Taking a cue from rivals such as Salesforce.com, SAP on Monday announced a partnership under which it will resell and support social media analytics software from NetBase.
NetBase is one of a growing variety of vendors with platforms that ingest large amounts of data from social websites such as Facebook and Twitter, and then analyze it to give companies a sense of what people are saying about their products, strategies and brands.
The move follows Salesforce.com’s acquisition earlier this year of Radian6, a NetBase competitor, as well as Oracle’s recent US$1.5 billion acquisition of RightNow, which has social-media monitoring software among its offerings.
SAP could have developed NetBase-like technologies on its own, but partnering with the vendor gets it in the game more quickly, said Byron Banks, vice president of information management solution marketing. He declined to address why SAP didn’t acquire the company instead, saying it does not discuss its “buy versus partner” strategy publicly.
The software will be sold as SAP Social Media Analytics starting in January, Banks said. Pricing is based on user seats and the number of topics a company wants to track, said Lisa Joy Rosner, NetBase’s chief marketing officer. They declined to provide more specific pricing information.
NetBase’s cloud-based system has a 30TB database of social media information that gets refreshed on an ongoing basis at the rate of about 90 million posts per day, according to Banks. “Anyone can connect to this system and get access to a year of trend data.”
But NetBase’s NLP (natural language processing) capabilities are what really set it apart from competitors, Rosner said. “What we know how to do really well is read language at scale,” and with great sophistication, she said. “If someone says, ‘I love the iPhone, it’s cool,’ We know that the ‘it’ refers to the iPhone,” she said.
NetBase can also detect degrees of sentiment, she added. “There’s a difference between, ‘I like the iPhone’ and ‘I adore the iPhone.'”
SAP has come up with about a dozen potential integration points with its other products, including a number of CRM (customer relationship management) modules and various members of its Business Objects BI (business intelligence) portfolio. None of those integrations will be available at launch, but customers will have access to a Web-services API (application programming interface) that they can use for immediate projects.