Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) certainly qualifies as a hot trend in IT. According to Gartner, the SaaS market is growing at twice the rate of the software market overall. SaaS applications such as Salesforce.com are especially popular with SMBs, but even large enterprises with more than 25,000 employees are devoting 11% of their current software budgets to SaaS.
SaaS, then, is big and getting bigger. But getting bigger, too, is the challenge of integrating SaaS applications with the rest of an organization's IT infrastructure. After all, no organization can afford to let the latest SaaS application it subscribes to become another data silo. SaaS applications need to share data with other enterprise applications and IT assets.
Integrating SaaS applications can be difficult, in part because there's an technology mismatch between SaaS application design and the community of SaaS customers. Most SaaS applications feature SOAP Web services interfaces whose complexity and sophistication are far beyond the programming reach of SMBs, the biggest users of SaaS. Even in large organizations with SOAP programmers on staff, SOAP programming often remains a rare skill. SOAP programmers are usually assigned to big internal initiatives. They're usually not available to help a department integrate its data sources with a new, cost-saving SaaS application.
One of my clients, SnapLogic, has published a new white paper on SaaS integration. If you're working with SaaS applications now, or thinking of subscribing to Salesforce.com, SugarCRM, or any other popular SaaS application, the white paper is probably worth a read. You can register for it here.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
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