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SAP User Groups Aren't Pleased with The Vendor's Announcement

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Core Tip: SAP user groups aren't pleased with the vendor's announcement this week that new customers will soon pay more for Standard Support, but at least so far, there doesn't seem to be a

SAP user groups aren't pleased with the vendor's announcement this week that new customers will soon pay more for Standard Support, but at least so far, there doesn't seem to be a backlash as strong as the one that occurred a few years ago over SAP's higher-priced Enterprise Support service.

Standard Support, now charged at 18 percent of customers' license fees, will rise to 19 percent under new contracts signed after July 15, according to SAP. That amounts to a 5.5 percent price increase overall. Enterprise Support provides more services but costs 22 percent. SAP rolled out the Enterprise service in 2008, saying that all users would be transitioned to it, but after a protracted outcry from customers ended up making some price concessions and also restored the Standard Support option.

SAP is handling the upcoming Standard Support price change better than past increases, given that it is giving customers a six-month advance notice, and won't try to apply the additional costs to current contracts, said Andreas Oczko, a board member of DSAG, the German-speaking SAP user group, in an interview Wednesday.

On the other hand, any increase in maintenance fees at all is "a pity," Oczko said.

SAP has done "nearly nothing" to improve Standard Support while adding more to Enterprise Support, he added. "It turns things upside down when they increase the price for Standard. It makes absolutely no sense."

In its announcement, SAP gave an indication that its own costs for providing support had gone up, saying the increase was required to "ensure the same high level of quality support in the future."

But Oczko rejected that position out of hand. SAP's "customer base is growing and as far as I understand the way support works, when the number of customers grows the cost of support does not go up," he said.

About 95 percent of new customers are choosing to go with Enterprise Support, according to SAP. A spokesman declined to provide a breakdown of the overall customer base with respect to what percentage is on each support option.

On a worldwide basis, the "vast majority" of SAP customers are probably on Enterprise Support, but in SAP's home market of Germany as well as among DSAG's membership, the breakdown is probably 50-50, according to Oczko.

DSAG knew the increase announcement was coming, as members spoke with SAP about it in recent months, he said.

Any lobbying effort to convince SAP to reverse or alter its decision is probably futile, in Oczko's view. "I don't think that SAP will go back to the 18 percent," he said. "We are absolutely not happy about it, we think it's a pity, but we don't think SAP will change their minds."

 
 
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