SAP the company was founded in Germany in 1972 by five ex-IBM engineers. In case you’re ever asked, SAP stands for Systeme, Andwendungen, Produkte in der Datenverarbeitung which - translated to English - means Systems, Applications, Products in Data Processing.
So now you know! Being incorporated in Germany, the full name of the
parent company is SAP AG. It is located in Walldorf, Germany which is
close to the beautiful town of Heidelberg. SAP has subsidiaries in over
50 countries around the world from Argentina to Venezuela (and pretty
much everything in between). SAP America (with responsibility for North
America, South America and Australia - go figure!) is located just
outside Philadelphia, PA.
The
original five founders have been so successful that they have multiplied
many times over such that SAP AG is now the third largest software
maker in the world, with over 17,500 customers (including more than half
of the world's 500 top companies). SAP employs over 27,000 people
worldwide today, and had revenues of $7.34 billion and Net Income of
$581 million in FY01. SAP is listed in Germany (where it is one of the
30 stocks which make up the DAX) and on the NYSE (ticker:SAP).
There are now 44,500 installations of SAP, in 120 countries, with more then 10 million users!
So what
made this company so successful? Back in 1979 SAP released SAP R/2
(which runs on mainframes) into the German market. SAP R/2 was the first
integrated, enterprise wide package and was an immediate success. For
years SAP stayed within the German borders until it had penetrated
practically every large German company. Looking for more growth, SAP
expanded into the remainder of Europe during the 80's. Towards the end
of the 80's, client-server architecture became popular and SAP responded
with the release of SAP R/3 (in 1992). This turned out to be a killer
app for SAP, especially in the North American region into which SAP
expanded in 1988.
The success of SAP R/3 in
North America has been nothing short of stunning. Within a 5 year
period, the North American market went from virtually zero to 44% of
total SAP worldwide sales. SAP America alone employs more than 3,000
people and has added the names of many of the Fortune 500 to it’s
customer list (8 of the top 10 semiconductor companies, 7 of the top 10
pharmaceutical companies etc). SAP today is available in 46
country-specific versions, incorporating 28 languages including Kanji
and other double-byte character languages. SAP also comes in 21
industry-specific versions.
SAP R/3 is delivered
to a customer with selected standard process turned on, and many many
other optional processes and features turned off. At the heart of SAP
R/3 are about 10,000 tables which control the way the processes are
executed. Configuration is the process of adjusting the settings of
these tables to get SAP to run the way you want it to. Think of a radio
with 10,000 dials to tune and you’ll get the picture. Functionality
included is truly enterprise wide including: Financial Accounting (e.g.
general ledger, accounts receivable etc), Management Accounting (e.g.
cost centers, profitability analysis etc), Sales, Distribution,
Manufacturing, Production Planning, Purchasing, Human Resources, Payroll
etc etc etc. For a full description of the modules included in SAP, see
the related articles. All of these modules are tightly integrated which
– as you will find out – is a huge blessing ... but brings with it
special challenges.
SAP are maintaining and increasing their dominance over their competitors through a combination of
- embracing the internet with mySAP.com (a confusing name we believe) to head off i2 etc
- extending their solutions with CRM to head off Siebel
- adding functionality to their industry solutions
- embracing the internet with mySAP.com (a confusing name we believe) to head off i2 etc
- extending their solutions with CRM to head off Siebel
- adding functionality to their industry solutions
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