When Prognosys started operations in 2004, market research was
still growing as an industry. However, the company saw its business
gain momentum within the next four years, as the economy continued
to grow. By now, the company began focusing on sales teams within
organizations and started profiling client accounts - mapping big
accounts according to their spending capacities — and helping
organizations understand potential opportunities.
As the demand for sales and market research continued growing,
Prognosys eventually began catering to customers such as ONGC and
Reliance. There was an increase in demand for its services from the
SMB segment.
There has been an emphasis on IT investment in India and
Prognosys currently provides intelligence to some of the most
renowned players in the industry, including Dell, Microsoft, Adobe,
Cisco, HP, IBM, Red Hat, and Wipro. “At one point, we started
churning out a lot of reports. These reports are usually based on
interviews with individuals from a sample group of 200 to 500
people. In our case, we were doing up to 10,000 interviews in a
month,” says Sandeep Ranjan, CEO, Prognosys.
As its business grew, the company decided to expand its market
research services to overseas markets. Naturally, the company
required that its systems and processes work in tune with the
growing demand.
The need for speed
At Prognosys, each customer requirement is taken up as a
project. Each time a research project was completed, an invoice
would be raised and sent to the customer. Due to the legacy nature
of its systems and processes, project status updates would be
provided manually whenever a customer requested for a status
update. This resulted in delays in project completion and receipt
of payments.
“Most big enterprises to which we cater, work with a lead
time when processing invoices. Hence, a delay of seven days in
raising an invoice meant receiving the payment after say 67 days,
instead of the stipulated 60 days of account payable time,”
informs Ranjan.
Why SaaS
The company felt the need for process automation and decided to
look at various applications that would help improve system
efficiency. While interacting with SAP, it came across the
company’s SaaS-based ERP solution Business ByDesign.
“As an entrepreneurship venture, we did not have a large
CAPEX capability. Hence, a solution based on the SaaS model would
be better suited to us. With such a solution, we would not have to
bear high upfront costs; the OPEX-based nature of the solution
suits our business which largely depends on working capital,”
informs Ranjan.
As its business grew, the company would require additional
features for which it would not be feasible to pay upfront, but
only when required. With a cloud-based solution, it could have
these features enabled as and when required, and pay as per
usage.
The cloud-based solution also meant ease of use for its large
mobile workforce. Employees could log in from any location and
update the project status or account information on projects.