L.A. software firms rush to meet demand for multi-task programs.A handful of local software firms are jumping into the race to grab a piece of an emerging multibillion-dollar (annual sales) international market for "groupware Software that supports multiple users working on related tasks in local and remote networks. Also called "collaborative software," groupware is an evolving concept that is more than just multiuser software which allows access to the same data. ," the industry term coined to describe multi-task computer programs. "Most Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. companies that have personal computers are evaluating different groupware to help them better manage their data," said Jon V. Ferrara, vice president of Encino-based Elan Software Corp. The groupware market is being driven by businesses' need to work more efficiently. One major way in which businesses are seeking to achieve that is by improving communication between their various computer work stations. That improved communication is being made possible by eliminating duplicated efforts. In most cases, groupware can be used on existing PC networks, said Ferrara and other consultants. Before groupware and electronic mail, work done on PCs was most often printed out on paper before being sent to co-workers or supervisors for their input and approval, Ferrara said. Prime groupware applications include work-flow management, document review, meeting scheduling, sales-lead management and product planning Product Planning is the ongoing process of identifying and articulating market requirements that define a product’s feature set. See also
Elan developed and started selling GoldMine, a groupware product used with the DOS operating system operating system (OS) Software that controls the operation of a computer, directs the input and output of data, keeps track of files, and controls the processing of computer programs. on IBM PCs, in August 1992, said Ferrara, who originated the software concept. The company's president and namesake, Elan Susser, wrote GoldMine's code. GoldMine can be used to support a company's marketing efforts by automating contact management, scheduling and sales forecasting, Ferrara explained. GoldMine's suggested retail price is $295 for a single user, $895 for up to five users and is incrementally priced for additional users, Ferrara said. Some of GoldMine's customers include Cypress-based Pacificare of California, a health maintenance organization; Shearson Lehman Brothers Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (NYSE: LEH), founded in 1850, is a diversified, global financial services firm. It is a participant in investment banking, equity and fixed income sales, research and trading, investment management, private equity, and private banking. Inc. and the New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Times, he claimed. Businesses have had a hard time quantifying PC-related productivity increases because desktop computers historically have focused on individual productivity, rather than group productivity. But businesses have found PCs more efficient since the advent of electronic mail, or "E-mail," which greatly facilitates communication between work stations. Virtually all companies that have multiple work stations are now shopping for groupware, said Elan's Ferrara. But Elan and other Los Angeles software companies must hustle if they want to overtake Lotus Development Corp.'s entry into the groupware market, a product called Lotus Notes Messaging and groupware software from IBM Lotus that was introduced in 1989 for OS/2 and later expanded to Windows, Mac, Unix, NetWare, AS/400 and S/390. Notes provides e-mail, document sharing, workflow, group discussions and calendaring and scheduling. . Lotus Notes replicates databases, offers support for distributed servers, electronic mail and has built-in development tools, said computer software experts. Lotus Development Corp. is based in Cambridge Mass. Frank Saldana, a senior systems engineer at Torrance-based InfoSystems Computer Center, works with hardware and software from many producers. He said Lotus Notes is the top-selling groupware in today's market, and InfoSystems is one of the largest Lotus dealers in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . But Saldana conceded that Lotus Notes and its competitor groupware products are relatively hard to learn how to use. Primarily a communications-oriented groupware, Lotus Notes runs on the OS-2 operating system on IBM (International Business Machines Corporation, Armonk, NY, www.ibm.com) The world's largest computer company. IBM's product lines include the S/390 mainframes (zSeries), AS/400 midrange business systems (iSeries), RS/6000 workstations and servers (pSeries), Intel-based servers (xSeries) computers and clones. It sells for $500 per user and the per-user price drops as the volume rises, Saldana said. "Lotus is scheduled to release Lotus Notes II by the end of March. It will be compatible with both Macintosh and IBM systems," Saldana said. Lotus Notes is best used by companies that have 30 or more inter-linked PC terminals, Saldana said. He added that Big Six accounting firm Price Waterhouse has linked its offices throughout the world with Lotus Notes. Price Waterhouse bought into Lotus Notes in a big way three years ago when it interlinked its 8,000-terminal global workstation network with Lotus Notes, said Rob Johnson Rob Johnson can refer to:
"Now anybody who works for Price Waterhouse anywhere in the world sees the status of legislation each morning. We can tell our clients about legislation that will impact their holdings before it passes," so clients can adjust their management strategies accordingly, Johnson said. A spokeswoman for Pasadena-based Aquarian Inc. said that software company is aiming for a piece of the groupware market as well. Aquarian has written a groupware product called Lantastic, which runs on a Microsoft DOS Microsoft DOS - Microsoft Disk Operating System operating system. Marlene Gibb, Aquarian's marketing director, said Lantastic can be used to build local area networks with PC- or Macintosh-based systems. Lantastic sells for $699 for the first two stations and $299 for each additional station. Montrose-based General Networks Corp., a company that helps clients put together PC networks, reports strong sales of "Beyond Mail," a Novell-based software that combines E-mail, scheduling and document-routing capabilities in a single program. Cambridge, Mass.-based Beyond Corp. Inc. produces the program, which sells for $100 per user, said Rick Nyhan, network consultant. "We have about 1,000 network clients and estimate that half of them are considering buying a groupware, such as Beyond Mail," Nyhan said. |
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