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October 5th, 2009

The as-a-service business model

Posted by Phil Wainewright @ 1:39 am

Categories: Business models, Customer experience, Social computing

Tags: Software-as-a-service, Industry, Real-time Service, Business Model, As-a-service Business Model, Salmi, Software As A Service (SaaS), Managed Hosting, Strategy, Cloud Computing

It’s interesting to see other industries taking a lead from SaaS and learning lessons from what I’ve started calling the ‘as-a-service’ business model. Especially when you consider that most ISVs still haven’t the least idea what SaaS really entails.

An article republished yesterday on paidcontent.org is by guest author Mika Salmi, former president of Global Digital Media at Viacom/MTV. Time To Change The Lens: Media As A Service discusses the impact of digital distribution on the media industry and argues that the software industry’s transition to SaaS illustrates what lies ahead:

“Shipping or downloading a static physical or digital product is a dying business. Pioneers like Salesforce.com, and now Google with their office apps, are showing how a ‘product’ is not a discrete thing. Rather, it’s an ongoing relationship — with continuous updates and two-way communication — with customers and even between customers.”

Sometimes it takes someone outside our own industry to be so clear-sighted about what’s happening within it. Salmi gets right to the point without getting distracted by discussions of virtualization or subscription pricing. He identifies the core of the as-a-service business model as being the way that it changes relationships with customers:

“This is not just about putting up a pay wall and charging a subscription fee … The ‘S’ in MaaS is not an afterthought or tacked on, it is the entire ecosystem attached to the content.”

If only there was so much refreshing clarity within the software industry, where, as I mentioned in my last post, most people seem to believe they can simply plonk their existing software on the Web or into a pay-as-you-go subscription plan and be successful without having to make any other changes to the way they do business. The as-a-service business model is much more than that, requiring a real-time service infrastructure and culture, able to interact with and respond to the needs, interests and dynamics of customers and their own connected networks.

Phil WainewrightPhil Wainewright is a commentator and strategist on emerging software industry trends. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.


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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 4 Talkback(s)
RE: The as-a-service business model
Good stuff, I have always said that their are two S's in SaaS and the second is more important. Witness my thoughts on the matter last month:

Read the rest)
Posted by: Edgy Saas Guy Posted on: 10/13/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Insurance policy  troj65 | 10/05/09
RE: The as-a-service business model  mmichalik | 10/05/09
Well now...here's a ringing endorsement of SaaS...LOL...LOL...ROTFLMAO!  IT_Guy_z | 10/05/09
RE: The as-a-service business model  Edgy Saas Guy | 10/13/09

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