S/4HANA with RISE + AMS – Managing SAP RISE with AMS, What Changes and What Stays the Same? 

SAP S/4HANA has redefined enterprise resource planning for businesses globally, empowering intelligent and integrated processes that drive real-time insights and operational excellence. With the rise of cloud adoption, SAP introduced RISE with SAP, a comprehensive business transformation as a service bundle designed to accelerate an organization’s journey to the Intelligent Enterprise. 

However, moving to RISE with SAP is not just a technical migration it’s a transformation in how companies operate, consume support, and manage their SAP landscapes. For many enterprises, Services de gestion des applications (AMS) become the backbone of ongoing support managing configurations, upgrades, optimizations, and user support. 

This article explores from an SAP S/4HANA expert’s lens what changes and what stays the same when managing SAP RISE with AMS. 

1. What Is RISE with SAP? A Quick Recap 

RISE with SAP is: 

  • business transformation offering rather than solely a technical migration. 
  • A package that includes SAP S/4HANA Cloud (public or private edition), Business Technology Platform (BTP), and technical services such as migration tools, industry content, and analytics. 
  • A subscription-based model with cloud infrastructure and a single price/per invoice model. 

Unlike traditional on-premise licensing, RISE shifts the economic and operational model to a cloud-centric, service-oriented approach. 

2. What Is Application Management Services (AMS)? 

AMS refers to a set of services that ensure your SAP solution runs smoothly. Key elements of AMS include: 

  • Incident resolution & user support 
  • Monitoring and performance optimization 
  • Change requests and minor enhancements 
  • Updates & quality assurance activities 
  • Root-cause analysis and remote troubleshooting 

AMS ensures your SAP environment remains reliable, resilient, and aligned to business needs. 

3. What Changes When Managing SAP RISE with AMS

a) Support Landscape Shifts from On-Premise to Cloud-Centric 

In traditional setups, AMS teams managed: 

  • OS and database maintenance 
  • Hardware provisioning and patching 
  • Network infrastructure and disaster recovery tasks 

With RISE, many of these responsibilities shift to SAP or hyperscaler partners (Azure, AWS, GCP). AMS teams now operate with: 

  • Cloud service management 
  • Integration oversight 
  • Performance and cost monitoring 

A shared responsibility model where SAP owns platform-level stability. 

This requires AMS providers to be fluent in cloud operations and SLAs at the infrastructure layer. 

b) New Interfaces, New Integration Patterns 

RISE with SAP encourages digital transformation, leading to: 

  • Greater usage of APIs 
  • Event-driven architectures on SAP BTP 
  • Microservices and modern extensions 

AMS teams must now support broader integration requirements — both internally (with existing systems) and externally (partners, third-party applications). 

c) Cloud-Driven Release & Update Cadence 
  • Traditional ECC or on-premise S/4HANA upgrades were periodic and project-style engagements. 

    In RISE: 

    • Patches and releases can be more frequent 
    • Features delivered via continuous innovation cycles 

    AMS teams must adopt agile support processes, plan for quicker deployment windows, and ensure regression testing frameworks are cloud-ready.

d) Service-Level Priorities Evolve 

In classic AMS, uptime was measured mostly at the application layer. Post-RISE: 

 

Responsibility 

Traditional On-Premise 

RISE with SAP 

Infrastructure updates 

AMS 

SAP + Hyperscaler 

SAP stack maintenance 

AMS 

AMS & SAP Cloud Operations 

Database support 

AMS 

SAP Cloud + Managed AMS oversight 

Integration gateways 

AMS 

AMS 

Performance optimization 

AMS 

Shared with SAP 

The AMS model evolves from full ownership to orchestration, oversight, and orchestration with SAP. 

e) Enhanced Use of Automation and Platform Monitoring Tools 

RISE offers tools such as: 

  • SAP Focused Run 
  • SAP Solution Manager in the Cloud 
  • SAP Cloud ALM 

AMS teams must adopt these systems as a central toolset for system monitoring, incident management, and proactive performance tracking. 

4. What Stays the Same in AMS, Regardless of RISE 

5. Key Best Practices for Managing RISE with AMS 

1. Redefine the AMS Contract Model

Move from traditional hourly/break-fix contracts to: 

  • Outcome-based SLAs 
  • Business process performance metrics 
  • Cloud cost monitoring KPIs 

2. Build Cloud-Native Monitoring Capabilities 

AMS teams must: 

  • Use cloud management dashboards 
  • Leverage BTP capabilities 
  • Enable proactive support rather than reactive only 

3. Align with SAP’s Innovation Calendar 

Instead of one big upgrade every few years, AMS teams should: 

  • Plan quarterly release management 
  • Validate changes with regression tests 
  • Engage business users early 

4. Invest in Integration Expertise 

With RISE, many companies integrate non-SAP apps. AMS professionals must: 

  • Understand API management 
  • Ensure secure data exchanges 
  • Monitor interface performance 

Conclusion: A Unified Approach to AMS in the Age of RISE 

Managing SAP S/4HANA in a RISE setup is not a departure from AMS best practices  it’s a maturation of those practices. 

The essence of support  ensuring business continuity, optimizing performance, and enabling users remains at the heart of AMS. What changes are the tools, the shared responsibilities, the pace of innovations, and the cloud-centric mindset. 

For organizations partnering with an AMS provider  or managing AMS in-house the transition to RISE is an opportunity to overhaul support excellence  making SAP operations more adaptive, resilient, and aligned to business outcomes. 

 

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