A report identifies five key findings regarding the impact of integration on SaaS/cloud vendor success.
Integration
is the most common hurdle in the sales process for software-as-a-service (SaaS)
and cloud providers, according to a recent study by strategic consulting
services company ThinkStrategies and cloud integration provider MuleSoft.
Almost 90 percent of respondents consider integration to be important or
extremely important in winning new customers, found the study, which focused on
the impact of integration on SaaS/cloud vendors in the rapidly growing cloud
computing market.
In
addition, SaaS/cloud vendors identified integration as the most time-consuming
element of the customer implementation process. Nearly two-thirds of SaaS/cloud
vendors acknowledged that integration needs to be a critical part of their
solution, rather than leaving it to the end user.
"The
success of the first wave of SaaS/cloud vendors has sparked a -Cloud Rush' effect,
which is attracting a proliferation of players to enter the market, ranging
from fledgling startups to the biggest vendors in the hardware, software and
services industry," said Jeffrey Kaplan, managing director of ThinkStrategies
and founder of the Cloud Computing Showplace. "The results clearly show that
leading SaaS/cloud vendors must incorporate integration solutions into their
go-to-market strategies in order to succeed in today's marketplace."
The
report identified five key findings regarding the impact of integration on
SaaS/cloud vendor success. Integration is a key to winning new customers, as
more than 88 percent of SaaS/cloud vendor respondents view integration as
either important or extremely important in winning new customers. Integration
need is widespread, with a majority of SaaS/cloud vendors (52.8 percent) claiming
that more than half of their customers require integration. Dealing with
integration issues is the norm, not the exception, when deploying SaaS/cloud
solutions.
The
report found integration is the top barrier to new SaaS/cloud sales, as almost
eighty-eight percent (87.7 percent) of SaaS/cloud companies identified
integration as a common or very common sales hurdle. In addition, the report
found integration to be the most time-consuming element of customer
implementation, with 79.3 percent of respondents saying that integration is
highly time-consuming or somewhat time-consuming. Nearly two-thirds (62.5
percent) of SaaS/cloud companies believe integration is a critical part of
their solution.
"As
cloud adoption continues to grow, customer expectations have shifted
dramatically, requiring SaaS/cloud vendors to take on many of the integration burdens
formerly held by end users," the report noted. "Customers' concerns about
integration represent both a threat and an opportunity for SaaS/cloud
providers. Failing to offer integration can blunt sales and create customer
support issues, while offering integration capabilities can create a
competitive advantage."
The
report includes analysis of the survey findings and an integration solution
guide to aid SaaS/cloud providers in selecting an integration solution to fit
their needs. In addition, the report introduces a new approach to cloud
integration, identified by analyst firm Gartner Group as "integration
platform-as-a-service." iPaaS can benefit both end users and SaaS/cloud
vendors, by providing a complete platform that allows SaaS vendors to offer
seamless integration with both on-premises and cloud applications.
"As
SaaS adoption rises, and as the number of SaaS providers continues to increase,
issues with integrating these applications will remain at the forefront," said
Mahau Ma, vice president of marketing for MuleSoft. "SaaS/cloud vendors have to
understand that the integration responsibility now rests on their shoulders,
not the end user, and will become a significant inhibitor to their business."
Nathan Eddy is Associate Editor, Midmarket, at eWEEK.com. Before joining eWEEK.com, Nate was a writer with ChannelWeb and he served as an editor at FierceMarkets. He is a graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.