SDL looks to battle Oracle, Salesforce.com in 'customer experience'

SDL's Customer Experience Cloud combines Web content management, social analytics and more

Customer experience has emerged as one of the enterprise software industry's hotter segments of late, as companies try to run marketing, sales and support across both traditional and digital channels.

While Salesforce.com, Oracle and other large vendors have generated headlines for their moves into customer experience, SDL is hoping to present itself as an independent alternative with a newly launched product suite.

The SDL Customer Experience Cloud brings together Web content management, campaign management, social analytics, e-commerce, language translation services and documentation, with a unified user interface, according to a company announcement Monday. The suite is the result of several years of work, according to SDL.

All SDL products will be available in SaaS (software as a service) form, receiving updates on a quarterly basis, SDL said.

As part of the launch, SDL has also made a series of new executive hires over the past six months, including the appointment of Jan Wiersma as head of cloud operations, according to a statement.

SDL counts more than 1,500 global companies among its customers, including Chrysler, Canon and Bosch.

To build out its customer experience suite, SDL has invested in recent years in acquisitions and "a considerable amount of R&D," CEO Mark Lancaster said in an interview. "We think are quite significantly ahead of the competition in terms of integrated technology."

Among SDL's acquisitions are Tridion, for Web content management; Language Weaver, for machine translation; Alterian, for campaign management and marketing analytics; and Bemoko, for mobile content delivery. SDL expects to have roughly £266 million (US$440 million) in revenue for 2013, and has more than 1,500 customers.

What SDL lacks in contrast to Oracle or Salesforce.com, however, is a core CRM (customer relationship management) application.

It's not necessary for SDL to get into CRM, Lancaster said. "We're not interested in being a big database with all your customers inside it. That database is not going to solve your customer engagement problem."

Companies gearing up to invest in customer experience software should consider offerings from platform vendors such as Oracle as well as specialized players like SDL, according to analyst Ray Wang, founder and chairman of Constellation Research. "Most [customer experience] projects tend to get replaced in three to four-year cycles, so I'd say it's a minimal risk" to go with a smaller vendor, he said. "What you are looking for in this space is flexibility and functionality today."

Chris Kanaracus covers enterprise software and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Chris' email address is Chris_Kanaracus@idg.com

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