News
Siebel leaps on .NET bandwagon
- By Colleen Frye
- October 28, 2002
Siebel Systems, San Mateo, Calif. (http://www.siebel.com), and Microsoft (http://www.microsoft.com) disclosed details
of a wide-ranging strategic alliance during Siebel's user conference held last
week in Los Angeles. Executives of both firms contend that the deal will
culminate in enterprise solutions that exploit Web services.
As part of the alliance -- which will include joint development, sales and
support targeted at enterprise customers -- Siebel's CRM application suite will
be optimized for the Microsoft Windows Server operating systems, Microsoft SQL
Server and Microsoft .NET Framework; in turn, Siebel will use Microsoft Visual
Studio .NET as its primary development toolset. In a statement, Thomas M.
Siebel, chairman and CEO, said, ''Enterprise applications are shifting to
industry-specific business processes and best practices exposed through Web
services.''
While the announcement was cloaked in a ''Web services'' mantle, the
cornerstone of this alliance ''has to do with the ubiquity of the Siebel Smart
Client,'' said Eric Austvold, research director, enterprise applications and
technologies at AMR Research (http://www.amrresearch.com) in Boston.
Siebel eBusiness Applications will use Microsoft .NET technologies to enhance
interactivity of the Siebel Smart Client, integrate more tightly with Microsoft
Office and support deployment on emerging mobile devices. ''Siebel today in the
7.0 release has a substantial amount of proprietary code they've been
maintaining,'' said Austvold. ''They have to deal with the ubiquity of
information, regardless of location or device -- cell, PDA, laptop ... it runs
the gamut. In essence, they will let Microsoft build that code for them, which
will allow Siebel to re-allocate those resources to a more appropriate role.''
And tighter integration with Microsoft Office also makes sense, Austvold said,
because many workers already use Office and the Siebel client today forces a
change -- ''the biggest obstacle'' to acceptance.
One question the alliance raises, said Jason Bloomberg, senior analyst at
ZapThink (http://www.zapthink.com), is
''Where is the Web services story? What we find interesting in the last few weeks
is that Microsoft is moving away from the '.NET is for interoperability story';
this story is that Siebel will run on .NET.'' The message they are sending,
Bloomberg said, is that ''if you want to do Siebel, you really should do it on
.NET.''
While the Siebel-Microsoft alliance is more about infrastructure and
integration, the two companies each target the CRM space. ''Siebel is at the high
end and Microsoft is at the low end [with its Great Plains software]; there's
some overlap in middle,'' said AMR Research's Austvold. ''If they are competing,
one of them is in the wrong spot. It's not much of an issue today, but maybe
five years from now it might be.''
In a related announcement, Siebel said it is now shipping its Universal
Application Network, a standards-based vendor-independent application
integration solution. Siebel has also unveiled what it called the first set of
industry-specific business processes based on best practices for Universal
Application Network. And as part of the Siebel-Microsoft alliance, Microsoft
BizTalk Server joins the Universal Application Network program; integration
servers from BEA, IBM, Mercator, SeeBeyond, Tibco, Vitria, and webMethods
already participate. BizTalk Server's graphical business-process design tools
will be the preferred toolset for Universal Application Network business
processes. BizTalk will bring Universal Application Network support for BPEL4WS,
the Business Process Execution Language.
About the Author
Colleen Frye is a freelance writer based in Bridgewater, Mass.