
SharePoint 2007 Advantages
- Familiarity to MS Office users and reduced training
- MS Office Integration e.g. Check in, check out and update document metadata from within Word/Excel/etc itself - without Install of SAP Easy DMS
- Offline capabilities i.e. checkout to "SharePoint Drafts" folder so you can work from home without a connection - without SAP Easy DMS
- Licensing - Licensing models are different - no SAP licenses required - esp if most users are not using SAP.
SAP DMS Advantages
- No Additional Licenses required if all users are using SAP
- Direct link of document to Business Entities directly without specifying additional metadata (e.g. supporting documentation for invoice) - this is sometimes a more natural linkage.
As desribed in this Cap Gemini blog on the subject - "Will we get to the point where companies just have their SAP system as a backend database and have SharePoint vNext (SharePoint 2014) as the integration platform? "
(From http://www.capgemini.com/technology-blog/2009/02/will_sharepoint_14_become_sap.php)
[UPDATE 2nd November 2009 - 1]
It has been pointed out to me that a comparison between SAP KM and SharePoint 2007 would be a more relevant comparison.
SAP KM Advantages
- Doesn't have requirement for client (like SAP Document Management System (DMS) does)
- Can preview CAD and other documents within the Web UI directly, unlike SharePoint
- Closer integration with SAP Business Data versus SharePoint
[UPDATE 2nd November 2009 - 2]
SAP Document Management offering with OpenText
One of my Oakton colleagues brought this to my attention - SAP now has a partnership deal with OpenText.
"The last option (out of SharePoint/DMS & KM/OpenText) is really powerful but comes at a price as OpenText is a leader in Document Management and integrates into SharePoint seamlessly. For large organisation with strong records management requirements with industrial class DM requirements option 3 would be a good choice, hoping that OpenText has done all the heavy lifting in terms of SAP Integration."