Many of the above features apparently were implemented in release 6.5 in 2002 with the aim of helping customers streamline report generation and distribution on the FRx Report Server, increasing options when using the Web, support for XBRL enhanced usability of OLAP output, and allowing for more complex currency translation scenarios. Version 6.7, which is slated for early 2004, should feature a new module called FRx Report Manager, support for XBRL 2.0, ability to export directly to Excel graphs, OLAP output from Report Designer, and so on.

Expanding the Opportunity

Although FRx Software is known for its reporting and analysis tool that interfaces directly with nearly fifty mid-market accounting package vendors, the company had to further expand its opportunities. Namely, despite FRx instant!OLAP, which contains predefined interfaces that extract data out of accounting systems and then populate Hyperion Essbase and Microsoft Analyses Services OLAP cubes (the capability which is coming out in version 6.7), until now FRx was readily available only to those ERP products whose purveyors had a partnership in place with either FRx or with one of its VARs.

The idea behind the new Integration Designer product was to make it possible for VARs to avail the prospects with FRx Software's products regardless of the existence of a partnership. To that end, a VAR will supposedly have the initial interface with Integration Designer and will configure scripts created by Data Integrator to make them specific to the GL in place. Using Data Refresher, the VAR may then run the scripts that will be distributed to the customers—the FRx' end users. The VARs will nevertheless have to posses a sound knowledge of Microsoft SQL Server, of a scripting language, and general knowledge of relational databases including the GL database.

Namely, despite many commonalities, every GL has its own fingerprint uniqueness. To illustrate, MBS Solomon (a product that features a built-in version of the FRx Desktop and Forecaster) GL account and sub-account numbers can be up to thirty characters in length, whereby the main account number can be up to ten characters, and the remaining twenty characters can include up to eight user-defined segments. GL transactions can be entered using several types of transaction batches, including non-recurring, recurring, manual, and one-sided adjustment, and the GL account determines whether the transaction will operate in multi- or single-company mode. Transactions can be entered for any prior fiscal period or year as well as for future periods, which allows for things such as installments and prepayments to be managed at a single time rather than month after month.

On the other hand, MBS Navision's (where the integration is slated for Navision some time in 2004/2005) chart of accounts lets users define an unlimited number of "dimensions" and "dimension values" at any time. A dimension is data that users can add to an entry as a kind of marker so that the program can group entries with similar characteristics and retrieve these groups for analysis purposes. Dimensions are not limited to the GL accounts, since they can be set on all master records stored in the database such as customers, vendors, items, fixed assets, and so on. Dimension values are sub-units of dimensions. For example, a dimension called department can have sub-units such as sales, administration, and so forth. This is a powerful concept and tool, allowing nearly unlimited configurations to meet a company's needs and business processes, but it will certainly present some challenges to the integration to FRx.

This concludes Part Two of a four-part note.

Part One discussed the event.

Part Three will continue the market impact and detail vendor challenges.

Part Four will cover competitors and make user recommendations.


 
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Edwards On The Mend; This Time Might Be For Real | PipeChain Adds Pragmatism Onto Simplicity | Besieged By The CRM Throne Aspirants, King Siebel Delivers "The Magic No.7" Part 2: Market Impact | How Some ERP Vendors Demonstrated - Warts And All Part 2: Results | How Some ERP Vendors Demonstrated - Warts and All Part 1 | Should interBiz Mean Intelligence And Prediction Beyond ERP? - Part 2: Challenges and Market Impact | Is SCT And Logistics.com Partnership A Déjà vu? | Should interBiz Mean Intelligence And Prediction Beyond ERP? | Navision Enhances Its e-Vision And Looks To Expand Vertically - Part 3: Challenges & User Recommendations | Navision Enhances Its e-Vision And Looks To Expand Vertically - Part 2: Market Impact | Navision Enhances Its e-Vision And Looks To Expand Vertically | ERP Selection Facts and Figures Case Study - Part 2: Qualitative Assessments and Analysis | ERP Selection Facts and Figures Case Study Part 1: Business Model Scenarios | Soft Economy Dents SAP’s Armored Shield As Well | PRISM Users Get A Dedicated, Independent Web Community | Geac Awakens On Its Deathbed - Part 2: Geac's Response | What's With Oracle's And SAP's Differing Clairvoyance? | Geac Awakens On Its Deathbed - Part 1: Event Summary | The ERP Market 2001 And Beyond – Part 5: Recommendations | The ERP Market 2001 And Beyond – Part 4: Market Predictions | The ERP Market 2001 And Beyond – Part 3: Rating The Vendors | The ERP Market 2001 And Beyond – Part 2: Vendor Reactions | The ERP Market 2001 And Beyond – Aging Gracefully With The ‘New Kids On The Block’ | Shall Bifurcated Tack Reverse J.D. Edwards’ Bad Spell? | E-Business Sell Side Success at H.B. Fuller | Business Intelligence Success at Biomet, Inc. | Sausage Producer Packs Out the Profit with Technology | Intentia’s Intents To Be More Fashionable | 'Collaborative Commerce': ERP, CRM, e-Proc, and SCM Unite! A Series Study: J.D. Edwards | E-Business Customer Service Success at H.B. Fuller Company | SCT Extends Into Business Intelligence | ERP Trivia - Every Why Should Have Its Wherefore Part 2: ERP Key Success Factors | ERP Trivia - Every Why Should Have Its Wherefore Part 1: ERP Trends | Single Source or Best of Breed - The Debate Continues | Can You Add New Life To an Old ERP System? | Lawson Software Means Business With PSA and IPO | NavisionDamgaard Reverts To Navision, But In Name Only | J.D. Edwards' QUEST To End Its String Of Pyrrhic Victories Part 2: The Implications | J.D. Edwards' QUEST To End Its String Of Pyrrhic Victories Part 1: The News | PeopleSoft: Giving Fervent Hope To The Market And Jitters To The Competition. Part 2: The Implications | PeopleSoft: Giving Fervent Hope To The Market And Jitters To The Competition. Part 1: The News | ERP Selection Case Study Audio Conference Transcript | Fed Gives ERP A Shot In The Arm | IFS' Tamed Growth + Continued Losses + Increased Competitors' Lobby Talk = Decreased Customer Confidence | Latest Development on Epicor's Trying The Divestiture Tack | Is Ross Systems Up To A Hat Trick? | The Mid-Market Is Consolidating, Lo And Behold | Where Is ERP Headed (Or Better, Where Should It Be Headed)? Part 4: ASP’s and New Pricing Models | Where Is ERP Headed (Or Better, Where Should It Be Headed)? Part 3: E-Business and Mid-Market Shakeout | Geac Decomposes To Survive | Where Is ERP Headed (Or Better, Where Should It Be Headed)? Part 2: Product Architecture and Web-Basing | Where Is ERP Headed (Or Better, Where Should It Be Headed)? Part 1: Functional Scope and Vertical Focus | Sagent Improves Its Image With SAS Partnership | Seagate Software 'Crystallizes' Its New Name: Crystal Decisions | Stalled Navision + Mixed Bag Damgaard = Satisfactory NavisionDamgaard | Information Builders Did It iWay | Business Objects Teams With TopTier For Analytics | Small ERP Vendors Missing The ASP Boat | ERP Beginner's Guide In So Many Words | Will 2001 Be The Year Of Baan’s Miraculous Comeback?
Definitely Maybe.
| Hummingbird Smells Nectar In The Corporate Portal Market | SCT Corporation: The Last Viable Process Manufacturing Vendor Standing? | QAD’s Costly eTransition Continues | Does NavisionDamgaard Merger Mark Further Mid-Market Consolidation? | Essential ERP - Its Functional Scope | The Essential ERP - Its Genesis & Future | MicroStrategy Manages Your Customer Relationships And Its Own | Symix Starts New Year Under New Name, But Old Issues Remain | What On Earth Is Going On With SSA? | BEA Systems Has A Broad Vision For E-Business Infrastructures | Big ERP Players Courting Government Agencies | QueryObject Partners With Cognos | Geac Lives By Acquisitions; Will It Die By An Acquisition? | Knosys "in the Kno" With ProClarity 3.0 Analytical Platform | Did Sagent Technology Pull the Old 'Pump and Dump'? | Lawson Software Expands Vertically As Well | Cognos Unveils CRM Solution | Great Plains’ Latest Product Offering — Ready to Stampede the SME Market? | Great Plains' eEnterprise Solution 'N Sync with Microsoft's New Platforms | Navision Executes At a Slower Pace | Symix Systems Front-Steps Into Greener e-Commerce Pastures | Has SAP Found Magic Formula (One) To Learn The Ropes Of Marketing? | Is Baan Showing Signs of Life After Death? | Informix Decides to Start Analyzing Websites | Oracle – How to Disappoint Analysts by Doubling Profits | Ross Systems Ends Year On a Sour Note and Braces Itself For Survivor’s Game | Syncra Systems Helps Kimberly-Clark Clean Up | Will Oracle’s Freebie Shot Hurt (Or Only Graze) Siebel? | Great Plains – An SME Market Leader, But At What Cost? | IFS Marches On, Although With a String of Losses | Siebel: Great Plans for Great Plains | Commerce One Holds Announcement Festival | Fourth Shift Corporation: Working Overtime To Provide Complete Customer Care | SynQuest Posts Mixed Results | J.D. Edwards’ Mixed Blessings | QAD Continues to Wade Through Red Ink | eConnections Expands Web With IPNet | Geac Trying Its Luck in Partnering | Ultimate Connection Seeking Its US Retail Connection Through Solomon Software Partners | New Release For Ariba’s Software | Thru-Put Announces Features For New APS Release | Oracle Applications - An Internet-Reinvented Feisty Challenger | American Software Has Been Starving While Delivering Innovations | Intentia Has Been Bleeding For Its Platform Independence | ERP Belle Époque Officially Ended With the Demise of Baan and SSA | PowerCerv Facing Another Stormy Season | The Pros and Cons of Collaborative Planning | MAPICS Back On Track, But Not Without Restructuring Pains | Global Vendor Negotiation Strategies | Winner Takes All – Siebel Ousts SalesLogix From Solomon’s Deal | PeopleSoft 8 Launched – Anything to Write Home About? | PeopleSoft: No More a Humble Kid From a Rough Neighborhood? | IBM Nabs Another Application Vendor | Epicor Software Corp.: How Far From Being 'One-Stop' Shop? | SCT Comes Back With a Vengeance | Lawson Software Marches Over $300M Milestone | SAP Remains Solid While Transitioning | They Can Run, But You Can’t Hide | How Has Made2Manage Systems Been Managing Itself? | Baan Defectors – Is This Only Tip of an Iceberg? | Is Fourth Shift Succeeding in Providing 'Complete Customer Care'? | SAP - A Leader Under Reconstruction | How Detrimental Can a 2nd-In-Charge’s Departure Be? | Microsoft Certified Fresh | OmniSky Selects WorkSpot to Develop Wireless Internet Services | Can Geac Reshuffle the ERP Standings? | ERP Getting a New Breath of Fresh Air in Europe | Has Market Been Too Harsh On Great Plains? | Marketing and Intelligence, Together at Last | J.D. Edwards Chooses Freedom to Choose EAI | Siebel Has Done It Again – This Time with Navision | American Software - A Tacit Avant-Garde? | MicroStrategy 7 Hits the Street | Dead Heat: Corporate Buyers Gain Analysis Tools in Leading e-Procurement Products | Ross Systems, Inc.: In Process of Renaissance | How Has MAPICS Been Extending? | PeopleSoft Manufacturing - This Time For Sure?! | i2 Technologies’ Latest Offering: J. D. Edwards OneWorld™ | SAP to Become Leaner, Meaner and More Organized | J. D. Edwards FOCUSes on Active Supply Chain | Infinium Software, Inc.: Having All the Right Cards? | Access Commerce Spices Up North American CRM Fray | Informix Goes Vertical With Software Vendor ADRM | No More Mr. Nice Guy With J.D. Edwards | Enterprise Resource Planning Systems Audio Conference | IFS Far Cry From Running Out of Breath | ROI Systems, Inc.: Will Slow and Steady Remain in the Race? | Viador Teams With Business Objects | Baan Yet Another ERP Vendor to Find a Sanctuary Under Invensys’ Wing | MAPICS Red Ink Stained While Extending Its Offering | Applix Still Shows a Presence in the OLAP Market | Intentia’s Growing Pains | Ross Systems’ Renaissance Yet to Happen | Information Builders Announces New Release of WebFOCUS | Epicor Continues To Bleed | Symix Systems’ Slips Into Red During Its E-Commerce Transition | Sagent Technology Teams for Telco e-Business | Will Solomon Finally Satisfy Great Plains’ Insatiable Appetite? | Baan Sinks Deeper into Red Quicksand | Lawson Software’s CRM and ASP Moves – Wise, Bold, Injudicious, Enforced, or Something Else? | Is SAP Stumbling? Perhaps. | Yet Another ‘Big 5 ERP’ CEO Casualty | Navision Software a/s: Mid-market iNvasion | Essential ERP – Current Market Trends – Part II | Will That Wretched ERP Finally Die? Possibly, But Only the Acronym! | Yet Another ERP/CRM Partnership | Sybase Tag-Teams with Informatica | Oracle Flying High on Q3 Report: Is Gold All That Glitters? | Navision Becoming More Visible | Geac Announces Q3 Results and Acquires CRM Vendor | ERP Demand Being Re-heated | Brio Technology Expands Support for WML and XML | ERP Vendors Venturing into PSA | Solomon Software: Breaking Away from Perception as “Best-of-Breed-Accounting” Vendor | JD Edwards’ Alliances: Is It Too Much of a Good Thing? | GLOVIA to be Resuscitated (Hopefully) | Oracle Warehouse Builder: Better Late than Never? | JD Edwards Reports Strong License Revenue Growth in Q1 2000, but… | Intentia Attempts to Become ‘Lean and Mean’ | Vendors Begin to Round Out Their CRM Suites | J.D. Edwards Names SynQuest Preferred Solution | Oracle Integrates Front and Back Office with Applications 11i | PeopleSoft's CEO Steps Down | SSA Seeks Support from Synquest | SAP sets up Apparel and Footwear team | Geac and JBA Join Forces to Form New ERP Giant | Computer Associates, Baan Japan and EXE Announce Strategic Alliance to Provide Total Supply Chain Management Solutions | Oracle to Enlist BPA Systems in its Mid-Market Quest | SAP Lowers Revenue Expectations | Symix Maintains Consistent Profitability Despite Y2K Market Conditions | Software Leasing Trend Slams Baan Earnings | Intentia Americas Gains Momentum with 10 New Deals Inked During Last Two Weeks | MAPICS Reports Solid Profitability Despite Dismal Fiscal 1999 4% Growth | Baan Releases New Supply Chain Products | French Government awards ERP contract to Peoplesoft | Business Software Firms Sued Over Implementation - Lawsuits Bring ERP Problems to Light | Geac Metamorphosises JBA Into Gear, but Cuts 20% of Staff | J.D. Edwards Incurs Further Losses In Third Quarter | Intentia and Dash Associates Team Up | Key Product Delays Take a Toll on Oracle Users | ERP Packages For Midsize Firms in the Works | QAD Reports Third-Quarter--Revenue Rises 56 Percent | Pronto ERP 'Coming to America' | System Software Associates Announces Fiscal Fourth Quarter Results - The Agony Continues | Boeing Expands Baan Licensing Deal | Oracle Reports Strong Profits | QAD Offers Improved E-Commerce Applications with Greater Flexibility and Customization Capabilities | Heads Roll at Consulting Giant in Wake of SEC Investigation | Is Baan Clinically Dead? | Manhattan Associates Partners with Intentia | PeopleSoft Completes Acquisition of Vantive; Vantive CRM Applications Integrate with PeopleSoft and Other ERP Systems | SAP, PeopleSoft Earnings Look Brighter; ERP Strikes Back | Great Plains on a Shopping Spree | Geac Upgrades Accounting And Human-Resources Apps -- SQL Release 6.0 Simplifies Purchasing And HR Services For Midsize Companies | MAPICS, Inc. to Acquire Pivotpoint, Expanding e-business Offerings for Mid-Sized Manufacturing Establishments | PeopleSoft Takes Aim at Foods Industry | ERP Vendors Moving to Aerospace and Defense Markets | PeopleSoft Recuperating Slowly, Hoping to Sink 1999 into Oblivion Quickly | Baan Posts $236 Million Loss and Sells Off Coda for Nearly $40M Less Than It Paid | Symix Expands Its Product Offering While Remaining Profitable | IFS Continues to Blossom | SAP Declares Victory Over Manugistics, Takes Aim at i2 | Food Producer Files $20m Lawsuit Against Oracle | Informatica Conforms to Metadata Standard | Oracle Loses Again | PeopleSoft Programs Cause Headaches at Number of Universities | Business Objects Outguns Brio Technology in Patent Dispute | Datawarehouse Vendors Moving Towards Application Suites | Microstrategy Moves Up with e-Business | Seagate Technology Refocuses its Software Business | Hummingbird Announces Extraction and Portal Strategy for ERP | Sagent Technology Reports Strong Growth | SAP Posts Solid Q499, but Warns of Q100 | Analysis of Lawson Delivering New Retail Analytic Capabilities | Informix to Acquire Ardent Software-Another Vendor's Attempt at End-to-End Data Warehousing | Informatica Heads for E-Business | Acta Technology Helps Add Business Intelligence Capabilities to Major ERP Vendors | ERP Vendor Lawson Software Extends to IBM's DB2 Universal Database | J.D. Edwards Teams with FRx Software to Improve Reporting Solutions | SAP and HP on the Web Together | Hummingbird Releases Genio 4.0 With Improved Support for Oracle, Business Objects, Cognos, and NCR | Analysis of SAS Institute and IBM Intelligence Alliance | Business Objects Launches WebIntelligence Extranet | Resistance is Futile: Computer Associates Assimilates yet another Major Software Firm | E-Commerce Lesson: Success Gets a Yawn, Failure Takes a Beating | SAP's New Level of e-Commerce: mySAP.com | BAAN Announces "Open World": Business-To-Business Collaboration Over The Internet | Lawson Plays Well With Others | The "S" in SAP Doesn't Stand for Security (that goes for PeopleSoft too) | Oracle Co. - Internet Paradigm Boosts Applications Growth | J.D. Edwards and Numetrix Ponder the Future as One | Symix Sytems: Shifting SME's Focus to Their Customers | MAPICS: Will Customer Satisfaction be Enough? | Intentia: Java Evolution From AS/400 | SSA: Evolving into systems integrator to survive | JBA: Will it remain "@ctive Enterprise"? | Marcam Solutions: Shifting its Focus to MES | Industrial & Financial Systems, IFS AB: Thriving on Product Flexibility and Incremental Deployability | Enterprise Resources Planning (ERP) Market - Dismal 1999, the New Millennium to bring Relief (for Some) | Lawson Software: Self-Evidently Thriving on Innovations | QAD Inc.: The Art of Vertical Focus | Great Plains: Strong Channel and Microsoft focus for Dynamic(s) Growth | SAP's Dr. Peter Barth on Client/Server and Database Issues with SAP R/3 | Baan E-Commerce: a Wing, a Prayer & a Single Platform | J.D. Edwards - Creating OneWorld of Mid-sized ERP Users | Q: Who Wants to Marry a Multi-Billionaire? A: Baan -- Foster Care for Its Orphans Needed As Well | Geac Computer Corporation: Mastering Growth by Acquisitions |


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