SAP to Buy OutlookSoft
German software juggernaut hopes to complete the purchase of the privately held OutlookSoft within the next 30 days.
IDG News Service (Boston Bureau) — Business applications vendor SAP is making another acquisition aimed at filling out its product portfolio to better meet the needs of chief financial officers (CFOs). The company announced late Tuesday plans to buy U.S. corporate performance management software company OutlookSoft for an undisclosed sum.
SAP hopes to complete the purchase of privately held OutlookSoft within the next 30 days, according to Sanjay Poonen, senior vice president and general manager of analytics at SAP.
Over the past 18 to 24 months, SAP has made a number of moves designed to put together a complete suite of software for CFOs, Poonen said, starting with the shipping of its mySAP ERP 2005 enterprise resource planning software, which includes financial applications. A year ago, SAP bought compliance software vendor Virsa Systems and established a governance, risk and compliance management business unit. Then in February, SAP acquired analytics software company Pilot Software. The idea is to combine all these products into an integrated suite for CFOs, Poonen said.
SAP is not alone in seeing CFOs as a key market for its software, one where there's been a decided lack of integration between different products. This has meant customers have had to engage in a lot of work trying to tie the disparate offerings together themselves.
Earlier this year, Oracle acquired business intelligence and performance management software vendor Hyperion for US$3.3 billion, while BI vendor Business Objects scooped up Cartesis for about $300 million. Cartesis was Business Objects' second purchase of a performance management company in recent years, following the purchase of SRC Software in 2005.
In contrast to its main applications rival, Oracle, SAP has steered clear of large-scale, multibillion-dollar acquisitions, opting instead to buy up smaller companies with software that fills white space in its current product lineup.
SAP and OutlookSoft did not have a prior formal relationship, but 150 of OutlookSoft's 700-strong customer base also use SAP's software, according to Phil Wilmington, president and CEO of OutlookSoft. His company has been growing at a good clip since its founding in 1999, around 25 percent annually, and wasn't looking to be acquired, he said. Instead, OutlookSoft had been considering going public. However, when SAP approached the vendor several months ago, OutlookSoft saw a way to gain more visibility in the market for its software, Wilmington added.
Traditionally, OutlookSoft's day-to-day competitors have been Hyperion, which is now owned by Oracle, and Cognos. Rumors continue to swirl that IBM will acquire Cognos.
OutlookSoft has had a strong relationship with Microsoft, with many of its users running the corporate performance management software alongside Microsoft's SQL Server database and its Analysis Services. Going forward, SAP's NetWeaver middleware will become OutlookSoft's "platform of choice," Wilmington said.


