Cost Comparison and ROI of Traditional Applications vs Saas Applications

Published on June 2016 | Categories: Types, Business/Law, Technology | Downloads: 30 | Comments: 0 | Views: 362
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A business owner’s guide to understanding the cost benefit of implementing Software as a Service based business applications and comparison with tradition applications. All aspects of cost are explored and the comparison between a traditional on-premise software and a SaaS application is highlighted with the help of an example.

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Comparison of Costs and Return on Investments of IT Investments
SaaS and Traditional Applications

A business owner’s guide to understanding the cost benefit of implementing Software as a Service based business applications and comparison with tradition applications.

Background

Software as a Service (SaaS) is the revolutionary new way of delivery software applications through the internet. This business model has gained prominence in the last 3-4 years and there are quite a few companies like Salesforce, Intuit, Success Factors, Net Suite that have been able to show impressive results using this model. Due to its various advantages over off the shelf packaged application or custom built software (referred to as “traditional applications” in this document) the rate of adoption by businesses has been very impressive. Like any business model SaaS also has many components – this paper takes a look at some of the components of a SaaS business and compares them with traditional applications – from an end user’s perspective. Since there are various business models around software applications we have classified some important one in the table below. Software Application Internet / Web based (hosted) applications Packaged Software Custom built Applications Examples Email, Ecommerce, Online Filings Tally, Oracle 9i, Microsoft Office, SAP Billing, Inventory, Attendance, CRM Attributes These are standard applications which are normally free and available for use through internet. Again standard applications which are not free but are licensed. Customization to suit business requirements may or may not be allowed. ERP falls in this category. This is a very large and diverse set; applications can be very small and do only one specific task – for example export invoice and document printing - or can be very large and complex – for example an application which includes sales, purchase, inventory, accounting and production. New types of applications have been becoming very popular with the businesses globally. These are available on the internet and are not free but the fees are linked to usage.

SaaS Applications

Salesforce, EazeWork, Intuit, SuccessFactors

Traditionally companies have depended mostly upon packaged software or custom built applications but with the recent advances in software development technology, computing infrastructure available on the internet and connectivity the new breed of Web based - SaaS applications are emerging.

Return on Investment

Return on Investment as a financial concept is used to measure the financial benefit from any project. A typical project has an initial capital outlay and then there are series of expenses (cash outflows) before gradually the cash inflows (savings, benefits, higher sales) start accruing and eventually the cash inflows exceed the cash outflows (hopefully!!). Information needed to calculate the ROI of any project are 1. Life cycle of the project – Since the speed at which software technologies change is quite fast the maximum life cycle of a software project is 5 years. After 5 years there are major changes which need to be taken up as another project. 2. Cash outflows – All expenditures which are done for the project is to be captured, this includes the following a. Initial capital expenditure b. Ongoing expenditure 3. Cash inflows – Inflows are either in form of revenue or due to cost savings. Typically for software projects both types of inflows are relevant.

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Benefits from a Software Implementation

The benefit a business is able to get from software depends upon various factors. Most important is the ability of the business to change their ways of working and start using the software application as planned. Nature or business is also an important factor; some businesses like trading, transportation based, export and OEM based tend to benefit more from computerization. To assess the benefits it is most important to understand the nature of benefits, there are three types of benefits which can result from any software usage. 1. Reduction in cost due to increase in efficiency – Efficiency has various aspects, reduction in human effort, reduction in time, increase in decision making ability. All these translate to reduced manpower and increase output. 2. Reduction in working capital requirements – Some applications helps us to manage our working capital better. Tighter inventory management, better control on Accounts Receivables, improved co-ordination between Sales, Purchase, Production and Dispatch all lead to reduction in working capital requirement. 3. Increase in Revenue – This is an area where most businesses want to focus and get results. Software applications are enabling tools and if properly implemented they help in increasing turnover of a business. Since the direct impact of any application on end sales result is difficult to measure its best if the business heads themselves arrive at a consensus. All these benefits vary significantly based on factors like 1. Nature of business 2. Success of implementation as seen by usage of the application For the purpose of this paper we assume that both Traditional applications and SaaS application give equivalent benefits over time. There are areas where either of them are stronger than other but on an overall basis this becomes equal.

ROI Comparisons

To compare the ROI of Traditional Application and SaaS Applications we are using the following scenario and will be focusing on the costs aspect alone. Scenario Description – Small Enterprise with 50 users, the users are spread across Finance, HR, Sales, Purchase, and Dispatch and the breakup is given in the table below. The setup is across multiple locations – one factory, one head office and four sales offices. Department Finance HR All Sales Purchase Production No. of users 4 4 50 8 5 5 Application(s) used Accounting, Invoicing Payroll, HR Employee Self Service Sales, CRM MRP, Purchasing, Inventory Mgmt Stores, Production Planning
#

# - Please download Business Applications for SMEs to gain a better understanding of applications needed by SMEs. In this scenario we are assuming a 5 year usage cycle with minor upgrades every year and major upgrade every second year. We are also assuming that the number of users across departments remains constant over these 5 years. The costs are for a typical Indian company. Cost Heads 1. Licence costs 2. Infrastructure costs (servers, operating system, switch, desktops) 3. Implementation costs

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4. 5. 6.

Monthly IT Infrastructure operating costs (including connectivity, vendors and in house IT staff) Minor and major upgrade costs Annual Maintenance Charges (hardware and software)

Licence Costs

Software licences are typically of two types – perpetual or limited time. While packaged applications come with perpetual licence the SaaS applications have time or usage based licensing. The licence are further classified into fixed or a floating licence, fixed licence as the name suggests can be used only by a specific named user while floating licence can be used by anyone in the company. For this scenario we are assuming Packaged applications which are licensed perpetually to the company and are comparing with the annual subscription costs for the same set of SaaS applications. The SaaS license costs are actually predicted to come down by 5% per year due to increased user base and lower of hosting and connectivity costs. (Figures in INR) Application

Licence Costs
Traditional Apps 40,000 30,000 200,000 540,000 Included above Included above 810,000 SaaS (per annum) 14,400 30,000 90,000 28,800 24,000 24,000 211,200

Accounting, Invoicing Payroll HR, ESS Sales, CRM MRP, Purchasing, Production Stores, Inventory Total

There exists a significant different in licence cost between traditional applications and SaaS based applications.

Infrastructure Costs

We are assuming in the scenario that the traditional applications are hosted within the company’s premises hence the company needs to buy or lease the infrastructure components needed to run the applications. There are three components within this infrastructure layer 1. Computers – Server, Desktop 2. Networking – Firewall, Routers 3. Software – Operating system, Database, Anti-virus SaaS applications only need desktops and good internet connectivity. The desktops for running SaaS applications need not be very high end machines since they don’t need to host heavy client side software. (Figures in INR) Infrastructure Costs Infrastructure Components Traditional Apps Server 450,000 Desktops 1500,000 Networking Equipment 100,000 Software Licences 80,000 Total 2130,000

SaaS Apps 0 750,000 60,000 5,000 815,000

This investment in Infrastructure by a company can be reduced by going for a dedicated or shared hosting in a Data Centre but that adds to managerial costs and is not being considered in this scenario.

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Implementation Costs

Standard off the shelf applications need to be customized or configured for a specific company’s requirement. SaaS applications also need to be configured but cannot be customized since one application is shared by multiple companies. Basic difference between configuration and customization is that - configuration is based on company specific data which is inputted while customization is done by changing the code structure of the program. Traditional application’s customizability is a huge advantage when the company is implementing very niche and specific applications; typically these applications are implemented by large companies and not by SMEs. In the case of traditional applications the cost of implementation varies significantly depending upon the level of complexity and the quantum of changes but typically this is anywhere from 50% to 150% of the original licence cost of the application. Cost of configuration for SaaS applications is much lower in comparison – primary reason being that SaaS applications are built in a manner which enables quick configurability, it takes away some flexibility but brings in significant benefits. (Figures in INR) Implementation Costs

Implementation Costs
Traditional Apps 16,000 9,000 30,000 162,000 Included above Included above 217,000 SaaS Apps 5,000 5,000 8,000 15,000 8,000 8,000 49,000

Accounting, Invoicing Payroll HR, ESS Sales, CRM MRP, Purchasing, Production Stores, Inventory Total

Monthly IT Infrastructure Operating Costs

Keeping an IT infrastructure running in an Indian context can be quite a difficult and expensive affair. The basic infrastructure like power, internet connectivity, presence of competent IT staff and availability of reliable service vendors who stick to SLAs are all difficult to find. For these reasons only large companies are able to have a solid and reliable infrastructure. Assuming 90% infrastructure availability is quite optimistic. Compare this with SaaS services where the problem is maintaining the infrastructure is of the service provider who in turn depends either on in-house expertise or lease servers on cloud infrastructure. SaaS providers promise and deliver 99%+ reliability. Cost of connectivity is higher with SaaS (nearly three times) since the applications need constant access to the internet. (Figures in INR) Monthly IT Infrastructure Operating Costs Operating Costs Traditional Apps SaaS Apps Connectivity 15,000 45,000 In house IT Team 30,000 8,000 Outsourced IT Vendor 8,000 4,000 Power (Backup) 3,000 0 Total 56,000 57,000 As is evident from the numbers it is not only the cost of maintaining and running the IT infrastructure but also the lack of reliability which is causing a large numbers of companies moving to public infrastructure.

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Major and Minor Upgrade Costs

As the business environment keeps on continually changing and even governmental rules and regulations can change the business applications need to be updated as and when these changes occur. Sometimes companies decide to change the process due to re-structuring or to bring in efficiency improvements. Like stated earlier SaaS applications cannot be customized but can be integrated with external applications through APIs. In some cases companies can utilize this feature to develop small work flows outside the SaaS application and integrate it. If changes are external like regulations then it is the responsibility of the SaaS vendor to provide these changes as upgrades free of cost. Most of the good SaaS vendors also have a mechanism to ask their users about feedback and enhancement requests. They use these inputs to keep their applications continually evolving to meet the user’s requirements. Traditional applications can be completely customized and this helps companies in having an application which is flexible and in line with the requirements. The cost and complexity of maintaining these customizations is captured indirectly in other areas. (Figures in INR) Major and Minor Upgrade Costs Operating Costs Traditional Apps SaaS Apps Minor Upgrades 250,000 0 Major Upgrades 700,000 0

Annual Maintenance Charges

Traditional software companies charge an AMC which is meant to take care of the upgrades and services like trouble shooting, reinstallation, bug fixes and operating queries. AMCs vary from 10% to 22% of the original cost of licence. Hardware vendors also have a pretty steep cost of maintenance and due to high rate of technological obsolescence it becomes expensive to maintain the hardware after 3 years. This poses issues to companies which are outside the purview of this article. SaaS companies don’t charge any AMC but have flexibility in increasing the charge of their services at any time. These new charges will apply to you when you go for renewal of subscription. Most SaaS companies allow for multi-year contracts to prevent against this future escalation of charges. (Figures in INR) Annual Maintenance Charges Operating Costs Traditional Apps SaaS Apps Hardware AMC 205,000 81000 Software AMC 162,000 0 Total 367,000 81,000

Summary

If we compare the overall cost of purchasing, implementing, using and maintaining the traditional applications with the cost of subscribing, implementing and using the SaaS applications we find significant differences in the two. Table below gives the overall costs across the various factors between Traditional applications and SaaaS applications as a snapshot for years 1, 3 and 5.

(Rs ‘000s) Application Licence costs Infrastructure costs Implementation costs

Total Costs
Traditional Apps Y1 Y3 810 0 2130 0 217 0 Y5 0 0 0 Y1 342 815 50 SaaS Apps Y3 413 0 0 Y5 500 0 0

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Monthly Infrastructure costs Minor and major upgrade costs Annual Maintenance Charges Total

672 0 0 3829

813 350 367 1530

984 350 367 1701

324 0 0 1320

392 0 81 780

474 0 81 931

Graph below gives a snapshot of the different costs and how they stack up over five years. Total cost incurred over five years for Traditional Applications = Rs 97 lakhs and has a NPV of 59 lakhs if we take a cost of capital of 24% per annum. Compared to this the total cost incurred over five years for SaaS Applications = Rs 63 lakhs and a NPV of 36 lakhs. SaaS turns out to be 40% cheaper.

Although there is no expenditure on licence cost after the first year in the case of Traditional Applications the cost of maintaining the infrastructure and the cost / AMC of hardware more than makes up for the difference. The result is that the overall cost of Traditional Applications is about 1.6 times the total cost of SaaS applications.

© 2010 Mobius Solutions Pvt Ltd

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Conclusion

So what is the best option for your company? Comparing Traditional Applications and SaaS Applications should not be done only the factor of cost alone. There are other aspects like data security, level of customization needed, level of reliability needed, recent investments in Information Technology and the strategic direction the company wants to take regarding computerization. Besides all this the most important aspect is presence of good quality applications and SaaS vendors in the market. Answer to these questions and more insights can be gained by undergoing a SaaS Assessment service from EazeWork. You can go to http://www.eazework.com/services/ or Contact Us.

About the Author
Chintan Tyagi is the CEO of EazeWork – a company providing business applications to SMEs on SaaS platform. Chintan has rich experience in working with different types of industries and has implemented and managed implementations of various business applications. He has founded EazeWork along with three other co-founders to build, deploy and deliver business applications as a service to their clients. For more information you can write to [email protected].

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