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Workday acquisition of Platfora leaves questions

Workday says the Platfora buy will bolster its petabyte-scale analysis capabilities. It's good news for Workday customers, but Platfora customers should be prepared for change.
Written by Doug Henschen, Contributing Writer

Human resources and financial applications vendor Workday announced July 21 that it plans to acquire big data analytics vendor Platfora. In an echo of an earlier initiative, the company says the deal will enable customers to "analyze petabyte-scale data in seconds", but existing Platfora customers should be prepared for new priorities.

Workday's first effort to support big data analysis emerged in late 2012, when it announced plans for the Hadoop-based "Workday Big Data Analytics Platform". When the platform was delivered in September 2013, Workday acknowledged that customers were as interested in small-scale, Workday-internal data analysis as they were in speculative big data opportunities. And by 2015, Workday's focus had shifted to focused, data-driven "Insights" apps built on the Big Data Analytics Platform, starting with a Talent Insights app. The emphasis was on delivering prescriptive recommendations in the context of applications, not just data visualizations.

The acquisition of Platfora, a five-year-old big data analytics vendor, seems in some ways like a reboot for the Workday Big Data Analytics Platform. Platfora works with Hadoop and Apache Spark, providing data-management and governance capabilities as well as its original OLAP-like Platfora Lenses and high-scale, data-visualization capabilities.

Platfora

Platfora is currently focused heavily on customer-behavior analysis.

This screenshot from Platfora's website captures the company's focus on customer behavior analysis, with examples including path and funnel analysis, attribution, and segmentation.

Workday says it will retain Platfora's technology, its staff, and even its San Mateo, Calif.-based office. In a statement, Workday says the deal will "enhance our analytics capabilities --especially areas like managerial reporting and operational analytics where insights are gathered by collecting and connecting multiple data sources (Workday and non-Workday data)".

What Workday didn't say is that Platfora is currently focused heavily on customer-behavior analysis, with examples including online path and funnel analysis, attribution, customer segmentation, and customer journey analysis. Workday, by contrast, is focused on internal HR and financial analysis. Nonetheless, Workday says Platfora's tech and expertise will help it support all its customers, including retail customers and insurers doing profitability analysis and consumer goods companies pursuing supply chain analysis and planning.

My POV on the Platfora acquisition

Workday did not disclose the terms of acquisition, which suggests it was a comparatively small deal. Platfora was an early mover on big data analysis, but in many ways it was ahead of its time. Last year, there were signs of trouble at the company, as it swept in a new CEO just as many new competitors, including Arcadia Data, AtScale, and Kyvos, started to emerge.

Adding Platfora's analytical and big data technology and expertise can only be a good thing for Workday, assuming it came at an attractive price. That said, the types of analyses Workday focuses on aren't exactly in line with the types of "solutions" Platfora specialized in delivering. Shifting focus may take time, but leading software-as-a-service vendors, including Workday and Salesforce, seem intent on making analytics a part of their platforms. That's partly a bow to customers, who like seamlessly embedded analytics that are accessible to business users. It's also a self-interested move to capture more revenue from customers and to avoid forcing them to turn to third-party vendors for analytical capabilities.

As for existing Platfora customers -- a list that includes Citi, Disney, Sears, Tivo, and Volkswagen Group -- I would be wary. Workday's statement only addressed advancing analysis on the company's own, cloud-based platform. It did not say anything about continuing to develop and offer Platfora's software, which is currently deployed on-premises with multiple Hadoop distributions and on the Amazon, Google, and Azure public clouds. That's a crucial bit of reassurance that existing Platfora customers would expect to hear. A separate Platfora blog on the deal was equally vague, saying only that the company will reach out to customers privately to describe what the future holds.

Workday executives were not available for comment. The company says plans will be detailed at the Workday Rising 2016 event in Chicago in late September, but I'm hoping to learn (and will share) more as early as next week.

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