July 09, 2008   Sign In |  About ebizQ |  Contact Us |  Join ebizQ Gold Club
Web 2.0 Syndicate This
Print this article    Email this article    Talk Back!    Write to Editor
Application Strategy and Design for a Profitable SaaS (Part I of II)
04/16/2008
By Paul Giurata, Managing Partner, Catalyst Resources
Application Strategy and Design for a Profitable SaaS

Application Strategy and Design for a Profitable SaaS


By Paul Giurata, managing partner, Catalyst Resources

I've been working with more and more companies that are looking to deliver Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) versions of business solutions that were traditionally delivered as installed products or client-server deployments. "Saas-ification" however, is more involved and complex than it first appears.

ADVERTISEMENT
Our Popular Webinars
BPM for Financial Services
Roundtable Discussion: Open Source Market Update
Evolving Security Architectures and SOA for Better Business Collaboration
Getting Started with BPM
Roundtable Discussion: MDM's Role as a Critical Enabler for SOA
More Webinars

Many articles have been written on the technological challenges of deploying a SaaS model as compared to traditional on-premise software (e.g. multitenancy, control, integration, availability and security). There has been significantly less analysis of the application strategy and design challenges that distinguish a successful SaaS-enabled application from traditional enterprise application.

But as companies transition to this increasingly popular business model they must do more than simply find a technological solution that repackages a traditional application over the Web. To be successful, SaaS applications must do at an application strategy and design level, what traditional on-premise applications do not:

  • They need to provide an application user experience that is seductive, targeted and engenders loyalty.
  • They must integrate a constellation of self-service tools and user experiences that enable customers to do things they are not normally exposed to, such as purchasing, customization, provisioning, and monitoring.

Having worked with scores of start-ups and legacy providers moving to SaaS, Catalyst Resources has evaluated the commonalities among the companies that have thrived and put together a comparative tool for our own clients of the application strategy and user experience issues that distinguish traditional software from successful SaaS deployments. As you explore launching your own SaaS service or are considering a transition to a SaaS offering, you can use this comparison to evaluate your strategy. Getting these factors right need to be an integral part of any SaaS IT implementation plan.

Functionality / Feature Set    

Traditional Software

Page 1

More Top Stories
OSS: Talking to Amanda McPherson, Linux Foundation Gold Club Protected
Federated Event Systems: The Event Web Gold Club Protected
Understanding SOA Service Life-Cycle Management Gold Club Protected
SOA Needs a Bouncer Gold Club Protected
A Brave New Process Design Paradigm Gold Club Protected
What Microsoft Gains (and Faces) With Yahoo! Gold Club Protected
More Top Stories
Related News
Talisma Partners with Denodo for Enterprise Data Mashups
SnapLogic OS Data Integration for Amazon EC2 Now Available
Innotas and Boomi Partner to Bring On-Demand Integration to the Project Portfolio Management Market
More News
Subscribe to our Newsletters
ebizQ Weekly Gold Club Update
Live Webinar Updates
Updates from ebizQ Partners
ebizQ SOA Update
ebizQ BPM Update
ebizQ Security Update
ebizQ BI Update
ebizQ Open Source Software Update
Virtual Show Newsletter
ebizQ Web 2.0 and the Enterprise
Your E-mail Address:
Changing Tires on a Moving Car
Case studies and solutions for governing the continuous evolution of complex SOA systems

Date: Jul 15, 2008
Time: 12:00 PM ET
(16:00 GMT)

REGISTER TODAY!
Roundtable Discussion: MDM's Role as a Critical Enabler for SOA
Date: Jul 16, 2008
Time: 12:00 PM ET
(16:00 GMT)

REGISTER TODAY!
Archived Webinars | Upcoming Webinars
  ebizQ SOA Market Pulse 2008

Service oriented architecture - environments in which loosely coupled services are developed, deployed, and reused in a managed, orchestrated...Learn More

ebizQ also recommends
 Optimal Service-Parts Management: Part One
 The Geek Gap: Do Suits Care?
 Collaboration and Social Media <i>Taking Stock of Today's Experiences and Tomorrow's Opportunities</i>
 BPM Done Right
 Mitigate Risk with Security Assessments
More White Papers

Marketing Solutions | Feedback | About ebizQ | Unsubscribe | Privacy Policy | Site Map

Live Chat