Highlights 10/5: Why old ERP is dying; Analysts say Amazon's "Space Needle" no slam dunk vs QLIK, DATA








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Old ERP is way past its “Best When Used By” date (Brian Sommer/Diginomica)

After freak eye accident, a whole new insight (Philadelphia Inquirer)


Why Jack Dorsey Is Ready to Save Twitter (Re/code)

Amazon’s ‘Space Needle’ No Slam Dunk Against QLIK, DATA, Say FBR, William Blair (Barron's Tech Trader Daily)


DLA law firm plans expansion in Phila. (Philadelphia Inquirer)

OneTwoSee raises $1.2 million from local investors (Ben Franklin Technology Partners)

FanDuel CEO Nigel Eccles: How we're competing with DraftKings (Fortune)

IBM zeroes in on unstructured data with Cleversafe buy (PC World)


Highlights 10/4: What to look for at AWS re:Invent 2015; Questions persist about its US-East-1 region







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Come for a ‘Taste of Philly’. Leave with a new vision for the future of marketing, advertising and commerce. (Erik B. Rasmussen/Safeguard Scientifics Blog)

IBM Scientists Find New Way to Shrink Transistors (NY Times)

GE Predicts Predix Platform Will Generate $6B In Revenue This Year (TechCrunch)

AWS re:Invent 2015: 5 talking points to look out for (Computer Business Review)

A sneak peak at what to expect from Las Vegas this week (Network World)


Amazon launches managed Elasticsearch service (Computerworld)

AWS US-East-1 region scrutinized following service incidents (SearchAWS)


Philly Tech People News 10/4/2015: Cloudnexa hires Comcast's Telepun; RightCare Solutions brings on Siemens Heath vet Edgin to lead sales growth








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Cloudnexa taps Comcast veteran Telepun as Sales VP (Channel Partners)

Siemens Healthcare selects David Pacitti as new head of North America business (DOTmed)

RightCare Solutions Brings On Health IT Veteran Jeffrey Edgin to Lead Sales Growth (Business Wire)


What SAP N.A.’s Chief Innovation Officer Can Do for You (ASUG News)

Kiwi ex-SAP CEO’s high-tech startup raises $5 million capital funding
(Computerworld New Zealand)
Geraldine McBride formerly ran SAP's North American business from Newtown Square.

Blue Agility, LLC, Implements New Corporate Structure (Marketwire)

Ret. Brig. Gen. Frederick Henry Named DISA Business Lead at Unisys (GovConWire)


phillytechnews bytes is out 10/4/15



phillytechnews bytes is out


Sunday morning tech fix: NY Times on "TV Transformed"; AWS conference kicks off; Subarus flying off the shelf



Tom Paine



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A few items that might spark your interest on a beautiful (?) Sunday morning:

The New York Times has a special mini-section entitled "TV Transformed" that has a few articles about the rapidly changing industry, including challenges to our own big dog Comcast.



Amazon kicks off its annual AWS re:Invent 2015 conference on Tuesday in Las Vegas. That's about its powerful (~ $6 billion annual revenues) cloud computing business, Amazon Web Services, not about how to buy a toaster for $9.99. Some rumors: A closer "buddy-buddy" relationship with one-time competitor Backspace, and a super fast, in-memory relational database. I'll also track what noise local companies are making in Vegas.

And Camden County's Subaru of America saw the highest percentage increase of any US auto company in terms of US sales, as Bloomberg reports, growing 28% year-over-year last month to 53,000 units. And that's part of a longer-term trend.




Saturday Highlights: SAP Deploys Fieldglass To Manage Its Own Contingent Workforce; Comcast Expands Energy Rewards Program






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Comcast Expands Energy Rewards Program (Greentech Media)

Unwrapping the Cable TV Bundle


SAP Deploys Fieldglass To Manage Its Contingent Workforce (SearchSAP)

Go Digital or Die – Thoughts on the Digital Transformation (Steve Lucas/SAP)

Wal-Mart Considers Open Sourcing Hybrid Cloud Tools (Wall Street Journal: CIO Journal)


Highlights 10/2: Concur hopes its cloud experience will rub off on SAP; Rackspace, AWS reported near cooperative deal



Comcast Business Brings Voice Mobility to SMBs (Multichannel News)

A Dreamforce takeaway
(Denis Pombriant / Enterprise Irregulars)

AWS, Rackspace Deal Is Imminent (CRN)

Concur hopes its cloud experience will rub off on SAP (FierceCIO)


Wayne's LiquidHub, seeking to deliver superior value, looks to more closely connect front and back ends



Tom Paine



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LiquidHub, the Wayne-based, self-described "digital transformation company providing customer engagement and technology solutions to global corporations", has rebranded and repositioned itself in the marketplace in response to what it sees as "the growing need for an effective and holistic, end-to-end digital customer experience across multiple industries".

A part of this change in emphasis reflect's LiquidHub's percieved need to provide customers with an integrated solution covering the back end of a system as well as the front end. LiquidHub currently concentrates more on the front end, where the end-user interface is and the transaction originates. The back end is typically where transaction fulfillment is initiated, and the detailed databases covering information about customers, transactions, inventory and accounts are maintained.

Over the past year, LiquidHub has initiated an acquisition strategy aimed at filling out its digital marketing consulting skills and adding more Salesforce expertise, as the company had indicated an intent to become more Salesforce-oriented largely because that's the direction it saw its customer base heading. LiquidHub snapped up three Salesforce partners this year - Redkite, Harvest Solutions and ClosedWon - as well as digital marketing agency Foundry9 in late 2014. While collectively significant, I don't believe a single one of these acquisitions was too huge for LiqiudHub to swallow.

LiquidHub projected revenues of more than $200 million in 2015, roughly doubled over the past 18 months, the Inquirer reported in March, and the company says it is still on track to meet those projections.

But the challenge in the systems integration space is not so much to amass revenue, which can always be acquired at a price. The key is to focus on segmented areas of practice, and develop combinations of domain expertise and tools that make projects more predictable (and profitable). And going further, to productize some of those things when it can be done.

LiquidHub’s rebranding comes at a time when integrated customer journey solutions are taking center stage, according to a recently commissioned Forrester Consulting study for LiquidHub titled ‘Executing Digital Transformation: How to Pick the Right Partner for Success'.

“Companies undergoing a digital transformation need an end-to-end partner to help create an engaging customer experience, build the right technological foundation to support it, and enable the integration into existing technologies and systems,” concluded the study. Its key findings were:


  • Changing customer expectations means continuous transformation for digital engagement.



  • Customer engagement demands end-to-end integration among channels and across the value chain.



  • Effectively building improved digital engagements requires a full service, end-to-end partner.

The complete Forrester study can be viewed here.

"Our proven experience in handling systems and application integration in the back-end coupled with our user experience and customer journey expertise allows us to offer innovative solutions to clients that facilitate strategy and seamless technology execution, and provide their end customers with a spectacular experience,” said, Jonathan Brassington, LiquidHub Co-founder and CEO, in announcing the brand re-launch.


LiquidHub provided a more detailed breakdown of targeted market segments than I'd seen before, including financial services, healthcare, life sciences, insurance, and commercial & retail industries.

Rob Kelley /
LinkedIn
In answers to questions emailed by Philly Tech News to Partner & co-founder Rob Kelley while he was busy scouting Dreamforce, he indicated that while acquistions were always possible, the company favored organic growth.

Partnerships were a possibility, and Kelly described what LiquidHub looked for in partners: "We are always looking for go-to-market partners that help us deliver superior value to our clients. We value Salesforce as a partner because they are dedicated to our clients’ success, and we continuously evaluate partners who remain committed to delivering customer success, deeper integrations and productivity across our entire set of capabilities and service offerings".


Kelley also points to the benefits of having as much of the end-to-end development done inhouse by a single party. "Having a single partner for digital transformation services, for both application delivery and integration, enables more streamlined implementations by eliminating the logistical challenges of working with multiple partners. Today’s digital channels have to interface with data, information, and insights across the value chain, creating a complexity that a small number of partners can best address."

In June of this year, LiquidHub moved closer to a fully productized offering in one area by introducing Salesforce for Asset Managers – a Salesforce Fullforce Solution. I'm not entirely sure how this relates to Salesforce's pre-Dreamforce announcement of its Financial Services Cloud - a much broader, though not yet filled in concept.

As part of the rebranding, the company's redesigned logo features a new typeface with a unique design formed by two entwined infinity symbols representing user experience and technology solutions and "the endless possibilities that transform customer engagement".

Around the same time LiquidHub announced its rebranding, SAP's hybris unit, acquired in 2013, which has been more of a marketing automation platform, also revealed some repositioning that appears to place it going more head-to-head against Salesforce in the CRM market. SAP hybris, which coincidentally also uses Forrester extensively for market analysis, came to much the same conclusion as LiquidHub about the need to more closely integrate front end and back end systems.

While I am by no means an expert in the makeup of Salesforce's partner ecosystem nationwide, I do see a hole in it in providing the types of system integration capabilities LiquidHub offers. However, the acquisition appetite of the big consulting firms for Salesforce/Workday etc. consultants is very strong right now, and anything could happen over the next several months.



Veeva holds Analyst & Investor day yesterday; webcast available



Tom Paine



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Veeva Systems, the cloud-based life sciences SaaS and information company, held its annual Analyst & Investor day yesterday. Veeva, based in California, has a presence in Delaware and Montgomery Counties, and is important to the region because it interacts with so many life sciences companies and suppliers.

The link for the session, where you can view the webcast,
is here near the bottom of the page. For a summary, I would suggest listening to CEO Peter Gassner's opening introduction and President and Wallingford native Matt Wallach's presentation.

Veeva also stated some important goals yesterday, including reaching $1 billion in revenue by calendar year 2020 with about 50% of it coming from non-CRM sources. Also, for you life sciences junkies out there, I'm sure you'll be fascinated about how Veeva breaks down and analyzes almost every aspect of the industry.


Highlights 10/1: Inquirer owner has pondered nonprofit status; Hospitals - ready or not - make ICD-10 switch





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Google Launches New Cloud Platform Region To Better Serve Eastern U.S.
(TechCrunch)

Hospitals flip the ICD-10 switch, adding 68,000 ways to tell you're sick (Computerworld)

Dish partners surrender some spectrum licenses: FCC official (Reuters)

Philly media owner explored a nonprofit path (Poynter)

Kiwi ex-SAP CEO’s high-tech startup raises $5 million capital funding
(Computerworld New Zealand)
Geraldine McBride ran SAP' North America business from Newtown Square, but as is the norm didn't stay
in that job very long.

Inside the world’s largest software industry conference (Fortune)


Ben Franklin TechVentures in Bethlehem gets more funds for facility expansion



Tom Paine



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The US Department of Commerce's Economic Development Administation (EDA) announced Tuesday that it has awarded $1.7 million to Ben Franklin Technology Partners of Northeastern Pennsylvania to expand its TechVentures incubator in Bethlelem.

The funds will help Ben Franklin add 14,500 square feet to its existing 47,000 square foot facility located on the Lehigh University campus. Its not clear, however, that the entire expansion, which will cost an estimated $7.5 million, has been funded yet.

Rendering of expanded Ben Franklin TechVentures Facility /
BFTP NEP


Ben Franklin officials say rentable space in the existing TechVentures facility is 97% occupied, according to the Morning Call.