Intentia Braces For Its Ongoing Roller-Coaster Ride
Part 2: Challenges and User Recommendations
P.J. Jakovljevic -
7/16/2002
Intentia
Braces For Its Ongoing Roller-Coaster Ride
Part 2: Challenges and User Recommendations
P.J.
Jakovljevic
- Juky 16, 2002
Market
Impact Continued
Intentia
can also boast deep and wide ranging vertical industry knowledge and breadth,
attained through its own implementation and software support delivery,
as it has a staff consultancy and service organization of over 2,700.
The company employs industry-savvy individuals who not only provide strong
customer support, but are also able to blend industry-specific functionality
into the Movex suite. With its own substantial service organization
Intentia might be in a position to continue to build out its technology
to better serve its vertical markets. Moreover, the Movex applications
suite is built on several integrated software components to facilitate
implementation, such as the Component Repository, which contains
generic and industry-specific business components for customizing the
applications to unique business environments and industries. The Enterprise
Process Manager is an integrated business process-mapping tool facilitating
business process design and streamlining configuration. Intentia complements
these two software components with its Implex implementation methodology
that stipulates how an implementation project should be organized, planned,
and carried through to completion.
This
is Part Two of a two-part Event Note on Intentia. Part
One covered recent developments and began a discussion of the Market
Impact.
Challenges
Nevertheless,
the company strength has been tested for the last few years by its transition
from a solely iSeries based product to additional platforms, which resulted
in its current financial discomfort. The company still has to battle fights
on several fronts as it goes forward. It has to continue with strong license
revenue and with justifiable investment in direct and indirect channel
worldwide, while its R&D strategy has to produce notable returns.
One
fails to understand why the company with such a product and technology
in hand is not doing a much better job in marketing it with more vigor,
given its US counterparts start hyping (and often selling) the product
while it is only in the vaporware stage.
Culture
may be one reason for the company's inactive marketing in a small, close-knit
but highly contested domestic Scandinavian ERP market, Intentia's name
is well known. The company is regarded as a leading ERP vendor (on par
with the likes of SAP) and almost no ERP selection in Europe goes
without Intentia's participation. Therefore, the delivery of an immaculately
functioning product has long been the company's priority, for the product
was sold more through a word of mouth than through an active marketing.
The
same mindset cannot be applied in other markets worldwide, where any CIO
is overwhelmed with the hype from several dozen vendors and will only
be aware of Intentia through some meaningful channel. The similar initial
situation existed, until recently, for another Swedish vendor, IFS. However,
IFS recently launched an aggressive marketing campaign and struck well
thought out product and/or system integration alliances that are attuned
with the local markets, which, when bundled with a slick product seems
to have turned the tide and the US market now contributes a respectable
33% to IFS top line. Contrary to this model, until 2000, by and large,
Intentia has had the US operation in place to facilitate implementation
of spin-off deals from Europe. Lately, however, its US customer base has
grown to more than 230 customers in its industries of focus.
What
might have additionally hurt Intentia in its worldwide expansion would
be its traditional confinement to the IBM iSeries platform, where
it has faced strong competition from incumbent players like J.D. Edwards,
SSA GT, IBS and MAPICS, many of these with stronger
geographic coverage and channel throughout the 90s. Although Intentia
has theoretically been platform independent since 1999, it still has one
more myth to debunk on top of its otherwise low brand recognition outside
Europe.
Intentia's
strategy in developing its international operations has been to establish
strong local offices, typically by signing up joint ventures with distribution
partners, which would serve the delivery of Movex implementations projects.
Although the model has resulted in a great customer satisfaction and a
considerable growth from 1993 to 1999 with over CAGR 40%, it would typically
not scale up as rapidly as the fastest growing competitors. In cases of
really unsatisfactory results, Intentia has fallen back on a direct marketing
and sales model, which again has never really gained any ground despite
the benefit of a single accountability place for the customer. To continue
to expand beyond its European roots and succeed in other markets, Intentia
must continue to focus on marketing and sales, both direct and indirect,
engaging a number of resellers and executing an aggressive, enticing marketing
program, although not at the expense of profit margins.
More
Competition
Furthermore,
a broader offering inevitably creates more intensive competition. Although
Intentia might often face off against SAP, Oracle, J.D.
Edwards and PeopleSoft, its more likely nemeses in the ERP
space are the likes of Baan, IFS, IBS, SSA
GT, and Geac (formerly JBA). However, its emphasis
on web-based supply chain and CRM applications, as well as private web
trading exchange technology has indeed changed its footprint, therefore,
the company may additionally compete with the likes of i2 Technologies
and Manugistics in the SCM space, with Siebel Systems for
CRM and CommerceOne and Ariba for web auctions, trading
exchange technology, and other B2B eBusiness components.
Futhermore,
Intentia's intent to deliver everything an integrated all-round suite
geared to larger mid-size enterprises even via its own implementation
channel might simply be a tall order for its stature, since even SAP
had to abandon that approach, while Oracle's conundrum continues. Intentia's
scope and coverage, although tempting to its target market, may not likely
be as profound or able to deal with the same levels of complexity as the
best of breed concoctions or the leaders' offerings.
Some
examples of functional inferiority would be a delayed release of computer-telephony
integration (CTI) functions while no telemarketing or retail sales management
functions are currently supported within its CRM offering. In SCM, a profitable-to-promise
capability has not yet been completely integrated with the Global Capable-to-Promise
(CTP) module. Customers can still analyze and design the supply chain
based on profitability, but it is currently a manually intensive task,
compared to majority of slick Movex' 12 features.
Although
Intentia is marketing its revamped architecture as being 100% pure Java,
the architecture was initially only converted to Java, as Intentia delivered
an RPG to Java code conversion tool called R2J. To make changes to the
core product, existing AS/400-based customers still have to make the changes
in RPG and run that code through the R2J. Thus, a 100% Java-based architecture
might be applicable mainly to brand new users of Movex 12. On the other
hand, the AS/400 version is currently more stable, proven, and robust
than its more recent Java-based version in terms of functionality, although
this should change some time in the future.
Therefore,
although the company's biggest challenge remains its still nascent toehold
in North America (where its strategy is likely to create a market leadership
in the fashion, food & beverage, and wholesale & distribution vertical
niches, get profitable and after that look at a verity of expansion strategies
including acquisitions) and less nascent in Asia/Pacific (over the past
18 months it has scored big wins in the region with prestigious accounts
like BHP Steel and it is the only vendor besides SAP with a full
presence in Japan), without which no vendor can have a strong global competitive
position, another area of its weakness has been a dearth of its prominent
product (both technology and functionality wise) and system implementation
partners. The company has been tardy to partner with any non-IBM technology
provider, and its partnerships in the past have been rather reactive to
a sporadic opportunity or customer request than really strategically proactive.
Also,
the corporate culture still seems to be conservatively centralized, with
all major decisions coming from the HQ, which does not bode well for the
agility in this highly competitive and fast market. Recent acquisition
and alliances like the ones with Sun Microsystems, IBM,
Manhattan Associates and MRO.COM marketplace, might indicate
the shift in Intentia's mindset and might promote its visibility and give
it a quantum leap. These, bundled with the recent restructuring of some
worldwide operations could boost Intentia's penetration of the global
applications market after a number of dismal earlier attempts. Intentia
must market the Movex product aggressively with the flashy media blitz
and audacity that is peculiar to its US-based counterparts. Without it,
it will likely remain confined mainly to the esoteric customer base in
some local markets, which it has captured opportunistically mostly owing
to a good word of mouth, to a dearth of suitable products, and/or to a
bad publicity of some competitor's failures. Reliance on these certainly
does not grant coveted sustainable growth and expansion.
User
Recommendations
Intentia's
functionality footprint, technological innovativeness and expertise, and
sharp vertical focus should be attractive to mid-size and large global
enterprises within the following industries: automotive, aviation, apparel/fashion,
food & beverage, industrial goods, electronics, furniture, MRO, paper,
retail & distribution, service & rental, and steel. Although its sweet
spot is the higher-end of the mid-market, manufacturers with revenues
in the range over $50 million should evaluate Intentia, its overall suite
is scalable way beyond this, and has been sold into companies with up
to several billion in revenues.
European
enterprises that run on the iSeries server are the best candidates to
benefit from deploying Movex. However, many companies from different geographic
regions running on other platforms and within the above industries may
benefit from allowing Intentia to give the other vendors in the selection
a run for their money. Still, customers in countries where Intentia is
not well established or where it uses distributors might find the quality
of local service and support uneven. Also, while the reported Movex 12
performance benchmarks on non-iSeries platforms are trustworthy, one should
rely more on performance in a real-world environment. Therefore, question
the company's ability to provide reference sites that closely fit your
business description.
On
top of Intentia's challenge to manage brand recognition and channel development,
the company will have to carefully balance its new technology strategy
with a more aggressive marketing effort to gain acceptance as a cross-platform
provider of enterprise applications without impairing its strong functionality
development and reputation. We believe its open platform approach, e-Business
capabilities, vertical focus, and more proactive partnerships should bode
well for the company's overall standing. More comprehensive recommendations
for both current and potential Intentia users can be found in Intentia
Possibly Seeing Daylight.