Business Objects pushed further
into business performance management (BPM) software this week, announcing its
agreement to acquire activity-based costing and profitability management
software specialist ALG Software and
unveiling new performance management functionality for the
BusinessObjects
XI platform.
The business intelligence (BI) specialist has agreed to pay £30m for UK-based
ALG and expects the deal to close by the end of the year.
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Mark Doll, senior vice-president of global services at Business Objects said
ALG's profitability management and activity-based costing capabilities would
fill a gap in Business Objects' portfolio and complement the budgeting and
planning software the company acquired through its purchase of SRC Software last
year.
However, the deal prompted some criticism from BPM specialist
Cartesis, which argued that Business
Objects would find it tough to integrate the high-end profitability management
software acquired from ALG and the more mid-market-focused planning
functionality purchased from SRC.
Crispin Read, chief marketing officer at Cartesis, argued that Business
Objects would also need to bolster its consulting capabilities to support the
complex financial transformation projects that underpin many activity-based
costing software deployments.
But Doll countered that the company was investing heavily to expand its BPM
services capabilities. He added that the two BPM suites would remain separate at
the front-end, but would both be integrated with Business Objects' BI platform
at the back-end to enable full interoperability.
Mike Sheratt, founder and chief executive of ALG Software, added that the
open APIs in ALG's software meant integration would be relatively simple.
Meanwhile, Business Objects also unveiled new performance management
functionality as part of its BusinessObjects XI platform. The new modules, which
have been integrated with the BI platform following their acquisition from SRC,
include over 30 applications designed for specific industries and feature a
range of planning and budgeting, metric management, data visualisation,
scorecarding, and analytical functionality.
The company said the integration of BI and BPM data would give users a better
view of both operational and financial performance and make it easier for IT
departments to install and manage reporting tools.
The news came a day after BI rival Hyperion also strengthened its position in
the BPM market, announcing enhanced integration with Google's Search Appliance.
The company said the integration would allow users to search BI-related data and
the business rules and metrics underpinning their BPM applications through a
single search window.
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