Oracle Updates Fusion Cloud ERP And EPM

The Six Five team discusses what is new within Oracle Fusion Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) and Enterprise Performance Management (EPM).

Watch the clip here:

If you are interested in watching the full episode you can check it out here.

Disclaimer: The Six Five Webcast is for information and entertainment purposes only. Over the course of this podcast, we may talk about companies that are publicly traded and we may even reference that fact and their equity share price, but please do not take anything that we say as a recommendation about what you should do with your investment dollars. We are not investment advisors and we do not ask that you treat us as such.

Transcript:

Patrick Moorhead: So Oracle has an enterprise SaaS suite called Fusion, and they do quarterly updates, and they updated ERP and EPM and took the advantage to take a few more swipes at SAP and some customer takeouts.

Daniel Newman: Yeah. Well, as we know, Oracle is never shy about calling out the competition. It starts at the top. Larry Ellison never misses a chance to claim a victory. It’s something that I find to be entertaining. We always talk about it here, competition drives innovation. We all have different ways. Some of us are the humble type. Some of us are the more outspoken types. But yeah, so each quarter, and I’ve really enjoyed this, Steve Miranda, the EVP that runs the Fusion and basically all the apps businesses for Oracle comes out and talks about what’s new.

So this week there was a series of meetings, and somewhere in between me packing my house and moving, I was able to attend and listen in. So as you know, there’s Fusion, there’s NetSuite, there’s Oracle Cloud, there’s lot of pieces. This particular go-around though, what I felt that Steve’s focus was really on was Oracle’s ML and AI efforts. This is a big topic. It’s happening across the board. There was a series of announcements, a new AI-driven interface called the Oracle Digital Assistant. Basically, when you’re working in these tools, there’s so much data, so many systems and records, so many screens.

Remember the little Microsoft paperclip, the Digital Assistant? Well, just imagine now having that kind of capability within your systems of record to be able to find what you need to find quickly using natural language processing. For instance, I’m just going to ask the question, and it’s going to work.

They also made a series of other announcements, an intelligent performance management platform, a risk management platform, a project management update, and of course, what Oracle does best, provided a series of customer wins and gave us the access to hear from these customers about what was going on. I’m not going to report on the whole thing. Again, Six Five, it’s about analysis, not about reporting.

But here’s the long and the short of what’s going on with Oracle. Oracle’s migration to a SaaS platform is enabling a faster scale of the business. This is where growth is coming. You can listen to any of their quarterly earnings, 20 to 30+% growth is coming out of their cloud applications business. They’re continuing to update it to add it. They’re making more and more ties from back office to front office. You love talking about that, Pat. I swear I said it first, but you said it better. But we’re bringing together the ERP, the CRM, the customer data platforms, the supply chain management tools. They’ve got all these things, and this layer of AI and ML is going to be a very important step for the company.

They’re not necessarily being credited with the same level as, say, a Salesforce or a Microsoft or some of the other players for the amount of investment and deployment of AI and ML capabilities, but with all this flexibility with SaaS, with Oracle Cloud, with that full vertical integration, borrowing a productivity collaboration suite, Oracle, they’re really moving toward that full staff, and they are moving towards a system that can be quickly updated that can have overlays of AI and ML capabilities.

And by the way, it’s just ripe for a acquisition of some type that’s going to focus on this area of AI and ML, but they’re building it, they’re integrating it, they’re adding it into their suite across their product platform. And I thought that was the most positive takeaway was they’re not just idling by. This is going to be an important part of their business going forward.

Patrick Moorhead: Yeah. A lot of this conversation reminded me too about … I was thinking, “What the heck is Salesforce going to do?” Oracle seems to be having a tremendous amount of success out there. And by the way, we’ll put the caveat on the SAP stuff. SAP usually comes out a week later and says, “Hey, here are the customers we took away from Oracle.” So getting to the bottom of all this is interesting. What is it? 30% growth that we’re seeing in many of these applications I think is proof positive that Oracle is making a dent in this.

And the full stack capability, it’s funny, I’ve been in tech over 30 years, and it’s almost like an accordion. You have aggregation, and you have disaggregation, where disaggregation or where best parts that are integrated together is the way to go. And then the industry goes integration, where it’s hard to differentiate on the piece parts, and it’s a lot more valuable to put those together with security or in the same place.

You’ve got all these point security products, but there’s so much integration that enterprises have to do that sometimes they’re two or three steps behind what the best in class software was, and that’s why the security industry is going to more of an integration point, and companies like Microsoft and Cisco are taking advantage of that. I’m sorry to digress, but you did a really good job capturing the news itself.

Daniel Newman: You’re entitled, sir.

 

Author Information

Daniel is the CEO of The Futurum Group. Living his life at the intersection of people and technology, Daniel works with the world’s largest technology brands exploring Digital Transformation and how it is influencing the enterprise.

From the leading edge of AI to global technology policy, Daniel makes the connections between business, people and tech that are required for companies to benefit most from their technology investments. Daniel is a top 5 globally ranked industry analyst and his ideas are regularly cited or shared in television appearances by CNBC, Bloomberg, Wall Street Journal and hundreds of other sites around the world.

A 7x Best-Selling Author including his most recent book “Human/Machine.” Daniel is also a Forbes and MarketWatch (Dow Jones) contributor.

An MBA and Former Graduate Adjunct Faculty, Daniel is an Austin Texas transplant after 40 years in Chicago. His speaking takes him around the world each year as he shares his vision of the role technology will play in our future.

Related Insights
Workday and Google Cloud Bet on Embedded AI Agents to Redefine Enterprise HR and Finance Workflows
June 5, 2026

Workday and Google Cloud Bet on Embedded AI Agents to Redefine Enterprise HR and Finance Workflows

Keith Kirkpatrick, Vice President & Research Director, Enterprise Software & Di at Futurum, analyzes how Workday Data Cloud's zero-copy integration with Google Cloud Lakehouse enables real-time analytics without data duplication,...
Zendesk Bets on Embedded AI Support, Can Deep Microsoft 365 Integration Shift Enterprise Workflows?
June 5, 2026

Zendesk Bets on Embedded AI Support, Can Deep Microsoft 365 Integration Shift Enterprise Workflows?

Keith Kirkpatrick, Vice President & Research Director, Enterprise Software & Di at Futurum, Zendesk's new Support Assistant for Microsoft 365 embeds AI-powered support into Teams, Outlook, and Word to streamline...
Brave Origin Bets on Minimalism and Paid Privacy to Challenge Big Tech Browsers
June 5, 2026

Brave Origin Bets on Minimalism and Paid Privacy to Challenge Big Tech Browsers

Brave Origin's paid privacy model tests whether users will pay for minimalist, data-free browsing. This launch signals a fundamental shift in browser monetization and poses significant competitive risks to data-driven...
HPE Q2 FY 2026: AI Orders Remain Strong as Supply Constraints Persist
June 4, 2026

HPE Q2 FY 2026: AI Orders Remain Strong as Supply Constraints Persist

Futurum Research analyzes HPE Q2 FY 2026 earnings, focusing on AI-driven demand across servers and networking, supply constraints affecting conversion, and what updated FY 2026 and FY 2027 guidance implies...
Intel’s COMPUTEX Keynote Reframes an Iconic Company as a Silicon-to-Systems AI Lab
June 4, 2026

Intel’s COMPUTEX Keynote Reframes an Iconic Company as a Silicon-to-Systems AI Lab

Brendan Burke, Research Director at Futurum, examines the Intel agentic AI pivot at COMPUTEX 2026, where Xeon 6+ on 18A, Rackscale Blueprints, and a Perplexity hybrid demo reframe the CPU...
Databricks Genie and Partners Target Enterprise AI's Real Bottleneck: Cross-Functional Intelligence
June 4, 2026

Databricks Genie and Partners Target Enterprise AI’s Real Bottleneck: Cross-Functional Intelligence

Databricks Genie launches production-grade conversational AI to address enterprises' top challenge: AI reliability. Governed, context-aware insights help overcome critical adoption barriers across business functions....

Book a Demo

Newsletter Sign-up Form

Get important insights straight to your inbox, receive first looks at eBooks, exclusive event invitations, custom content, and more. We promise not to spam you or sell your name to anyone. You can always unsubscribe at any time.

All fields are required






Thank you, we received your request, a member of our team will be in contact with you.