I excerpt 10% from every book in a series of blog posts. I posted several on SAP Nation 3.0 in April, then took a break after the Sapphire event. This is the final batch I am excerpting. The book is available to purchase on Amazon in print and eBook format here
"In the start of the book, we shared that in his inaugural address in 1801, U.S. President Thomas Jefferson had talked about a nation “with room enough for our descendants to the hundredth and thousandth generation.” A couple of years later, Jefferson instructed Lewis and Clark as they began their pioneering westward trek: “Those who come after us will fill up the canvas we begin ….”
Jefferson was an optimist and helped fire up a country’s imagination for a massive westward expansion. SAP needs a similar call to action."
"McDermott, himself, after announcing the large Qualtrics acquisition, said, “Very few people are aware of the implications of courageous decisions. Especially not if they’re hit unexpectedly …. Looking back in a few years, SAP will have reached a whole new level with the Qualtrics deal. We dream and fulfill dreams. That’s the wow factor that distinguishes an average company from a great company.”
"Of course, SAP is not the only vendor who sees this second wave opportunity. Dave Vellante of SiliconANGLE Media paraphrased IBM CEO Ginni Rometty’s message at her Think conference in February 2019. “Chapter two is about the hard stuff. It’s about scaling AI and creating hybrid clouds. It’s about bringing the cloud operating model to all those mission-critical apps and enabling customers to manage data, workloads, and apps and move them between multiple clouds. This is a trillion dollar opportunity and IBM intends to be #1.”
"McDermott has a best selling book titled “Winners Dream”. On Facebook, he periodically posts inspirational quotes such as “My parents gave me permission to dream big. Do the same for those around you”.
So, how bold can SAP’s and McDermott’s dreams be? Are they ready to issue the Manifest Destiny clarion call to go from “sea to shining sea”?
The continent of enterprise computing is waiting to be tamed."