Business transformation with S/4HANA and cloud managed services

This post is the third in a three-part interview series with Brian Burke, global SAP solutions executive with IBM SAP Alliance. Read part one.  Read part two.
Thoughts on Cloud (ToC): In our previous conversations, you discussed how cloud managed services can provide the skills needed to realize the benefits of S/4HANA much faster. Do you have examples you can share?
Brian Burke, global SAP solutions executive, IBM SAP Alliance (BB): Sure. The first one that comes to mind is a construction services company that stored all finance, inventory, project and personnel data across multiple disconnected infrastructures. This meant that common tasks like month-end close sometimes took more than two months to complete because employees had to manually gather data from each environment.
Having such a segregated environment also made it difficult to quickly respond to shifts in demand projections when procuring raw materials. As a result, the company had to keep way too much inventory on hand.
When the company migrated its enterprise resource planning (ERP) suite to SAP S/4HANA, it deployed the new environment with cloud managed services. The company achieved a 90 percent reduction in time spent managing and maintaining the infrastructure by moving the day-to-day management to IBM skilled specialists. This approach also helped the company optimize its SAP environment by integrating end-to-end processes so data could be shared. That integration sped up reporting and allowed the company to be more agile in their procurement of materials, which reduced inventory costs.
Another construction services company used a similar approach, realizing a 15 percent cost reduction by eliminating the need to manage and maintain hardware.
ToC: What about disaster recovery (DR)? How can cloud managed services help companies get back online after a disaster?
BB: A large part of the value that cloud managed services can deliver is the ability to deploy across multiple data centers in the same country or even across continents.
For example, IBM worked with an international food manufacturing company to migrate its entire SAP ERP environment to a managed cloud solution and set up DR in another geographic region. This allowed them to reduce their recovery time objective (RTO) by 98 percent and improve their recovery point objective (RPO) from four hours to 15 minutes, improvements that are advantageous in such a competitive industry.
ToC: Business leaders today need to make decisions faster. How are companies using cloud managed services with SAP applications to achieve that goal?
BB: IBM worked with one department store management company that wanted to accelerate its fact-based decision-making abilities. The problem was that their existing analytics models — based on a traditional SAP Business Warehouse (BW) platform — couldn’t support its objectives.
The first order of business was migrating to SAP HANA. To do that, the company worked with IBM on a managed cloud solution to host the platform and simplify the transition to HANA. The solution was designed to handle high transaction rates and complex queries on the same platform, allowing users to make business decisions in near-real time.
Because availability of the services is vital in real-time decision making, these services also included service level agreements (SLAs) that improved availability rates to 99.5 percent for the application layer in development and testing and to 99.7 percent for the SAP Solution Manager layer.
This move to SAP in a managed cloud environment boosted the company’s ability to analyze and respond to various types of data, including customer trends, which in turn improved decision-making.
Read the IBM Cloud for SAP Applications data sheet for more information on how managed SAP services can reduce complexity and boost agility.
To learn more about the benefits of deploying SAP applications in a managed cloud environment, visit the IBM Cloud Managed Services for SAP website.
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Quelle: Thoughts on Cloud

Tinder Will Let US Users Pay To See Who Likes Them For Around $4.99

Tinder is going to start letting users in the US see who likes them — no swiping necessary.

The popular dating app, downloaded by over 100 million people, is offering this feature, at around $4.99 for most users (but still testing), as part of its Tinder Gold product, which debuts in the US today. Already live in a number of countries including Australia and Germany, Tinder Gold nets its users an average of 60% more likes vs. users of Tinder's free version, the company told BuzzFeed News. Instead of swiping with suspense, these users can navigate to a “Likes You” section of the app where the company says they can see everyone who's liked them. “Think of it as your personal Swipe Right concierge—available 24/7—bringing all of your pending matches to you,” the company said in a blog post.

Tinder Gold, which bundles this “Likes You” feature with a handful of other paid enhancements like unlimited likes and extra profile controls, will begin rolling out to US-based users with iOS devices today. The company say it plans to bring Gold to Android in the US next month.

The move adds yet another paid option for Tinder, which already lets you pay to swipe in different geographic locations and to boost your profile's visibility. As it adds more of these options, Tinder risks alienating fans of its free version who must now compete for matches with users paying for an advantage.

Asked how Tinder will balance the needs of these two groups, Tinder chief product officer Brian Norgard told BuzzFeed News the company wants to keep both happy. “We're always working hard to be sure that being a subscriber adds value to your Tinder experience – and that not being one doesn't detract from Tinder's core purpose: to connect you with new people,” he said.

Tinder's enjoyed success in the online dating app market, but it is currently beset by competitors looking to gobble up its market share. Bumble, one of those competitors, is white hot. Founded by former Tinder marketing VP Whitney Wolfe, Bumble is adding 50,000 people per day and has 20 million users, according to Fast Company.

Quelle: <a href="Tinder Will Let US Users Pay To See Who Likes Them For Around .99“>BuzzFeed