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By Phil Wainewright July 23, 2001 At one time, enterprise ASPs thought their toughest competition would come from giant telecoms companies or from the "big five" systems integrators.
As for the likes of Accenture, Deloitte Touche and KPMG, they are turning out to be valuable allies rather than hot competition for ASPs. They have no interest in running data centers or tuning system architectures. In fact, it seems that calling them systems integrators has always been a bit of a misnomer. What they really like doing is setting up the automated business processes that run on top of the software systems. Leaving the technology layer to ASPs suits them well. So ASPs are striking up close bonds with integrators and telecoms companies, who have become allies providing complementary services. With ASPs edging ever further into the large enterprise market, partnership has become even more attractive for the integrators and telcos, since the size of deals ASPs can help deliver has swollen significantly. All of that is bringing their primary competition sharply into focus. Top-tier enterprise ASPs led by ASPnews Top 20 companies such as USinternetworking, Qwest Cyber.Solutions, Bluestar Solutions and Corio all now see clearly that the main threat to their survival is coming from the likes of EDS, CSC and IBM Global Services. So it must have come as something of a shock last week to see Sun Microsystems which has made a great play of presenting itself as a friend and ally to the service provider sector signing a deal with EDS to jointly market an expected $3 billion worth of Web hosting, outsourcing and ASP solutions to Global 500 customers over the next three years (see Sun, EDS Offer Combined Solution). With a single stroke, Sun risks wiping out all the goodwill built up by its investments in the SunTone certification program, by its ownership of the iPlanet family, by the development of Java and J2EE, and by its dominance as the server platform of choice for Internet computing. When ASPs go head-to-head with EDS for ASP contracts, who will Sun be rooting for? This would be a smart move if Sun had picked the winning side. But EDS has no track record of success with the ASP model. ASPs have the know-how to become the ultimate winners of that head-to-head battle. Sun would do well to keep them on its side.
Compaq Goes with Utility Computing Scheme The scheme was introduced for its high-end Alpha and Himalaya servers, but will be extended to include its PC architecture Proliant servers later this year. Compaq also offers prepackaged desktop PC bundles on pay-as-you-go terms, and last week announced a more flexible variation incorporating extra hardware and software options. Compaq is following in the footsteps of Hewlett-Packard, which began offering similar schemes last year, and two weeks ago introduced a new offering for its high-end Superdome servers that allows customers to switch off components as well as switch them on. This is an important distinction, since the Compaq scheme is more "pay-as-you-grow" than "pay-as-you-go." HP's latest offering caters for the once unthinkable possibility that a customer's computing needs may actually shrink as well as expand from month to month. This review of the week's news highlights is by ASPnews.com founder and consulting analyst Phil Wainewright. A comprehensive news digest is published every month in the ASP News Review newsletter, available exclusively to subscribers. |