Oracle is trying to muscle in on its incumbent cloud competitor in the most amusing way. Oracle is not aware of the well trained staff onsite at the customer showing the exactly how to migrate apps to the cloud. Instead its plan is a bunch of college kids mixed with Indians trying to pitch cloud over a webex.
Oracle has great story with the full stack of enterprise applications right down to the back end database and the hardware. It should be the easiest sale ever. But what did they do? They got rid of the SPARC and Solaris developers (proprietary hardware) and went with intel. What did they do with the database and apps sales engineer expertise? They laid them off too. Who can tell this great story to the customer? Some college kid with no experience and a guy with an accent named Kumar.
I can already hear the customer question "Thats great kid, how to I move and old version of PeopleSoft to the cloud? How do I keep my customizations intact?" The college kid hesitates... no rebuttal and no knowledge on this.
Kumar pipes up "We have the latest version of PeopleSoft on the cloud. Perhaps its time for an upgrade."
"I'm not sure if we are ready for the upgrade, we have other apps that have not been certified on the latest version of PeopleSoft, or ATG commerce. But my main concern is how do I keep my customizations?" Asks the customer.
Kumar replies "You can upload the instance as a virtual machine on our Bare Metal Cloud."
So now its no longer SAAS, its IAAS. And why would I go with you over Amazon who is already here doing that for me? This is what the customer is thinking, but he wont say it he has already tuned out. Bottom line he has put all new development in the Amazon cloud and has put a hold on all the legacy apps to minimize his Oracle footprint because the millions in annual Oracle support he is paying is killing his budget.
Last year he used some cloud credits and he now has to pay the Oracle support cost plus this years recurring ARR in Oracle's cloud. Instead of getting less expensive Oracle is getting more expensive. What kind of support do I get for all this? OH I see.... you laid off support in the US, France, England and next Germany. Those jobs have also moved to India and eastern European countries like Romania.
He thinks silently to himself about the recent calls to support and how he had trouble understanding anything that was said because of the thick accents in these countries. Then he thinks about AWS support and the local engineers right there in his office. Its a no brainer.
Oracle is not liked, has no infrastructure, is late to the game, is laying off technical people and is very very expensive. Its not a good thing for him to buy Oracle, not at this time. And he knows it.