Breeding openness
“For a long time, companies trusted their core ERP to take care of everything,” says Tim Leys, senior manager SAP development at delaware. “Now, more and more enterprises choose best-of-breed solutions to tackle specific business needs, like an HR-module from one vendor and a CRM solution from another. Most of our SAP customers today realize that the operation backbone is only part of the puzzle. They have numerous non-SAP solutions in place, e.g., to build digital platforms and data lakes, or to enable citizen development via low-code platforms.”
“The reality is that, from a technical standpoint, platforms like Microsoft Azure are ahead when it comes to running pilots, collecting data, implementing AI, etc. for building data lakes. At some point, however, most SAP customers will want to re-embed this intelligence in their business processes. That’s exactly where SAP makes the difference in terms of integration and transparency.”
To make this best-of-breed approach work, companies need a solid, reliable, and future-proof cloud architecture. “You need to be able to swiftly and securely replace each element with something else,” says Tim. “For vendors like SAP, this requires unprecedented levels of openness and a clear emphasis on integration.”