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What SoftBrands Brings into the Picture?

At the National Manufacturing Week (NMW) event, held February 23-26, 2004 in Chicago, Illinois (US), SAP AG (NYSE: SAP), the leading provider of enterprise applications, announced the availability of new industry-specific solutions for small and midsize manufacturing companies, with the aim of extending its leadership as a provider of solutions for an even broader range of companies, from small enterprises via mid-market companies to the world's industry leaders.

Part One and Part Two of this note details the announcements. Part Three began a discussion of the market impact by looking at SAP's answer for SMBs and focus on penetrating the US SMB market.

To that end, SoftBrands should be pleased by becoming one of a few strategic partners for SAP Business One. Conversely, SAP Business One, despite notable introduction and attention grabbing, has,not suited manufacturers so far as it lacked native manufacturing resource planning (MRP) and many other manufacturing-oriented capabilities. For that reason, prospects have still been required to consider the higher-priced and more complex mySAP All-In-One or mySAP Business Suite alternatives so far. This will have only defeated the purpose and it may not have helped much in preempting the intrusion of some competitors that specialize in plant-level manufacturing systems (such as QAD, Ross Systems, Agilisys, SSA Global, SYSPRO, MAPICS, Epicor, etc.), despite SAP's dominant presence in manufacturing industries. To that end, Fourth Shift adds proven manufacturing functionality and, in the longer run, provides some novel capabilities to support lean environments.

While some may be surprised by SAP not opting to leverage its existing and very deep manufacturing-focused functionality of mySAP Business Suite again, the reasons for opting for the incumbent tier 2 or tier 3 vendor's capabilities could be the following—time-to-market expediency, price adequacy, and simply another admission of mySAP Business Suite's inappropriateness in the SMB arena. In any case, we commend SAP for forming this partnership to address the tier 3 manufacturing sector, which again speaks volume about the vendor' true commitment to the sector in a manner different than to simply water-down its unsuitable large and complex application. SAP's cited reasons for partnering with Softbrands include SoftBrands' brand recognition in the target market, its existing customer base and global reach; large accounts potential; and fully integrated functionality with SAP Business One at the user interface (UI) level.

SoftBrands indeed brings a solution with multilingual capabilities and a broad customer base, many of which are smaller divisions or plants of large global corporations utilizing SAP at the corporate, white collar level, e.g., Eastman Kodak, Gillette, and Unilever. Fourth Shift product remains a major breadwinner for the SoftBrands Manufacturing division (approximately 65 percent of its revenue), being a web-enabled product for different manufacturing mid-markets (available in seventeen languages) spanning across sixty countries with more than 4,000 customers, some of which are the fastest growing manufacturers and global enterprises from the Global 2500 including Eastman Kodak, Unilever, Bosch, TTK Prestige, and Electrolux.

Fourth Shift product covers many bases with nearly fifty integrated application modules handling order entry, accounting/finance, inventory control, manufacturing, executive decision support/ BI, engineering, purchasing, and shipping, along with the adaptable web-based supply chain visibility modules that communicate through portal technology. The product has traditionally been very strong in terms of transaction entry and reporting and tactical level production status visibility, lot traceability, cost control and work in progress (WIP) management, rendering it well suited for order-ship-bill operations within make-to-stock (MTS) and configure-to-order (CTO) manufacturing environments. Through the integration with DemandStream there is support for lean manufacturing, although that provision specifically is not included in the recent announcement with SAP.

The technological compatibility between Fourth Shift and SAP Business One seems to be there too. By embracing concepts of component (modular) technology in designing its product, Fourth Shift has been providing a great number of middleware interfaces (APIs) for interconnectivity among its own and third-party components, also providing for flexibility and incremental deployment. Fourth Shift 7 provides connectivity to other applications based on the Microsoft standards like .NET and XML, which is considered quite appropriate for its target niche.

This is Part Four of a five-part note.

Parts One and Two presented the event summary.

Part Three began a discussion of the market impact.

Part Five will cover challenges and make user recommendations.

Fourth Shift Background

Having long acquired a reputation for quick and inexpensive implementation and excellent service and support, during the mid-1990s, in an effort to expand up-market from its traditional small, single-site enterprise stronghold, former independent Fourth Shift embarked on harnessing advanced technology (i.e., featuring object-oriented, Windows NT/SQL Server-based, productivity enhancing graphical user interface) by introducing OBJECTS Enterprise Software in 1997. This was an intended upgrade of its former outdated MSS product (which was written in 3GL C code, and featured a batch process architecture and non-relational proprietary database) that was supposed to enable users to link to multiple sites using the Internet or wireless technology. Disappointing sales sent the company back to the drawing board, where it combined OBJECTS with MSS, releasing MSS for OBJECTS in 1998, soon after to be renamed in Fourth Shift Software System.

In 1999, Fourth Shift began developing a further set of applications to enable its customers to conduct B2B and business-to-customer (B2C) e-commerce by acquiring underlying technology for these applications through the purchase of Computer-Aided Business Systems (CABS), a Colorado-based (US) developer of workflow-based e-business solutions. The CABS' acquisition has much improved the company's plant execution and multisite product functionality, which had been mediocre or non-existent before, by providing VisiBar and VisiWatch applications. VisiBar is a data collection and workflow application that accepts input from multiple sources (e.g. bar code scanners, sensors, digital scales, relays, and other software applications) and allows users to create scripts to transfer, manipulate, analyze and act on the collected data, enabling thereby the organization to, for example, automate plant floor, materials transfer and warehouse operations.

VisiWatch is a transaction monitoring application that can be set up to "watch" for specified events and then take a predetermined action, such as sending an automated e-mail message, generating a report, making a change in another database, or synchronizing the info with another enterprise system. VisiWatch is a Visual Basic for Applications (VBA)-programmable software application, a sort of a "silent assistant" designed to monitor and react to any of the following seven kinds of events: transaction event, time-based event, startup event, file event, e-mail event, transmission control protocol (TCP) event, and object linking and embedding (OLE) events. Thus, Fourth Shift could be regarded as one of the first proponents of emerging business activity monitoring (BAM) applications (for more details, see Business Activity Monitoring—Watching the Store for You).

This partnership provides SAP with the opportunity to further extend its reach within its large corporate customer base by serving the needs of their distant smaller plants and divisions dispersed around the globe. Thus, SAP should hereby have the wherewithal to defend its major accounts from encroachment by the above vendors touting low-cost, astute plant systems that "happily co-habit" with SAP. For more food for thought on this topic, see Standardizing on One ERP System in a Multi-division Enterprise. There should also be interest in this product combination from smaller independent manufacturing sites.

On the other hand, the Fourth Shift product will get the marketing support of SAP, as well as access to the SAP global VAR channel, which should help improve its dwindling visibility, particularly after the near death experience following the AremisSoft stint. To refresh our memory, early in 2001 Fourth Shift Corporation, a former prominent mid-market ERP provider for manufacturers, became part of then AremisSoft, another diversified but quite obscure ERP provider, and has unfortunately all but fallen into oblivion due to the alleged criminal activities of its new parent company towards the end of 2001. Namely, AremisSoft, with the accusations of reporting fictitious revenues, the ensuing Security & Exchange Commission (SEC) investigation, a shareholders' lawsuit, and the company's consequent bankruptcy filling, became a harbinger of an Enron-like trend.

Amid the turmoil, a part of AremisSoft spun off from the old corporation with its clean books, and renamed itself into SoftBrands Inc., which has been operating as a privately-held holding company and has since taken over the responsibility of its products and customer base hoping to shed its tainted past, to return to its enterprise software roots, and leverage its large installed base of more than 5,000 users in 60 countries. At the end of 2002, SoftBrands announced a new $20 million (USD) round of financing that put it on a firmer financial footing with working capital and a war chest to continue strategic acquisitions as a stated strategy for the company. SoftBrands believes the spin-off action has completely distanced it from AremisSoft's Chapter 11 filing, and has allowed it to move on unfettered by past difficulties. It has spent the past year also sensibly re-aligning itself with significant changes in the overall IT market, such as the demands on enterprise applications providers to deliver better ROI, their increasing need to balance skill shortages and the escalating costs of new product development between certain regions. The new organization seemingly has since been seeking to advance its two flagship ERP products—Fourth Shift and evolution—as well as its add-on DemandStream solution, which addresses lean manufacturing and execution.

However, the company has lately been quite subdued, with very few new contracts for its flagship ERP systems, except for some emerging markets like China, where it has more than one hundred employees in four offices and several hundred customer installations, and in India, where it has eighty staff members and thirty installations recently. As a whole, the company also now has over 500 employees, which has dropped from 700 in 2002 and its revenues are at best at the same level like the revenue for 2002 of approximately $80 million (USD). A silver lining for this company is its DemandStream suite for lean operations, including support for kanbans and outsourced processes, allowing companies to preserve their ERP rather than to replace them, which goes well within the current economic milieu.

Thus, SoftBrands will get an immediate shot in the arm in terms of market visibility for Fourth Shift, followed by a possible significant increase in license revenue as it begins to capitalize on SAP's channel and brand recognition. SoftBrands can also excite its existing customers with a compelling upgrade path to the future SAP Business One/Fourth Shift combination. This should not only prevent any erosion in the installed base but it should also open up the possibility of expanding into additional sites or divisions.

SAP also gets a product that should be appealing in new, emerging manufacturing markets, such as China, India, and Eastern Europe, which SAP has been keen on penetrating. Fourth Shift was one of the first ERP systems ever sold in China a decade ago, and SoftBrands has become quite established there, with offices in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Tianjin and with 400 customers. If one could extricate at least one benefit gained from former AremisSoft, it could be its early astute moves in terms of rejuvenating acquired software largely by shifting its developments offshore to India, and then to China owing to Fourth Shift's strong presence in the market. This coincides with SAP's recent efforts in China with SAP Business One, and the fact that SAP has also teamed with Sybase, which has a very strong foothold in the Chinese market, all which makes SAP a very strong player in China as well.

The offshore development remains a significant part of the new company's strategy, since product development for evolution is done in India, and for Fourth Shift in China. SoftBrands was indeed one of the first vendors that fully incorporated offshore development into its research and development strategy in a more than a casual manner, the trend that has recently taken hold market-wide. SoftBrands Manufacturing boasts to run its "software factory" in much the same manner that many of its customers handle production operations—by doing its design and engineering in the West, whereas the development and maintenance work is done offshore in China and India. The product comes back home for quality assurance, final assembly, and release. Much of manufacturing is moving that way, like it or not, and the vendor believes it has an advantage of understanding the dynamics and the requirements of doing business with an extended supply chain that includes offshore production resources.

This concludes Part Four of a five-part note.

Parts One and Two presented the event summary.

Part Three began a discussion of the market impact.

Part Five will cover challenges and make user recommendations.


 

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Edwards On The Mend; This Time Might Be For Real | It Isn't the Fall, It's the Sudden Stop | 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 | Stalled Navision + Mixed Bag Damgaard = Satisfactory NavisionDamgaard | 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.
| 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 | 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 | Geac Lives By Acquisitions; Will It Die By An Acquisition? | Lawson Software Expands Vertically As Well | 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? | Oracle – How to Disappoint Analysts by Doubling Profits | Ross Systems Ends Year On a Sour Note and Braces Itself For Survivor’s Game | 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? | Can Geac Reshuffle the ERP Standings? | ERP Getting a New Breath of Fresh Air in Europe | Has Market Been Too Harsh On Great Plains? | J.D. Edwards Chooses Freedom to Choose EAI | Siebel Has Done It Again – This Time with Navision | American Software - A Tacit Avant-Garde? | Ross Systems, Inc.: In Process of Renaissance | How Has MAPICS Been Extending? | PeopleSoft Manufacturing - This Time For Sure?! | Oracle Proud To Be Number Two | 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? | SAP Gives Up, Declares Victory. Again. | Access Commerce Spices Up North American CRM Fray | 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? | Baan Yet Another ERP Vendor to Find a Sanctuary Under Invensys’ Wing | MAPICS Red Ink Stained While Extending Its Offering | Intentia’s Growing Pains | After Strong Game, Logility Suffers Fourth Quarter Loss | Ross Systems’ Renaissance Yet to Happen | Ariba Gains Legs Courtesy of Descartes | Adexa Reports Record First Quarter Results | Epicor Continues To Bleed | Symix Systems’ Slips Into Red During Its E-Commerce Transition | 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 | 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 | 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) | 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 | Deloitte & Touche Alliance with SynQuest Largely Symbolic | 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 | Oracle Loses Again | PeopleSoft Programs Cause Headaches at Number of Universities | Hummingbird Announces Extraction and Portal Strategy for ERP | SAP Posts Solid Q499, but Warns of Q100 | Analysis of Lawson Delivering New Retail Analytic Capabilities | 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 | Analysis of SAS Institute and IBM Intelligence Alliance | 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 | SAP APO: Will it Fill the Gap? | 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) | Transition for Manhattan Associates Necessary for Long Term Growth | 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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