|
Impact Report
Spreading the appeal:
xTuple aims its ERP apps at both smaller and larger user
targets
Analyst: China
Martens, Jay
Lyman Date:
21 Dec 2010 Email This Report: to
colleagues »» / to
yourself »» 451 Report Folder: File
report »» View
my folder »»
As we head into 2011, we're
expecting incremental but constant change to occur
in the ERP applications arena. Faster deployment times
and ease of customization will become even more
important issues than ever for customers. Against this
backdrop, commercial open source ERP vendors may win
over additional customers, particularly if they can
field apps tailored to those twin needs. That's one
reason why xTuple has been bringing more
capabilities to market this year, some designed
specifically to woo smaller firms, others aimed more at
larger organizations.
Increasingly, we hear about
commercial open source apps providers seeking to appeal
to customers that don't have a particular open source
agenda, but are simply in search of cost-effective
alternatives to their existing ERP software or are
looking to take on their first full-blown business apps.
Some of these customers, both small and large, are also
seeking more modular, flexible apps offerings as
alternatives to the bigger, more comprehensive suites
from larger players.
| The 451 Take |
While
2009 saw xTuple double its paying customer base,
this year's focus for the commercial open source
ERP vendor has been on putting features in place
designed to broaden its appeal to new sets of
potential users. The timing for such a move is
good since the ERP apps space is undergoing
change, both in terms of ongoing consolidation and
more user interest in SaaS or hybrid deployments.
In offering a range of options for users,
including Cloud Access, xTuple is positioning
itself well in line with these trends.
The
acquisition of rival Compiere by Consona holds
both pros and cons for xTuple and its peers. On
the plus side, xTuple has already picked up some
former Compiere users and partners; conversely,
the sale may cause some user nervousness about
opting for a commercial open source player, and we
do hear rumors of possible further consolidation.
Ultimately, we anticipate that many of this year's
moves from xTuple will bear fruit in terms of more
customers ? perhaps some AS/400 refugees from
Infor and Oracle's JD Edwards ? and existing users
picking up more modules. |
Nine-year-old xTuple proudly touts
its continued independence. Unlike many of its
commercial open source peers, the profitable ERP apps
company has yet to take on any external funding. Of
course, lack of third-party investment means that
Norfolk, Virginia-based xTuple tends to grow at a slower
rate, but that situation appears to suit it. In
addition, xTuple is betting that its lack of funding and
thus lack of expansion into more services leaves more
room for channel partners, which have indeed grown.
Headcount for xTuple now sits at 25 fulltime staff, an
increase of only two employees over the past 12 months
or so. At the same time, the company is working a lot
closer with some of its partners, a move that along with
its open source community is helping to widen the number
of people continually working on enhancements and new
additions to its software.
XTuple offers a number of versions
of its ERP software. PostBooks is its community free
edition, which the firm recently began selling as a
commercial product. The idea is to provide partners
around the world with a paid offering that sits between
the free version of PostBooks and xTuple's two existing
paid editions ? Standard and Manufacturing. Partners can
also sell the commercial version of PostBooks themselves
and either add in more vertical capabilities to the
software or bundle the ERP application with third-party
products. While Standard and Manufacturing have a
minimum five-user purchase, there's no such limit on the
commercial license for PostBooks. All paid licenses
include product updates and online customer support.
The vendor will end the year having
unveiled two major releases of its ERP: xTuple 3.5.0,
which appeared in the spring, and xTuple 3.6.0, which is
about to be released. The upcoming release will include
fresh time and expense management capabilities as well
as a new project-accounting module. In adding new
features, xTuple has looked to appeal to two particular
audiences as well as its existing clientele. For smaller
companies, it's offering more ease-of-use functionality
as provided in its QuickStart Wizard and Desktop
interface software with custom workflows. The idea is to
guide users step by step as they both set up and then
begin using the ERP apps.
For larger organizations, the focus
is on increasing product sophistication. One example of
that is xTuple Connect, a stand-alone integration
platform that grew out of the company's Batch Manager
and aims to hook into third-party apps such as
computer-aided design and project lifecycle management
software. In 2011, xTuple plans to promote Connect more
strongly, particularly around the type of integrations
that it makes possible.
Over the past few years, the most
requested xTuple user feature has been better email
integration. The firm really wanted to offer
multiplatform email integration and realized that it
needed help to do so. It hit upon the 'feature mob'
concept whereby xTuple reached out to everyone who had
expressed interest in that feature and encouraged them
to help sponsor the development. As more people signed
up, the proposed cost for sponsorship went down, and
xTuple has attracted 56 paid sponsors for the project so
far.
XTuple's apps have long run on
Windows, Linux and Mac servers and the company also
offers a hosting service known as XTN Hosted. Earlier
this year, xTuple also started providing some cloud
capability, dubbed Cloud Access, so that users could run
any of the versions of the xTuple database on
Amazon EC2. It stresses that this paid service is
aimed at smaller firms that are looking to have all of
their IT needs managed by a third party, whereas XTN
Hosted is for organizations requiring administrator
access to the hosted servers. It's early days for Cloud
Access; of xTuple's 260+ customers, only a dozen are
using the commercial cloud service.
XTuple's customer base includes
Bausch Advanced Technology Group, Bergin Fruit
& Nut Company, Cedarlane Natural Foods,
Ebénisterie St-Patrick, E.A. Patten,
Katoomba Trading, Stone Plastics &
Manufacturing and Windkits. We continue to
keep an eye on one potentially large rollout at
self-storage and shipping company U-Haul. The
project, in which xTuple replaces Oracle apps in
U-Haul's truck fabrication and assembly operations, is
continuing, with around five facilities so far having
made the migration.
The community version of PostBooks
has now been downloaded more than 420,000 times since it
first debuted on SourceForge several years ago.
Community-wise, xTuple boasts 25,000+ active users, and
the health of that community is demonstrated by the
number of features that it both requests and helps
develop. As for open source, xTuple says interest and
use center on community and or reliability, which is
consistent with a couple of our findings among open
source software users and customers: first, there is
increasing concern about vendor lock-in, thus driving
the desire for a community of fellow users and
developers; the second finding is the changing rewards
of open source software, which appear to be expanding
beyond cost savings and time to more innovative factors
such as performance and reliability. Perhaps the
biggest, most consistent reward of open source software
among users, however, is flexibility, and xTuple reports
that its customers and partners are demanding
flexibility in the form of features such as support for
add-ons or extensions and compatibility with legacy and
other technology that is not necessarily open
source.
Partners are also very important to
xTuple, and they number about 50, with a mix of local
and regional VARs and systems integrators with plenty of
ERP knowledge. The partners function as a valuable first
focus group for the company given that they are on the
front lines with customers that are managing ERP
implementations on a daily basis. As we hear from other
open source players, xTuple's partners often function
almost as though they're an extension of the company
itself, which is how close the working relationship can
be between vendor and partner. Earlier this year, xTuple
signed up new partners in countries including Brazil,
Canada, Japan, Mexico and Singapore.
The xTuple customer base is a mix
of those deploying their first formal ERP apps and those
replacing existing, typically older on-premises ERP
installations. In the former camp, the commercial open
source player is most often attracting users moving
up-market from Intuit's QuickBooks accounting or
Microsoft's Excel spreadsheet software. Among the
latter group, xTuple's primary rival is Microsoft with
its four Dynamics ERP families ? AX, GP, NAV and SL.
SAP is another longtime rival, but xTuple hasn't
run into SAP's Business One apps suite lately and has
yet to face off against the troubled SaaS midmarket
Business ByDesign suite, which remains in limited
availability; xTuple is more likely to encounter SAP's
on-premises and partner-hosted Business All-in-One
suite.
More customers than in the past are
coming to xTuple from acquisitive apps vendor Infor
Global Solutions, particularly users that have been
running Infor's ERP on IBM's midrange servers.
After many name changes, Big Blue's AS/400 ? also known
as iSeries or System i ? servers are now part of the
Power Systems family and, as there has been for many
years of the AS/400's life, there continues to be lively
debate as to whether IBM might sunset the servers. We
have also seen Oracle's strategy for its JD
Edwards ERP customers that rely on IBM's servers be
impacted by Oracle's purchase of IBM server rival Sun
Microsystems. Some of xTuple's partners are already
helping some users in conversions off of their existing
ERP apps and AS/400 servers. There has always been a
strong sense of community around the AS/400, one that
xTuple hopes migrating customers might also see
reflected in the open source arena.
XTuple is bumping into on-premises
and SaaS ERP player Epicor Software more often.
In general, it doesn't tend to encounter SaaS pure
plays, although xTuple recently signed up a couple of
former NetSuite customers that have found
subscription renewal rates for the SaaS apps suite much
higher than the promotional rate they enjoyed in their
first year as NetSuite customers.
To date, xTuple doesn't tend to vie
with fellow commercial open source ERP players in the US
on a regular basis; such firms include the likes of
Belgium's OpenERP and Spain's Openbravo,
both of which recently opened offices in Silicon Valley.
The vendor has benefited from the fallout following ERP
rollup merchant Consona's purchase
of commercial open source ERP player Compiere
earlier this year. XTuple has attracted some of
Compiere's partners concerned about the future direction
of the latter's ERP apps given that Consona's drivers
for buying Compiere were the target's platform and its
expertise in the distribution industry. Since Compiere's
customers tend to be larger and more internal IT
projects, xTuple hasn't seen many users coming to it so
far.
| Strengths |
Weaknesses |
| XTuple
continues to grow steadily and has debuted a range
of interesting features likely to attract new
users and fresh modules, which should encourage
existing customers to buy more of its paid
software. The company's community approach is
serving it well in terms of being a lively and
supportive development environment for new
capabilities. |
In
casting a wider net in terms of potential
customers, a small company like xTuple has to be
very careful not to lose sight of the needs of its
current SMB user base. It also has to ensure that
its resources, both in human and dollar terms,
don't become overstretched and constrained. |
| Opportunities |
Threats |
| The
trend of veteran on-premises ERP vendors getting
their toes wet in the cloud and hybrid apps waters
is providing validation to those deployments,
which is helpful to all players in the field. |
There's plenty of competition in the
ERP arena, particularly at the SMB level, where
there's still no clear market leader. Some of the
newer areas that xTuple is entering, notably
project accounting, are markets already
overstuffed with apps rivals. |
Search Criteria
This report falls under the following
categories. Click on a link below to find similar
documents.
Company: xTuple
Other
Companies: Amazon.com,
Bausch
Advanced Technology Group, Bergin
Fruit & Nut Company, Cedarlane
Natural Foods, Compiere,
Consona,
E.A.
Patten, Ebénisterie
St-Patrick, Epicor
Software, IBM,
Infor
Global Solutions, Intuit,
JD
Edwards, Katoomba
Trading, Microsoft
Corporation, NetSuite,
Openbravo,
OpenERP,
Oracle,
SAP,
SourceForge,
Stone
Plastics & Manufacturing, Sun
Microsystems, U-Haul,
Windkits,
Analyst: China
Martens, Jay
Lyman
Sector: Application
software / Enterprise resource planning Application
software / Customer relationship management Application
software
Related analysis
451 Market Insight
Service
Prepare
the on-ramps? Apps vendors still struggle with how to
reach small businesses
CRM and
ERP software vendors that gradually scale their
businesses upmarket may face tough decisions about the
fate of their initial smaller-sized customers. We take a
look at some ways apps players have tried (and sometimes
failed) to retain such users. (5 Oct 2010)
Oracle
stresses current CRM, ERP coexistence as it readies
first Fusion Applications
As the
enterprise software player prepares to make new apps
available in Q1 2011, it's changed aspects of their
positioning. We look at Oracle's promises for the debut
of Fusion Applications, its largest-ever development
project, lasting five-plus years. (1 Oct 2010)
The
year of living vertically? NetSuite moves deeper into
manufacturing, e-commerce
One core
focus for the SaaS apps suite vendor in 2010 is
providing more sophisticated industry-specific versions
of its software. In order to expand its manufacturing
and e-commerce capabilities, NetSuite has worked closely
with several of its partners. (24 Jun 2010)
Microsoft
tries to become more Dynamic in quest for midmarket ERP
crown, CRM ubiquity
The
company is paying more attention to its Dynamics
business apps families. Recent moves include forging
tighter ties between its GP ERP and CRM as well as
readying a retail version of AX ERP and international
availability of its SaaS CRM edition. (4 May
2010)
xTuple's
open source ERP attracts more manufacturers, strikes
chord with distributors
The
commercial open source ERP player has been busy this
year, debuting a sizeable app upgrade, unveiling its
xChange marketplace and working on expanding its
partnerships. It has also doubled its customer base; so
how bullish is the vendor about 2010? (21 Dec
2009)
Open
source apps player xTuple expands vertically and starts
thinking modularly
Fielding a
trio of ERP offerings, the commercial open-source apps
player has broadened its industry spread, turning its
attention to distributors and retailers alongside its
manufacturing heartland. XTuple is also set to create a
first stand-alone module. (10 Dec 2008)
Commercial
open source player Compiere expands vertical apps focus
to manufacturing
Fresh off
a second round of financing, the integrated ERP and CRM
apps company is widening the industry sectors it serves.
The move into manufacturing also sees Compiere
experimenting with add-on modules and different pricing
models. (4 Nov 2008)
451 TechDealmaker
Heading
skyward? Consona buys open source firm Compiere to move
ERP into the cloud
The
business apps vendor has already laid out cloud plans
for its CRM software, but has lacked any road map for
its ERP apps. Consona sees commercial open source ERP
player Compiere as its ticket into the clouds,
particularly its purchase's platform. (16 Jun
2010) |