On demand enterprise software vendor
NetSuite has launched a new system
designed to help customers make sense of their subsidiaries.
OneWorld is a significant new innovation in the marketplace that will let
firms run their global businesses from one view, and in real time, according to
NetSuite chief executive Zach Nelson. "Everyone wants to be a global business",
he said. "You have to sell internationally to survive. This lets companies
operate locally and consolidate globally."
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OneWorld gives users a single view of their firms' international businesses,
collating sales, shipping, financial, and other business-specific information
within one dashboard - something which most firms can't do today, Nelson said.
"OneWorld is a single integrated application applied for running a global
business," he added.
Included in the package is the ability to launch e-commerce sites,
consolidate and de-consolidate information in a very granular way and to keep
track of sales staff and targets. The ability to drill down to the individual
transactional level will help businesses minimise the risk of any errors in
inventory and asset management, for example, Nelson explained.
OneWorld is available in 12 languages with support for ten currencies, and
offers NetSuite mainstays including accounting, ERP and CRM.
This was the firm's first public appearance since its succesful IPO and
Nelson could not resist the opportunity to poke fun at competitors including
Salesforce.com and SAP.
Explaining the capabilities of the system in a demonstration Nelson
commented, "Salesforce can't generate a quote or an order? Boy, that's some
sales system."
He also used SAP as an example of how costly a similar, piecemeal system
would be.
Nelson suggested that firms might pay $100m using SAP to make sense of their
different systems, such as sales, and ERP, before revealing how much Netsuite cu
stomers would have to pay for OneWorld. "It is $1,999 a month in addition to
current fees paid by NetSuite customers, and far more robust a system than you
get when you pay £100m." Implementation time is expected to be around six weeks,
according to the firm.
One customer already using Oneworld is Kana, Jay Jones, the firms' chief
administration officer, said, "We tried to do this, we tried to integrate, we
tried to
do analytics and we still had no ability to drill down. He added, "We spent well
over $100m as well."
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