Information Age: News, analysis & insight for IT & business leaders

Google opens business app store

10 March 2010  

Search giant has unveiled a marketplace for third party business apps that integrate with its online productivity tools

Google has today launched an online marketplace for business applications, called the Apps Marketplace, which is in similar vein to Apple’s AppStore and Salesforce.com’s AppExchange.

All of the tools available in the marketplace integrate with Google’s online desktop productivity suite and are themselves web-based. Once bought, the applications can be managed through the same interface that manages Google’s Apps.

Companies that are selling their software through Google’s Apps Marketplace include accounting software vendor Intuit and SaaS finance and ERP supplier NetSuite.

“NetSuite is committed to bringing the power of cloud computing to businesses, so integrating with Google Apps is a logical choice for us," said the company’s CEO Zach Nelson in a statement. "By adding NetSuite to the Google Apps Marketplace, we plan to make it extremely easy for Google Apps customers to get a powerful cloud computing ERP application that works seamlessly with their technology platforms."

The advent of software-as-a-service has made it easier for business users to provision and deploy their own applications without the involvement of the IT department. This can be a mixed blessing; by one token it allows business users greater autonomy, but it may lead to integration and support issues when software deployed on an ad-hoc basis begins to support key processes.

By using the ‘app store’ model, popularised in the consumer space, Google is making it even simpler to deploy applications. However, Google insists that cloud-based nature of the applications also reduces the management overhead.

“The Google Apps Marketplace eliminates the worry about software updates, keeping track of different passwords and manual syncing and sharing of data, thereby increasing business productivity and lessening frustrations for users and IT administrators alike,” the company said in an official blog post. “That's the power of the cloud.”


Comments 

There are currently no comments on this article

People who read this also read...

HP's difficult week continues with strikes and a lawsuit

Employee strikes continue at world's biggest PC company, while Chinese lawyers file complaint over faulty laptops

Cisco claims 'to change Internet forever' with router refresh

Networking equipment vendor aims to lay foundation for next generation Internet with unveiling of 322Tbps router

North Korea’s software self reliance

The communist state has developed its own distribution of the Linux operating system

Fujitsu's wrist slapped over president’s ‘resignation’

Tech giant had originally claimed president stepped down over illness, but this week revealed that he was pushed

Google snaps up Office collaboration start-up

Search giant turns up the heat on Microsoft as it hoovers up cloud-based collaboration project DocVerse

 

White Papers

Read article

11 Hiring Trends for 2011

In this document, you'll get the insider info you need to give potential employers what they want and beat your competition in 2011. You'll learn about the most valuable certifications and the game-changing skills that can lead to more job security and stability.

Read article

12 Hiring Manager Secrets to Getting the IT Job You Want

Learn how you can make yourself a more attractive candidate now with PrepLogic's free 12 Hiring Manager Secrets to Getting the Job You Want.

Read article

1Z0-040 Oracle Database 10G New Features for Administrators Practice Exam

Oracle 9i administrators can certify on Oracle 10G by passing this exam. The ExamForce 1Z0-040 Oracle Database 10G New Features for Administrators practice exam provides their unique triple testing mode to instantly set a baseline of your knowledge and focus your study where you need it most.

More
Advertisement
div class="banner">