Oracle usually refers to Oracle Corporation, a major U.S. enterprise software and cloud company best known for its Oracle Database and business applications.wikipedia+1
Company overview
Oracle Corporation is a global technology firm that focuses on enterprise software, databases, and cloud computing for businesses and governments. It was founded in 1977 (originally as Software Development Laboratories) by Larry Ellison, Bob Miner, and Ed Oates, and later took the name Oracle from its flagship database product. The company is headquartered in Austin, Texas, after relocating from its long‑time base in Redwood City, California. Oracle’s customers span sectors such as finance, healthcare, retail, telecom, and the public sector, where its systems often sit at the core of mission‑critical IT.britannica+3
Main products and businesses
Oracle’s most famous product is Oracle Database, one of the first commercially successful SQL‑based relational database management systems, widely used to store and manage structured data for large organizations. Around this core, Oracle offers a broad portfolio: enterprise resource planning (ERP), human capital management (HCM), and customer relationship management (CRM) applications; analytics and business intelligence; and industry‑specific software for areas like finance and supply chain. The company has also become a significant player in cloud infrastructure through Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), competing with providers like AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud to host databases and applications in the cloud. In hardware, Oracle sells engineered systems and servers optimized to run its database and middleware stacks, continuing a vertically integrated model inherited from its acquisition of Sun Microsystems.ibm+3
Technology focus: database and cloud
Oracle’s database line now includes traditional on‑premise releases and cloud‑based offerings such as Autonomous Database, which uses machine learning to automate tasks like tuning, patching, and backups to reduce admin overhead and improve performance. It also provides specialized databases and related technologies, including MySQL HeatWave and Oracle NoSQL, to support analytical workloads, mixed transactional‑analytic processing, and large‑scale distributed applications. These databases are designed for high performance, scalability, and strong security, with features like real application clusters and advanced compression to support high‑throughput multi‑user environments.solarwinds+1
Strategy and acquisitions
Oracle has expanded aggressively through acquisitions, buying companies such as PeopleSoft (HR and ERP), Siebel (CRM), Sun Microsystems (hardware, Java, Solaris), and many cloud SaaS providers. This acquisition strategy helped Oracle assemble a full stack from hardware and operating systems up through databases, middleware, and business applications, targeting large enterprise customers that want integrated solutions. The company’s business model emphasizes long‑term software licenses and cloud subscriptions, which generate recurring revenue and lock in customers via deeply embedded systems and complex implementations.ebsco+3
Founders and leadership
Larry Ellison, a cofounder of Oracle, built his reputation as a high‑profile tech entrepreneur and led the company as CEO for decades before stepping down in 2014 to become chairman and chief technology officer. Ellison and his cofounders originally developed the Oracle database after reading a research paper on relational database theory by IBM’s Edgar F. Codd and seeing commercial potential in implementing it. Under Ellison’s leadership, Oracle grew from a niche database vendor into one of the world’s largest software and cloud companies by revenue and market capitalization.companies-explained+4