Browsing All Posts filed under »Commentary«

TomorrowNow Lawsuit Underlines the Fact that to SAP and Oracle, Customers are Nothing More than Chess Pieces in A Wall Street Game

November 9, 2010

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TomorrowNow was founded in December 1998 by Andrew Nelson and Seth Ravin, to provide upgrade and technical service to PeopleSoft licensees with large, complex environments. In March 2002, the company changed its business to focus on providing third-party maintenance and support service to companies licensing enterprise software. In January, 2005, TomorrowNow was purchased by SAP […]

You can’t legislate skill sets!

November 3, 2010

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As is the case with any writer, it is never my intent to seek agreement or consensus but to stimulate intelligent and therefore meaningful discussion.  Based on the response to yesterday’s post “Is Google’s recent suit against DOI based more on an entitlement mindset or a misguided understanding of transparency?,” this objective was achieved and then […]

Is Ariba more focused on Wall Street versus their chosen market?

November 2, 2010

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Now some may refer to the headline related to this post as being an exercise in whimsical semantics as they would most likely point to the fact that being able to service clients is ultimately what drives the revenues that leads to Wall Street performance. However, and as we have discovered over the past year, […]

Is Google’s recent suit against DOI based more on an entitlement mindset or a misguided understanding of transparency?

November 2, 2010

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“The process for winning government contracts is truly based on the ability of a supplier to legitimately and transparently win preference with government buyers.” Judy Bradt, Washington-based expert author whose new book discusses her more than 20 years helping 6,000 clients to win in excess of $300 million in U.S. Government contracts It never ceases […]

Chairman Emeritus at The International Institute for Outsource Management Weighs In on UK Roundtable

October 26, 2010

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As reported in a post last week, I participated in what turned out to be a very interesting and informative Roundtable discussion on Sir Philip Green’s review of the UK Government’s purchasing policies and practices.  (NOTE: for those who may have missed the live broadcast, here is the link to the on-demand audio portion of […]

Tomorrow’s broadcast regarding generational learning stirs up debate even before the show airs

October 25, 2010

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This post is from the Contracting Intelligence Blog I must admit to some scepticism about these broad-brush attempts to create generational segments. Such analyses tend to be very US-centric – and even then apply largely to the more privileged members of US society. Outside these ranks, many of the depicted ‘norms’ are unrecognizable. For example, […]

The M&A Shuffle or, Why Clients Assuming Responsibility for their Own Success is Forever Altering the Consultant/Vendor Landscape

October 22, 2010

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In yesterday’s post “eVA: Your Still The One!,”  I had provided a number of insights into why Virginia’s program continues to be one of the most enduring examples of a procurement initiative that has and continues to deliver results. While there are other programs to which I can refer in the context of being successful such […]

eVA: Your Still The One!

October 21, 2010

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You are still the one that makes me shout Still the one and I wouldn’t switch We’re still having fun, and you’re still the one… Lyrics from the song “Still The One” by Orleans With the decision to resume my speaking schedule (I had taken time off to write three books), I have had the […]

TD Bank’s Green Chair Dialogue First Indication of Mainstream Media’s Move to Conversational Marketing

October 21, 2010

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Memo to Purchasing: social media and social networking is more than marketing and telling people what you had for lunch.  It is in fact the new paradigm in terms of how we communicate and share ideas with one another. In a bellwether move that may finally signify the fact that mainstream media such as television […]

Did Sir Philip Green Get It Right?

October 16, 2010

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Below is the actual review prepared by Sir Philip Green regarding the inefficiencies of the UK government’s procurement policies and practices.  Please note that it also includes a brief introduction video after the first slide. While we all take the time to review and digest the findings of Sir Philip, especially his assertion that “The […]