Founded in 1987 by Ken Morris and
David Duffield, PeopleSoft was originally headquartered in
Walnut Creek, California, before moving to
Pleasanton, California. Duffield envisioned a
client–server version of Integral Systems popular
mainframe HRMS package. He cofounded PeopleSoft after leaving Integral Systems which was also based in Walnut Creek. It should not be confused with
Integral Systems of Columbia, Maryland, a different company. The company's sole venture backing came from IBM. George J. Still Jr. from
Norwest Venture Partners joined the board of directors. PeopleSoft version 1, released in late 1989, PeopleSoft expanded its product range to include a financials module in 1992, distribution in 1994, and manufacturing in 1996 after the acquisition of Red Pepper. The latter's similar product line,
World and
OneWorld, targeted mid-sized companies too small to benefit from PeopleSoft's applications. JD Edwards' software used the
Configurable Network Computing architecture, which shielded applications from both the
operating system and the database back-end. PeopleSoft branded the OneWorld product
PeopleSoft EnterpriseOne.
Oracle Corporation acquisition Beginning in 2003,
Oracle began to maneuver for control of the PeopleSoft company. In June 2003, Oracle made a $13 billion bid in a
hostile takeover attempt. In February 2004, Oracle decreased their bid to approximately $9.4 billion; this offer was also rejected by PeopleSoft's
board of directors. Complicating Oracle's takeover attempt was PeopleSoft's
poison pill, allowing their customers to potentially receive refunds of 2–5 times the amount they had paid in the case of a takeover. Later that month, the
U.S. Department of Justice filed
suit to block Oracle, on the grounds that the acquisition would break
antitrust laws. In September 2004, the suit was rejected by a
U.S. Federal judge, who found that the Justice Department had not proven its antitrust case. In October, the same decision was handed down by the
European Commission. Although Oracle had reduced its offer to $7.7 billion in May, it again raised its bid in November to $9.4 billion. In December 2004, Oracle announced that it had signed a definitive merger agreement to acquire PeopleSoft for approximately $10.3 billion. A month after the acquisition of PeopleSoft, Oracle cut over half of PeopleSoft's workforce, laying off 6,000 of PeopleSoft's 11,000 employees. Oracle moved to capitalize on the perceived strong brand loyalty within the JD Edwards user community by rebranding former JD Edwards products. Thus PeopleSoft EnterpriseOne became JD Edwards EnterpriseOne and PeopleSoft World became JD Edwards World. Oracle announced in 2005 that
Fusion Applications would combine the best aspects of the PeopleSoft, JD Edwards, and Oracle Applications and merge them into a new product suite. The product was released in 2011.
Post-Oracle acquisition Under Oracle, PeopleSoft offers different cloud-based software products, including Human Capital Management (HCM), Campus Solutions, Procurement and Supplier Management, Financial Management, and PeopleTools and Technology. In 2010, PeopleSoft released its In-Memory Project Discovery. It translated
unstructured data into structured data, which then allowed users to analyze keywords and data in the Services Automation suite. It ran on Oracle's Exalytics in-memory machine and
Oracle Endeca Information Discovery enterprise data platform. == Product design ==