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For Business Process & Applications Professionals

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July 7, 2009

An Enterprise Software Licensee's Bill Of Rights, V2

Forrester Redefines 47 Basic Rights That Licensees Should Expect From Vendors

by R "Ray" Wang

with Paul D. Hamerman, Andrew Magarie, Ralph Vitti

Average:
10 
(3 ratings)

This is an excerpt

Executive Summary

Of all the assets that an enterprise acquires, enterprise software brings with it the most unusual, onerous, and restrictive set of constraints. In most cases, licensees may not resell, reuse, or share their license. Licensees often encounter numerous grievances across the software ownership life cycle from selection to implementation, utilization, maintenance, and retirement. Poor economic conditions have kept vendors from raising prices for now; however, rapid vendor consolidation has eliminated choice and customer leverage in the market. Upon economic recovery, enterprises can expect price increases in software categories where only a handful of solution providers compete. Fortunately, advances in new deployment options (e.g., software-as-a-service, platform-as-a-service, cloud computing, managed services, and virtualization) may slowly shift the pendulum in favor of the customer. Forrester's updates to its 2006 Enterprise Software Licensee Bill Of Rights (LBoR) reflect these new best practices from more than 1,000 interactions. CIOs, business process and apps professionals, enterprise architects, and procurement experts should immediately review and incorporate these best practices into their vendor relationships, contract strategies, and packaged apps strategies.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

  • Changing Market Conditions Result In New Rights
  • Rights Should Free Users From Onerous Ownership Restrictions

RECOMMENDATIONS

  • Use The Bill Of Rights As The Centerpiece In Contract Negotiations

WHAT IT MEANS

  • The Bill Of Rights Serves As The Foundation Of A Good Vendor Relationship
  • Related Research Documents

This is an excerpt

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