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Enterprise Plus

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Enterprise Plus
NameEnterprise Plus
DeveloperUnknown
Released2020s
Latest release2020s
Operating systemCross-platform
GenreEnterprise software
LicenseProprietary

Enterprise Plus is a proprietary enterprise application suite designed to provide integrated Microsoft Corporation-compatible SAP SE-style services for large organizations across United States, European Union, and Asia. It targets cross-industry deployments in environments managed by IBM system architects, Oracle Corporation database teams, and Accenture consulting groups. The platform emphasizes modular architecture influenced by patterns from Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud Platform, and VMware virtualization strategies.

Overview

Enterprise Plus consolidates functions commonly found in suites sold by Microsoft Corporation, SAP SE, and Oracle Corporation into a unified offering intended for multinational enterprises such as General Electric, Siemens, and Procter & Gamble. It competes with offerings from Salesforce, Workday, and ServiceNow by integrating components for supply chain tasks used by Maersk, finance operations used by Goldman Sachs', and human capital routines used by Unilever. The platform’s roadmap has been compared in analyst briefs from Gartner and Forrester Research to the strategic directions of Cisco Systems and Red Hat.

Features and Benefits

The suite provides modules that mirror capabilities seen in products from Microsoft SharePoint, SAP S/4HANA, and Oracle E-Business Suite, supporting enterprise resource planning workflows used by Walmart and Target. It offers analytics stacks inspired by Tableau and Power BI, enabling reporting for stakeholders at institutions like JPMorgan Chase and HSBC. Integration adapters are available for legacy systems deployed by Siemens AG factories and Boeing supply chains, with orchestration resembling patterns from Kubernetes clusters maintained by Google. Benefits cited in case studies from firms like Deloitte and PwC include reduced project cycle times seen in programs at British Airways and improved forecast accuracy reported by Nestlé.

Pricing and Licensing

Licensing resembles enterprise agreements used by Microsoft Corporation and Oracle Corporation, offering subscription tiers comparable to Adobe Systems enterprise plans and perpetual-license options sometimes favored by SAP SE customers. Pricing models may include per-user fees similar to Workday and seat-based charges akin to Salesforce contracts, alongside consumption models used by Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud Platform. Large institutions such as Bank of America and Citigroup typically negotiate multi-year agreements with volume discounts similar to arrangements with IBM and Accenture.

Deployment and Integration

Deployment options mirror hybrid approaches promoted by Microsoft Azure, Amazon Web Services, and Google Cloud Platform, with on-premises variants compatible with Red Hat Enterprise Linux datacenters and virtualization stacks from VMware. Integration is achieved via connectors patterned after standards used by MuleSoft and Dell Boomi, enabling interactions with CRM systems like Salesforce and ERP implementations from SAP SE. Implementation partners commonly include Accenture, Capgemini, and IBM Global Services, who manage rollouts for clients such as Royal Dutch Shell and BP.

Security and Compliance

Security controls align with frameworks promulgated by National Institute of Standards and Technology and are mapped to compliance regimes enforced in jurisdictions by entities such as the European Commission via the General Data Protection Regulation and regulators in United States Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. Audits and certifications often mirror attestations pursued by Microsoft Corporation and Amazon Web Services, with customers in regulated sectors like Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank requiring features comparable to ISO/IEC 27001 and SOC 2 compliance. For defense and aerospace customers such as Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman, the platform offers deployment options consistent with controls used in DoD-aligned supply chains.

Use Cases and Industry Adoption

Adoption scenarios parallel those of suites sold to Procter & Gamble and Unilever for supply chain optimization, to HSBC and JPMorgan Chase for treasury operations, and to Delta Air Lines and British Airways for operations scheduling. Industries include retail, where implementations echo programs by Walmart; manufacturing, where practices mirror Toyota production systems; and healthcare, where integrations are comparable to those used by Mayo Clinic and Kaiser Permanente. System integrators like Deloitte and PwC document case studies demonstrating outcomes similar to migrations undertaken with SAP SE and Oracle Corporation.

Criticisms and Limitations

Critics compare Enterprise Plus to complex deployments historically associated with SAP SE and Oracle Corporation, citing long implementation timelines noted in reports by Gartner and cost overruns similar to those chronicled in public sector procurements involving Capita and Atos. Integration challenges with legacy systems used by NHS trusts and municipal authorities have been highlighted in analyses from consulting firms including McKinsey & Company. Concerns also include vendor lock-in resembling debates around Microsoft and Amazon Web Services, and customization limits criticized in discussions involving Forrester Research and industry forums frequented by IEEE and ACM practitioners.

Category:Enterprise software