Yesterday was the third official meeting of the Software as a Service group. It started out with the heads of a few SaaS accounting software firms getting together and taking it in turns to give money to Fullers, but has now been formalised under the auspices of Intellect.
The first task we set ourselves was to put together a briefing document explaining SaaS to the uninitiated, starting with a definition of what is and isn’t SaaS. You’d be amazed (or perhaps not) at how some people/organisations want to stretch the definition to breaking point in order to be included in the definition. I guess everyone just wants to be associated with the latest hot tech.
One of the attendees yesterday was John Patterson of Really Simple Systems. Last year when we won the main award for Small Business Accounting Software, beating all of the traditional software vendors, Johns SaaS firm did the same in the CRM category.
John has come up with a beautifully simple and equally beautifully named “Touring Test”. He says on his blog:
Next time you are on holiday, walk into the hotel lobby and log on to your application using whatever machine and browser they have. If you can access all the data and all the functionality in your SaaS application immediately, without having to download any extra software, it’s a true SaaS product.
I can’t find anything wrong with that definition – it’s about as close to perfect as is possible I think. It’s comprehensible to the non techies, and has a name that make us geeks feel superior to everyone who hasn’t heard of the Turing Test.
Tags: CRM, Intellect, RSS, SaaS
This entry was posted on Friday, May 1st, 2009 at 10:47 am and is filed under Technology. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

[...] Sage also seems to be some confused about what their soon-to-be-ex customers actually want. Walker talks about delivering more ”cloud computing” apps - which is a catch-all term that includes just delivering the same old software over the internet (not the same as “the web”) using remote access software. The ex Sage customers we and other SaaS accounting companies are picking up aren’t looking for cloud computing solutions. They specifically want true SaaS applications that will pass The Touring Test. [...]
[...] Some sites make you fill in a form and they then get back to you when the trial is ready for you. That’s just plain silly. Either they’re wasting time trying to filter out competitors (if they want to see it, they’ll see it) or they need some manual intervention to get you up and running (not scalable and probably not real SaaS) [...]