SALES AND MARKETING
Rational markets and sells its products and services directly through telesales field operations, sales organizations, and the World Wide Web and indirectly through channels such as value-added resellers (VARs) and distributors.
Rational's direct selling approach couples sales of its integrated software tools with high-value technical consulting services. Rational has established a major-account direct sales and technical consulting organization in the United States, Canada, Europe, and the Asia/Pacific/Latin America region.
Rational's sales, marketing, and professional services organization consists of 861 individuals, operating out of corporate headquarters in Cupertino, California, and from field offices in other locations throughout North America, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Sweden, The Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Australia, Hong Kong, Taiwan, India, South Korea, New Zealand, Japan, and Brazil. Rational's direct international operations are staffed almost exclusively by local personnel. Rational also has distributors and resellers in North America, Europe, and Asia Pacific.
In support of its sales efforts, Rational's marketing department conducts comprehensive programs, which include maintenance of an extensive World Wide Web site, an electronic subscription service for news announcements about Rational, print advertising, direct mail, public relations, trade shows, and ongoing customer communications programs. Rational also keeps its customers informed of advances in the field through technical papers and other mailings.
The Company also has an extensive set of relationships with independent software vendors (ISVs) including Microsoft, PeopleSoft, and Oracle. These companies work closely with Rational on marketing and technology programs, providing customers with a comprehensive, easy-to-use development and testing solution. The marketing relationships often involve one or more of the following programs: joint advertising campaigns, exchange of mailing lists, reciprocal use of logos in marketing literature, and joint promotions, seminars, or trade-show presentations.
International sales accounted for approximately 34%, 27%, and 27% of the Company's revenues in fiscal 1998, 1997, and 1996, respectively, and the Company expects that international sales will continue to account for a significant portion of the Company's revenues in the future. International sales are subject to inherent risks, including unexpected changes in regulatory requirements and tariffs, difficulties in staffing and managing foreign operations, longer payment cycles, greater difficulty in accounts receivable collection, potentially adverse tax consequences, price controls or other restrictions on foreign currency, and difficulties in obtaining export and import licenses. Any material adverse effect on the Company's international business would be likely to materially and adversely affect the Company's business, operating results, and financial condition as a whole. The Company's international sales are generally denominated in local currencies. From time to time, the Company enters into short-term forward exchange contracts to hedge against the impact of foreign currency fluctuations on accounts receivable denominated in local currencies. Gains and losses on the conversion of foreign payments into U.S. dollars may contribute to fluctuations in the Company's results of operations. Although the Company has not experienced any material adverse impact to date from fluctuations in foreign currencies, there can be no assurance that the Company will not experience a material adverse impact on its financial condition and results of operations from fluctuations in foreign currencies in the future. See "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations: Overview: Revenue: International Sales."
PRODUCT PRICING
Rational's software licenses are normally perpetual, fully paid-up floating or node-locked licenses. Floating licenses limit the number of simultaneous users on a network instead of being associated with a specific user or computer. Node-locked licenses limit a software license to a single computer. Rational also offers other kinds of licenses, such as project licenses that provide selected Rational tools to all the developers working on a specific project.
The bulk of Rational's net product revenue in fiscal 1998 was derived from sales of its ClearCase, Rational Rose, testing, and Rational Apex product families. A ClearCase license is $3,000 on UNIX or Windows NT. Elements of the Rational Rose family range in price from $495 for a single-user PC version of Rational Rose, to $3,600 for Rational Rose 98 Enterprise Edition on a PC, to $8,400 for a floating license of Rational Rose/C++ on a UNIX workstation. Rational's Purify, Quantify, and PureCoverage products range in price from about $500 to $2,000, depending on platform and specific combination. Elements of SQA Suite, available on Windows, range from $1,395 for SQA Manager to $3,295 for SQA Suite Team Test Edition. The price of preVue ranges beyond $100,000 for a high-capacity version. Elements of the Rational Apex family range in price from $22,000 for a Rational Apex Ada license on UNIX to $35,000 and above for an embedded-systems version of Rational Apex. Rational's products are often sold in multiple quantities to teams of software developers working together in a client/server environment. Rational offers standard discounts based on dollar volume in a single-purchase order.
Rational also offers a support program that entitles a licensee to receive all enhancements and upgrades to the licensed product that are published in the succeeding 12-month period, as well as certain other support services. Annual fees for support generally range from 15% to 20% of the software license fee.
Rational's packaged training courses are offered in the form of open- enrollment public courses and in-house courses at customer facilities, which range from $1,750 per person for a typical four-day course to between $3,000 and $12,500 for in-house courses, depending on the length of the course and the maximum number of students in the class. Rational's packaged consulting services range from approximately $50,000 to several hundred thousand dollars. Custom consulting generally is priced on a time-and-materials basis.
See "Factors That May Affect Future Results: Adverse Impact of Promotional Product Versions on Actual Product Sales."
COMPETITION
The industry for tools for automating software application development and management is extremely competitive and rapidly changing. Rational expects to continue to experience significant and increasing levels of competition in the future. Bases of competition include corporate and product reputation, innovation with frequent product enhancement, breadth of integrated product line, the availability of integrated suites and bundles, product architecture, functionality and features, product quality, performance, ease of use, support, availability of technical consulting services, and price. Rational faces intense competition for each product in its product lines, generally from both Windows and UNIX vendors. Because individual product sales are often the first step in a broader customer relationship, Rational's success will depend in part on its ability to successfully compete with numerous competitors at each point in its product line.
Rational faces competition from software-development tools and processes developed internally by customers, including ad hoc integrations of numerous standalone development tools. Customers may be reluctant to purchase products offered by independent vendors such as the Company. As a result, the Company must educate Prospective customers about the advantages of the Company's products versus internally developed software-quality systems.
Rational faces competition from, among others, Intersolv, Inc., Platinum Technology, Inc., Select Software Tools plc, Cayenne, Oracle, IBM Corporation (IBM), Sun Microsystems, and Sybase Inc., as well as numerous privately held tool suppliers offering traditional CASE tools that compete with the Rational Rose approach to visual modeling and component-based development. Rational's RequisitePro requirements-management product faces competition from companies such as GEC-Marconi. Rational's software-testing tools--Purify, Quantify, PureCoverage, SQA Suite, Rational Visual Test, and preVue--face competition from Compuware, Mercury Interactive Corporation, Segue Software, Inc., Intersolv, Inc., Computer Associates, Platinum Technologies,
Terodyne, Cyrano, SQL Bench International, Inc., and several private companies offering testing-automation tools. Microsoft, Compuware, Oracle, Sybase, and several of the major UNIX platform vendors, including Sun Microsystems, Hewlett Packard, Digital Equipment Corporation, Silicon Graphics, Inc., and IBM, also compete with Rational with respect to software-quality products and testing tools, with testing products customized to certain of their other software products. Rational Apex for C/C++ faces competition from, among others, major UNIX platform vendors such as Sun Microsystems, Hewlett-Packard, and Digital Equipment Corporation, which have C/C++ compilers and debuggers and in some cases programming environments for their platforms. In addition, numerous privately held companies offer compilers, debuggers, and programming environments that compete with Rational Apex. Rational's ClearCase, ClearDDTS, and ClearQuest product line faces competition from various suppliers offering products with configuration and change management functions, including Continuous Software Corporation, StarBase Corporation, Hewlett Packard, True Software, SQL Software, LTD., Intersolv, Inc., Sun Microsystems, and IBM. The Rational Apex Ada product line faces competition from Aonix, Green Hills Software, Inc., and a large number of other suppliers offering Ada products for native and embedded systems.
The Company also experiences competition with respect to a number of its products, both from utilities commonly bundled with versions of operating systems and from standalone product offerings. For example, versions of UNIX are commonly bundled with utilities (such as SCCS and RCS) that provide version control, which is part of the functionality provided by ClearCase. Some system vendors, such as Sun, already have products, such as Workshop, that provide features similar to those in Purify or others of the Company's products and would compete directly with such products if offered on a standalone basis. The Company's recently announced ClearQuest defect-tracking product is expected to compete with products from LBMS, Inc., which was recently acquired by Platinum Technology, Inc. There can be no assurance that Sun, which has a license to some of the Company's patents, will not introduce standalone products that compete with the Company's products. Companies offering products competitive with Rational Summit and ClearCase in the UNIX marketplace include Sun, which offers TeamWare, IBM, which offers Configuration Management/Version Control (CMVC), Computer Associates (CA) through its acquisition of LEGENT Corporation, which offers the Endeavor WSX product, and Platinum through its acquisition of Softool Corp., which markets CCC Harvest. In addition, there are several smaller, privately held companies that market competitive products, including Continuous Software Corporation, which markets Continuus/CM. Other companies have offered version control or configuration management products outside the UNIX market. Companies in this category include CA, Intersolv, and Microsoft. CA has a large installed base of its configuration management product on IBM mainframes. Intersolv has a large installed base of DOS and Windows software developers. In 1994, Microsoft acquired OneTree Software, which offers a version control product. The Company expects additional competition from other established and emerging companies.
Rational believes that the major competitive factors in its markets are corporate and product reputation, breadth of coverage by an integrated product line, product architecture, functionality and features, product quality, performance, ease of use, quality of support, availability of technical consulting services, and price. Rational believes that its combination of an integrated family of products supporting component-based development throughout the software-development lifecycle and its emphasis on controlled iterative development, visual modeling, and an architecture-driven process, coupled with its extensive major-account direct sales and technical consulting organization and the supporting channels such as telesales, VARs, distributors, and the World Wide Web helps it compete.
Rational believes that the increased level of competition it observed in fiscal 1998 will continue to increase. Certain of Rational's competitors are more experienced than Rational in the development of software-engineering tools, databases, or software-development products. Some of Rational's competitors have, and new competitors may have, larger technical staffs, more established distribution channels, and greater financial resources than Rational. There can be no assurance that either existing or new competitors will not develop products that are superior to Rational's products or that achieve greater market acceptance. Rational's future success will depend in large part on its ability to increase its share of its target markets and to license additional products and product
enhancements to existing customers. Future competition may result in price reductions, reduced margins, or loss of sales, which in turn would have a material adverse effect on the Company's business, results of operations, and financial condition. |