I'm happy to report that Intacct has just been named a finalist in the "Best Financial Software" category for the 2009 CODiE awards. I looked through the list of finalists, and it looks like Intacct is the only financial applications that made it through the extensive evaluation process (more than 850 products were nominated) to the finals.
The CODiE Awards, originally called the Excellence in Software Awards, were established in 1986 by the Software Publishers Association (SPA), now the Software & Information Industry Association (SIIA), so that pioneers of the then-nascent software industry could evaluate and honor each other’s work. Since then, the CODiE Awards program has carried out the same purpose – to showcase the software and information industry’s finest products and services.
The CODiE Awards hold the distinction of being the industry’s only peer-reviewed awards program, which provides member companies with a unique opportunity to earn praise from their competitors.
We're delighted to receive this recognition from our peers in the industry.
Contributors
Senior Vice President, Intacct
Taylor Macdonald
Vice President, Intacct
Mark Littlefield
Senior Product Marketing Manager, Intacct
Peter Olson
Senior Corporate Communications Manager, Intacct
Bob Green
Partner, Information Technology Advisory Services/ERMS, SingerLewak, LLP
Jim Hart
Practice Manager, SingerLewak Systems
Labels
- SaaS (53)
- Innovation (51)
- Cloud (36)
- Best of Breed (27)
- ERP (22)
- Adoption (20)
- Accounting (19)
- Customer Satisfaction (19)
- Channels (17)
- Innovator's Dilemma (12)
- ROI (12)
- CPA Firms (11)
- Internet (10)
- Partners (10)
- Predictions (10)
- Value (9)
- TCO (8)
- Flexibility (7)
- Sage (7)
- Customers (6)
- SAP (6)
- Salesforce.com (6)
- Google (5)
- Great Plains (5)
- Maintenance (5)
- QuickBooks (5)
- Intacct (4)
- Revenue Recognition (4)
- SLA (4)
- IBM (3)
- Microsoft (3)
- NetSuite (3)
- PaaS (3)
- Advantage (2)
- Awards (2)
- Best Practices (2)
- Lawson (2)
- Security (2)
- VAR (2)
- VSOE (2)
- financial management (2)
- AICPA (1)
- ASAE (1)
- CFO (1)
- Efficiency (1)
- GAAP (1)
- Professional Services (1)
- Project (1)
- Project Accounting (1)
- Softrax (1)
- Superior Global (1)
- Visibility (1)
- momentum (1)
- software (1)
Blog Archive
-
►
2011
(21)
-
►
September
(6)
- The Intacct Advantage in Professional Services and...
- Silverlight debacle coming to the cloud applicatio...
- Intacct Revenue Management and Vertical Offerings
- The IRS wants your data file - That's so 1980's......
- A brand-new data center for 5,000 companies - and ...
- Intacct Chosen by Indiana-based Software Developer...
-
►
September
(6)
Blog Roll
- Accman - Dennis Howlett
- Accounting Software World
- Alternative Information Technology - Doug Harr
- Anshu Blog
- Appirio Blog - Apps in the Cloud
- Convergence Coaching
- CPA Firm Technology
- Deal Architect - Vinnie Mirchandani
- Enterprise Anti-Matter - Josh Greenbaum
- Enterprise Apps - Renee Ferguson
- Enterprise Irregulars
- FAQ
- Intacct Home Page
- Laurie Mccabe
- NetSuite Guy
- OnStrategies Perspectives - Tony Baer
- SaaS Solutions Showplace
- Sandhill.Com Opintion and Blogs
- Sanjeev Aggarwal
- Software as Services - Phil Wainewright
- Software Insider
- Technology Best Practices
- ThinkIT Services - Jeff Kaplan
- Totally Paperless
- Venture Chronicles - Jeff Nolan
- ZDNet - Phil Wainewright
- Zuora Blog
View from the Cloud is for the business professional who wants the real story on emerging trends and best practices in financial management and accounting software, cloud computing and Software-as-a-Service. Read on for news you can use to better run your business.
Friday, February 27, 2009
Intacct Walks the 2009 CODiE Red Carpet - Best Financial Software
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Saugatuck: SaaS in Finance: Mainstream, Growing, and Poised for Growth
More evidence from Bill McNee's excellent SaaS research firm, Saugatuck, that SaaS momentum is continuing to build in the finance department.
In a major new report coupled with extensive research on SaaS in finance, just released, the analysts at Saugatuck found:
Finance executives are much less happy with their current on-premise systems’ abilities to meet important business goals. There is a gap between existing systems’ abilities to meet important business goals; and just as clearly, SaaS solutions are seen as a much more attractive and viable alternative.
So while finance executives are unhappy with their current financial applications and expect that SaaS will be a lot better. This isn't just a hope, it's based on experiences they are already having with SaaS, as Saugatuck notes:
Finance executives see broad-based value in the use of SaaS across both tactical point solutions and core finance systems, functions and roles. Nearly sixty percent of Finance executives indicated that their firms are using SaaS for mature business applications categories such as Payroll.
And it's driving more and more finance departments to adopt SaaS, which is exactly what we are seeing at Intacct:
While starting from a much lower account penetration base, SaaS adoption into key financial functions and processes will experience explosive growth of 40 percent to more than 100 percent by the end of 2010.
Saugatuck's bottom line couldn't be more clear:
As a result of Finance executives’ dissatisfaction with current systems, and market conditions that favor the acquisition and use of SaaS over many traditional, on-premise solutions, Saugatuck believes that arguments being made by many leading, legacy on-premise providers (and industry pundits) that customers will “never” swap out and upgrade their core financial systems – whether SAP, Microsoft, Oracle, PeopleSoft, JD Edwards, Sage and the like – is, at best, optimistic. If alternative solutions such as SaaS are seen by existing customers as providing more value at lower cost, then these legacy systems (and their vendors) face significant market share losses at best.
You can read the overview of the report here: “Great Expectations: SaaS Strategies in the Finance Organization”