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SAP is following “Cloud first” approach for its innovations and simplifications. What is means? How is it differentiating from on-premise solutions? I hope my first blog below on this forum will answer such questions.
Let’s compare the S/4HANA Cloud with S/4HANA On Premise on various parameters:
1. Governance of the product:
S/4HANA Cloud application is fully managed by SAP, i.e. the backend system is lying with SAP and customer/partner have access to mainly the cloud based fiori interface to execute various business processes. Customer can just procure
subscription based license for usage of S/4HANA cloud version.
Whereas S/4HANA On Premise can be managed by customer/partner also. Both SAP GUI and SAP Fiori are available to execute various business processes.
2. Deployment Option:
S/4HANA Cloud has two options from SAP for deployment:
- Public Cloud option: where SAP has restricted the system modifications and recommended to follow the SAP best practices.
- Private Cloud option: where the flexibility is similar to S/4HANA on-premise version, but system being managed by SAP on cloud.
In comparison, S/4HANA on-premise can be hosted on cloud instead of hosting on customer’s premise. The hosting cloud can be – public cloud or private cloud.
Also SAP is assuring that the backend code line is same for both on-premise and cloud version of S/4HANA.
3. Innovation Cycle:
SAP is following a quarterly release cycle for S/4HANA Cloud. In each year there will be four versions released in the month of February, May, Aug, and Nov. So for this year the latest release is 1802 (i.e. February release of 2018) and upcoming versions are 1805, 1808, 1811 and so-on.
S/4HANA on-premise version is having yearly major release last being 1709 (in September, 2017) and the next one planned in 1809 (September, 2018). During the year, SAP also release the 2 FPS (Functional Pack Stacks) which are nothing but for down-porting the simplifications from cloud version to on-premise version.
Now the important fact to notice is that for S/4HANA cloud, client has to adopt quarterly innovations as and when release by SAP. There is no option to skip a cloud quarterly release. This also enables the client to always utilize the latest and greatest innovations. The particular version has just the lifecycle of three months, e.g. see the below product availability matrix dates for 1802 version:
For S/4HANA on-premise version, there is no mandatory adoption need. Client can skip the version in between, e.g. client who has implemented 1511 version can go directly to 1709 without first implementation 1610 version. However please note that each S/4HANA on-premise version has lifecycle of 5 years from the end of the year in which version is released, e.g. see the below product availability matrix dates for 1709 version:
4. Fiori Applications and best practices:
As innovations are first coming on cloud version, so you will be seeing various intuitive fiori applications which are not yet down-ported to on-premise version. Please refer the below link to find relevant fiori applications for your processes:
https://fioriappslibrary.hana.ondemand.com/sap/fix/externalViewer/
Regarding best practices also, the innovations gets integrated in cloud scripts first. Refer the below link to get the latest list of best practices:
https://rapid.sap.com/bp/
5. Configurations:
Organizations and consultant are used to do various configurations in SAP world using IMG guide in SPRO. This has been continued in S/4HANA on-premise version.
However, for S/4HANA cloud version this is changing drastically. SAP has divided the configuration scope into two categories:
- Self-Service Configuration UIs (SSCUIs)
o SAP has fioritized many configuration activities and has made that available via SSCUIs which customer/partner can maintain directly in S/4HANA cloud environment.
o The list is growing by each version, i.e. SAP is relaxing the self-configuration scope gradually.
- Expert Configurations
o All configurations which are not covered by SSCUI, are called expert configurations and those can be done in the system
only by SAP.
o There are templates provided by SAP, which customer/partner has to fill before requesting SAP service center team to make such expert configurations.
6. Test Automation:
For S/4HANA on-premise version, SAP is not offering any test automation tool. So generally customer utilize the in-house build capabilities or partner’s/ third party tools to automate test cases. E.g. Infosys Panaya helps in automating the test processes and manages it intuitively.
For S/4HANA cloud, SAP is offering the test automation tool on cloud environment and integrate into customer deployment. There is no extra fee for this tool and it is covered in S/4HANA cloud subscription fees. It provides standard processes test scenarios and plans out of box, which can be modified to customer’s own need and also provide option to build own test plans. This tool manages the whole execute process, stores the results for audit/ verification purpose, do robust error handling etc.
Test automation tool is quite critical in S/4HANA cloud version, as the innovation cycle is quarterly and customer has to mandatory adopt the changes. There is short window to test and automation helps to cover more processes in that short test cycle for each quarter.
7. Data Migration:
S/4HANA Cloud supports only data migration cockpit inbuilt in cloud environment. It provides various templates which user can fill and then upload via “Manage your data” section in solutioning.
S/4HANA on-premise supports many methods to do data migration like data migration cockpit, BAPI, IDocs, LSMW, customer/ partner built interfaces/tools etc.
8. Integration:
S/4HANA cloud only supports integration via whitelisted APIs. So customer/ partner can build the side by side extensibility using the whitelisted APIs, apart from in-app extensibility.
S/4HANA on-premise allows various other ways also like BAPI, RFC, IDocs, exits etc. like it used to be in ECC environment.
9. Implementation approach:
SAP activate methodology is covering both the versions and supports various SAP Activate phases – Discover, Prepare, Explore, Realize, Deploy and Run.
Refer site link
https://go.support.sap.com/roadmapviewer/ to see the details of SAP Activate phases, deliverables and tasks for each of the version.
However, note that right now there is no approach for converting a client from on-premise to cloud version and vice versa. Only option is to follow a greenfield approach in this case.
10. System landscape:
S/4HANA on-premise can have muti-layered system landscape, e.g. development, quality, pre-production, production, sandbox etc.
However, for S/4HANA cloud there are limited systems available:
- Discovery system during discovery phase
- Starter System which is made available during prepare phase and goes off during realization phase.
- Quality and production systems are provisioned in realize phase and ultimately stays in client environment. Any changes on on-going basis are first made in quality system and then moves to production system.
I hope from above you would be able to appreciate the differences between S/4HANA cloud an S/4HANA on-premise version and can better plan your S/4HANA journey. SAP S/4HANA cloud is growing at 350% YoY and thus in future we will be seeing many customers shifting to S/4HANA cloud. Stay connected and follow me for more blogs in future related to S/4HANA.