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Major organizations in the enterprise software field include [[SAP AG|SAP]], [[IBM]], [[BMC Software]], [[HP Software Division]], [[Redwood Software]], [[IFS AB]], [[QAD Inc]], [[UC4 Software]], [[JBoss]] ([[Red Hat]]), [[Microsoft]], [[Adobe Systems]], [[Oracle Corporation]], [[CA Technologies]] and [[Wipro Technologies]] but there are thousands of competing vendors globally. |
Major organizations in the enterprise software field include [[SAP AG|SAP]], [[IBM]], [[BMC Software]], [[HP Software Division]], [[Redwood Software]], [[IFS AB]], [[QAD Inc]], [[UC4 Software]], [[JBoss]] ([[Red Hat]]), [[Microsoft]], [[Adobe Systems]], [[Oracle Corporation]], [[CA Technologies]] and [[Wipro Technologies]] but there are thousands of competing vendors globally. |
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==Criticism== |
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The word ''enterprise'' can have various connotations. Sometimes the term is used merely as a synonym for ''organization'', whether it be very large (e.g., a [[corporation]] with thousands of employees), very small (a [[sole proprietorship]]), or an intermediate size. Often the term is used only to refer to very large organizations, although it has become a corporate-speak buzzword and may be heard in other uses. |
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Some enterprise software vendors using the latter definition develop highly complex products that are often overkill for smaller organizations, and the application of these can be a very frustrating task. Thus, sometimes "enterprise" might be used sarcastically to mean overly complex software. |
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The adjective "enterprisey" is sometimes used to make this sarcasm explicit. In this usage, the term "enterprisey" is intended to go beyond the concern of "overkill for smaller organizations" to imply the software is overly complex or absurdly convoluted even for large organizations and simpler solutions are available.<ref>[http://thedailywtf.com/Articles/Enterprise_SQL.aspx "Enterprise SQL"]; Alex Papadimoulis, The Daily WTF</ref> |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
Revision as of 22:39, 12 December 2012
Enterprise software, also known as enterprise application software (EAS), is software used in organizations, such as in a business or government,[1] as opposed to software used by individuals. Enterprise software is an integral part of a (computer based) Information System.
Services provided by enterprise software are typically business-oriented tools such as online shopping and online payment processing, interactive product catalogue, automated billing systems, security, enterprise content management, IT service management, customer relationship management, enterprise resource planning, business intelligence, project management, collaboration, human resource management, manufacturing, enterprise application integration, and enterprise forms automation.
Due to the cost of building or buying what is often non-free proprietary software, only large enterprises employ a software program that models their entire business system.[citation needed]
As enterprises have similar departments and systems in common, enterprise software is often available as a suite of customizable programs. Generally, the complexity of these tools requires specialist capabilities and specific knowledge.
Definitions
Enterprise software describes a collection of computer programs with common business applications, tools for modeling how the entire organization works, and development tools for building applications unique to the organization.[2] The software is intended to solve an enterprise-wide problem, rather than a departmental problem. Enterprise level software aims to improve the enterprise's productivity and efficiency by providing business logic support functionality.
According To Martin Fowler, "Enterprise applications are about the display, manipulation, and storage of large amounts of often complex data and the support or automation of business processes with that data."[3]
Although there is no single, widely accepted list of enterprise software characteristics,[4] they generally include performance, scalability, and robustness. Furthermore, enterprise software typically has interfaces to other enterprise software (for example LDAP to directory services) and is centrally managed (a single admin page, for example).[5]
Enterprise application software
Enterprise application software is application software that performs business functions such as order processing, procurement, production scheduling, customer information management, energy management, and accounting. It is typically hosted on servers and provides simultaneous services to a large number of users, typically over a computer network. This is in contrast to a single-user application that is executed on a user's personal computer and serves only one user at a time.
Types
Enterprise software can be categorized by business function. Each type of enterprise application can be considered a "system" due to the integration with a firm's business processes.[6] Categories of enterprise software may overlap due to this systemic interpretation. For example, IBM's Business Intelligence platform (Cognos), integrates with a predictive analytics platform (SPSS) and can obtain records from its database packages (Infosphere, DB2). Blurred lines between package functions make delimitation difficult, and in many ways larger software companies define these somewhat arbitrary categories.[7] Nevertheless, certain industry standard product categories have emerged, and these are shown below:
- Accounting software
- Business intelligence[8]
- Business process management[9]
- Content management system (CMS)[10]
- Customer relationship management (CRM)[11]
- Database
- Enterprise resource planning (ERP)[13]
Developers
Major organizations in the enterprise software field include SAP, IBM, BMC Software, HP Software Division, Redwood Software, IFS AB, QAD Inc, UC4 Software, JBoss (Red Hat), Microsoft, Adobe Systems, Oracle Corporation, CA Technologies and Wipro Technologies but there are thousands of competing vendors globally.
See also
- Business informatics
- Business software
- Enterprise architecture
- Enterprise forms automation
- Identity management
- Identity management system
- Information technology management
- Integrated business planning
- Management information system
- Operational risk management
- Retail software
- Strategic information system
References
- ^ "Enterprise software" is a social, not technical, phenomenon
- ^ Management Information Systems Glossary of Terms
- ^ Martin Fowler, "Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture" (2002). Addison Wesley.
- ^ What is Enterprise Software?
- ^ Gartner Group: IT Glossary - enterprise application software
- ^ http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/E/enterprise_application.html
- ^ http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/data/library/techarticle/dm-0810wurst/index.html
- ^ http://www.oracle.com/us/solutions/ent-performance-bi/bi-applications-066544.html
- ^ http://www.pega.com/products/business-process-management
- ^ http://drupal.org/
- ^ http://www.sage.co.uk/crm/
- ^ http://www.oracle.com/uk/products/applications/master-data-management/
- ^ http://www.sap.com/solutions/bp/enterprise-resource-planning/
....