Negative View of Security Standing in Way of SaaS


No reason not to deliver dev tools as services, but perceived risk remains


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September 5, 2007 —  (Page 1 of 2)
Thanks largely to the success of Salesforce.com, software as a service is a widely accepted way to deliver business applications. But despite longstanding pockets of adoption, SaaS has not completely caught on in the enterprise development tools arena.

Analysts and toolmakers said there is no reason why entire suites of development tools cannot be delivered on a service basis. The obstacles—security concerns being chief among them—are not technical. The real impediment, they said, is a widespread perception that the SaaS model poses a greater risk for coding, testing and other life-cycle development tools than it does for business software, such as the customer relationship management offering sold by Salesforce.com. “Some people have an almost allergic reaction to hosting source code outside the firewall,” said Forrester analyst Carey Schwaber. “But the resistance is more of an ideological thing than a technical thing.”

IBM Rational program manager Ashok Reddy noted a widely held belief exists that committing customer data to a centralized server controlled by a third party is OK, but doing the same thing with source code is another story. “Source code is intellectual property, and it is perceived as more strategic to the company [than customer data],” he said. HP vice president of managed software solutions Marc Olesen said the challenges of delivering software as a service are “not unique to development tools.” Security is the key issue cited by development and QA managers considering HP’s service-based offerings for load testing and functional testing; the company, by virtue of its 2006 acquisition of Mercury, can be said to have provided these since 2000. Potential customers also raise concerns about self-sufficiency—the ability to control the software themselves—and about integrating that software with other offerings, he said. These are the core issues, added OpSource chief technology officer John Rowell. “And they are the same for any software.” OpSource provides services that help software companies adopt the SaaS delivery model.

‘In Someone’s Garage’
When development managers opt for SaaS solutions, they do so primarily to take advantage of the toolmaker’s institutional knowledge, which is very difficult to replicate on staff, said Voke analyst Theresa Lanowitz. When software is provided as a service, “you don’t need a full-time person [dedicated to] Load Runner,” she said referring to the HP load-testing offering. Relying on a service provider—instead of deploying and managing the software on servers located in-house—helps immensely with managing distributed teams, and it is also cost-effective, she said. “But people haven’t understood the full value of this approach.”




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