Customer Stories / Software & Internet

2021
SAP Concur Logo

SAP Concur Overcomes Obstacles after Undergoing AWS Experience-Based Acceleration

Travel management software provider SAP Concur gained the momentum it needed to complete a large DoD contract after undergoing a series of EBA parties hosted by AWS.

Identified and removed

blockers to productivity

Fulfilled $9.2 million DoD

contract on time after months of inertia

Created blueprint

for broader migration to AWS

Facilitated

a more agile work culture

Migrated 700 microservices

to AWS in 4 months

Overview

In June 2019, SAP Concur, a leading provider of travel and expense management services, was at risk of missing a critical deadline for the US Department of Defense (DoD). The company had won a $9.3 million contract to build a new travel management solution for men and women in the armed forces—but SAP Concur was struggling to spin up a new environment in the cloud, jeopardizing the contract and complicating the company’s revenue recognition.

To remove obstacles and meet its deadline, SAP Concur participated in three workshops led by the Amazon Web Services (AWS) Experience-Based Acceleration (EBA) team. These productive 3-day EBA “parties”—designed to help customers develop new ways of working, collaborating, and problem solving in the cloud—enabled SAP Concur to remove blockers to modernization and deliver its DoD product on time. More broadly, the experience transformed SAP Concur’s company culture and helped it create a road map for a company-wide migration to the cloud. It also opened the door to attracting other government agencies as SAP Concur customers.

SAP Concur case study

Opportunity | Struggling with Analysis Paralysis

Based in Bellevue, Washington, SAP Concur is a division of SAP that provides travel and expense management services to more than 60,000 organizations worldwide, including most of the world’s largest corporations. In August 2018, the DoD awarded SAP Concur a major contract to build new travel and expense software that would drastically reduce travel costs and labor for more than 2 million military personnel. Beyond the $9.3 million initial phase, the contract represented a potential annual revenue of $60–70 million for SAP Concur: a sum larger than revenue from its top seven customers combined. Aware of the security and compliance challenges involved with any government contract, SAP Concur opted to proceed with a shared responsibility model exemplified by AWS GovCloud (US), which gives companies the flexibility to architect secure cloud solutions that comply with the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program High Baseline.

While SAP Concur was already established in the commercial space, the DoD project involved the arduous task of spinning up a new environment that had to comply with the DoD’s strict and complex regulatory framework. The enormity of the project resulted in analysis paralysis, according to Cameron Etezadi, SAP Concur’s chief architect at the time. “It was overwhelming,” says Etezadi, who is now the head of platform architecture for SAP. “Some teams were reluctant to embrace the changes that a cloud DevOps environment represents.” A lack of communication and collaboration across teams also resulted in bottlenecks and stoppages.

SAP Concur missed its initial deadline of June 2019. Feeling enormous pressure to get back on track and fulfill its obligation to shareholders and the DoD, the company set an aggressive new deadline of November 2019—but something had to change. “We needed help opening the lines of communication and clarifying the technical direction between teams,” says Etezadi. That’s when AWS pitched the idea of an EBA party. “I was reluctant at first,” says Etezadi. “We were already behind schedule, and devoting 3 days of engineering resources to a migration party seemed risky.” However, Etezadi ultimately determined that the EBA party would facilitate the kind of organizational and cultural transformation that SAP Concur needed to become unstuck and fulfill its DoD contract.

kr_quotemark

EBA drove out the inertia. It offered a way to measure success, and it transformed us culturally.”

Cameron Etezadi
Head of Platform Architecture, SAP

Solution | Removing Blockers and Gaining Momentum

In July 2019, SAP Concur brought together a coalition of volunteers that included senior vice presidents and other influential people as well as whole teams from around the world. Roughly 120 people gathered in a single room for 3 day-long sessions to identify blockers and jump-start productivity. “We could see some of the problems and gaps in the company almost immediately,” says Etezadi. “The security people sat at one table; the infrastructure people sat at another, and so forth—it was a visual representation of how siloed our teams were.” Throughout the EBA party, AWS EBA organizers looked for ways to better integrate teams and foster an environment of collaboration. After noticing that one team had neglected to address a ticket during the whole first day, the organizers removed the team’s table, forcing them to sit at other tables and work with other teams.

The overall objective was to see how many applications the teams could deploy on AWS by the end of the EBA party. Now together in one room, the teams could see the challenges others faced in real time, and they brainstormed solutions together. The experience was fun as well as productive: teams celebrated minor successes by ringing a cowbell and major accomplishments by banging a gong, creating an atmosphere of collaboration and friendly competition as teams raced to complete cowbell- or gong-worthy tasks. “The cowbells and gongs may seem silly, but they provided a sense of shared ritual and ceremony that brought us together as one tribe,” says Etezadi. “The feeling of shipping and delivery is what motivates engineers. Being able to celebrate progress and mark it audibly turned out to be super motivating.”

The EBA party sparked enthusiasm that participants brought back to their teams all over the world. “The positive feedback was overwhelming,” says Etezadi. “We had several more teams demand that we rerun the EBA party for them.” To satisfy demand, SAP Concur hosted two more 3-day EBA parties near its development centers in Prague, Czech Republic, and Minneapolis, Minnesota, where organizers had to set up extra space for eager employees who couldn’t fit into the EBA party space but wanted to participate remotely from elsewhere in the building. Across the three EBA parties, SAP Concur teams removed more than 60 blockers and deployed more than 19 services on AWS.

The company finally found the momentum it needed to finish the DoD project. Within 4 months, SAP Concur had migrated more than 700 microservices to AWS. “We came out with a replicable set of skills that we could continue applying to the problem at hand,” says Etezadi. “We started doing daily check-ins as we tracked the project, and we met our contractual dates.” The cloud environment enabled the SAP Concur team to quickly make adjustments as needed. As of March 2021, the DoD is in the beginning stages of rolling out the software to its users.

Outcome | Continuing a Cultural Shift in the Cloud

In addition to meeting its deadline for the DoD, SAP Concur emerged from the EBA parties with a blueprint that would help the company move off its legacy data centers—a years-long project the company now expects to complete in 2021. Throughout the process, SAP Concur discovered additional AWS services that the company hadn’t planned on using—services that will help the company facilitate faster feature delivery, higher availability, reduced costs, and other positive business outcomes. The future looks bright for SAP Concur, and the company can trace much of its success back to the EBA parties. “EBA drove out the inertia,” says Etezadi. “It offered a way to measure success, and it transformed us culturally.”

About SAP Concur

SAP Concur is a division of SAP that provides travel and expense management services to more than 60,000 organizations worldwide, including most of the world’s largest corporations.

AWS Service Used

AWS GovCloud (US)

Amazon's Regions designed to host sensitive data, regulated workloads, and address the most stringent U.S. government security and compliance requirements.

Learn more »

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