Make your Salesforce Project More Successful by Inviting a BA to the Party (Or Thinking Like One)


Today I welcome my good friend, Garry Polmateer as a guest blogger at CRMFYI. Garry is not only a Salesforce community rockstar, but he's planned and executed some great Salesforce implementations,

A Little Help from My Friends


In a demonstration of community and collaboration, Mike Gerholdt and I have created a blog post / demo video of utilizing inline Visualforce to display rich text info in standard page layouts without

Chatter-vantage #1 - No Need to Rush the Stage


Salesforce has created a conference attendee experience using Chatter that blows away all other conferences. Their Dreamforce Attendee Portal allows attendees to connect with speakers before, during

I Need You; to Join The Salesforce Channel Community


If you follow me on Twitter, it's hard to miss my regular status updates like,  "21 videos were posted to The Salesforce Channel today," but what's that all about? The Salesforce Channel is a website

Calling All Heroes! You Belong at Dreamforce


Earlier this year, I wrote about being a hero to your users, and the gist of it was that through social media, you can surround yourself with fantastic people who will make you a hero to your users. I

Competitors

Salesforce.com CEO, Marc Benioff Earns a “Bozo?”

Posted on by Jeff Grosse in AppExchange, Competitors, Force.com, Integration, Tools | 2 Comments

bozoI found it interesting to read Bill Snyder of Computerworld put Salesforce.com CEO, Marc Benioff in what Snyder calls, “our Bozo Hall of Fame.”  He walks the reader through the drama that unfurled about a year ago when Salesforce.com began some type of talks with Zoho’s CEO, Sridhar Vembu about bringing the Zoho productivity suite to the Salesforce AppExchange.  Snyder attributes the “award” to Benioff for how the whole process went down and eventually fizzled to nothing.  What adds to the intrigue of this story is the timing of Salesforce’s strategic alliance with Google over the past year.  Though we don’t have many details from the article, here’s kind of what I’m kind of thinking went on.

Going back even a little further than this story recounts, I remember having a discussion with Salesforce back in 2006 about Zoho.  At the time, we had a Salesforce product manager and a few services guys in our office to discuss a project.  Off the cuff, I asked if the product manager had ever seen Zoho CRM.  Since he hadn’t seen it, I decided to take a few minutes and show him what I’d seen in it by getting a free Zoho CRM license.  We walked through the app a bit and honestly, we had a good laugh about just how similar Zoho and Salesforce really were, once you strip away the on-screen formatting.  While you can’t say that Zoho had nearly the features that Salesforce had at the time, it was still striking how much it appeared that Zoho emulated Salesforce CRM.  The Salesforce guys kind of laughed it off as imitation being the sincerest form of flattery.

logoWe also found the Zoho CRM logo humorous.  Notice how the Zoho blocks are similar to the Salesforce “S Cube” logo which appears to now be retired.  And notice that the font of “CRM” appears to be strikingly like the signature logo of the company formerly known as Siebel.  What a coincidence?

Now fast forward to 2007.  The Google / Salesforce alliance gets it’s kickoff on June 5.  That alliance really started with Google Adwords and the launch of Salesforce Group Edition.  I’m going to guess that more than just AdWords talks had taken place during that year, though nothing more was released.  No doubt, talks about Google Apps were happening too 

Then, according to Snyder, sometime before Dreamforce 07, Salesforce asked Zoho to put development effort into integrating with Salesforce and offering it on the AppExchange.  Salesforce still had no office suite that was fully integrated to Salesforce CRM, so Zoho seemed to make sense.  Salesforce knew full-well that Zoho had a CRM product that would compete, but they wanted to see the office suite integration.  A later meeting between Salesforce and Zoho brought them to putting a stop to the offer to bring it to the AppExchange due to the competing CRM.  Salesforce then offered to buy Zoho out, though Zoho’s CEO refused.  Vembu wrote on the Zoho Blog on November 4 with the headline, “Mr. Benioff, Tear Down That Wall.”  Now if Zoho CRM had defined their company, I can see them being a little miffed at their flagship being absorbed (or annihilated) by a merger, but their many products defined Zoho, not just their CRM.  

Move forward to April 2008 and the launch of the full Google Apps suite, fully integrated with Salesforce.  That was a huge announcement which led to tons of possibilities and speculation.  While I know Google and Salesforce have become best pals, I wonder where that Google alliance would be today if Vembu had accepted Benioff’s offer to buyout Zoho.  Frankly, I’m glad Zoho walked away, but I wonder what Dreamforce 08 would have been like if Salesforce had it’s own office suite.

Though I can’t point to just when, I really thought I remember Marc Benioff being complimentary to Zoho in the past, on a quarterly earnings call when talk of office productivity suites came up.  Either way, now he gets to be complimentary to Google instead.

Regarding Snyder’s “Bozo” award, I can’t really say that I think it’s deserved.  Think of every corporate merger and buyout that happens.  If there are competing products in both the former companies, it’s not so unreasonable to expect the stronger one to win dominance and drive the other to obsolescence.  That’s business.  Not everyone will like it, but that’s the way it works.  Now he may be wishing that Salesforce had just let Zoho go out on the AppExchange as is.  But think about which one will drive more revenue to Salesforce.  Zoho on the AppExchange or Google Apps native in Salesforce? We know the answer, and that’s the way Marc Benioff has chosen to take his company.  Good for us.

What’s CRM Like on Your iPhone?

Posted on by Jeff Grosse in Competitors, Mobile, Productivity, Tools | Leave a comment

IPhone browserThough I am one who lusts after an iPhone, I’m not one who will run out and get one anytime soon.  Author and blogger, Paul Greenberg has opened up a little competition or bakeoff when it comes to CRM apps running on an iPhone.

He’s inviting EBSuite, Etelos, HEAP, NetSuite, and Salesforce.com to show off their apps on the iPhone and see who’s best.  This should be an interesting one to watch, provided everybody is up for the comparison.  While Greenberg says Zoho has come up with a great suite of desktop productivity apps for the iPhone, he says they haven’t put anything together yet for ZohoCRM.  (If you haven’t seen ZohoCRM, it’s amazingly similar to Salesforce.  So much so that Salesforce thinks it’s flattering.  Zoho lacks quite a lot compared to Salesforce, but it’s funny to look at how much they look alike.)

Having just watched some more video on the Adobe on AIR Bus tour today, I’m thinking that Salesforce would probably be able to make some pretty killer apps for iPhone using the Flex Toolkit.  But then again, this is Salesforce, so why would the vendor need to build the app.  Incubators?  Anybody up for the challenge?  With Dreamforce only eight weeks away, who will be showing off Salesforce on the iPhone? 

I’m sure the geekdom (I say that lovingly guys) of Salesforce HQ and the Incubator have plenty of iPhones floating around.  If you are using Salesforce on the iPhone, send me a screenshot of it.  Tell me what you think of it.  If you’re working on an app for the iPhone, let me know about it.  I’d like to hear what you’ve done, and most of all, I’d like to see it at Dreamforce.  Actually, it doesn’t matter who you are….tell me what Salesforce is like on your iPhone.

In the meantime, let’s watch how the competition heats up over at Paul’s blog and see who shows up for the party.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

Marc Benioff; CRM Live and the Zune

Posted on by Jeff Grosse in Competitors | 1 Comment

Zune-vs-ipod-gMarc Benioff commented recently on some of the details announced about pricing of Microsoft’s delve into hosted, on-demand CRM software, CRM Live

Microsoft announced that they will begin beta this fall with a Professional Edition and Enterprise Edition of CRM Live, available through the web or Outlook.  Pricing for PE and EE are $44 and $59 per user, per month respecitvely.  That’s lower than Salesforce, but why?

Marc Benioff says, “When you have an inferior product you have to have an inferior price. That is why Zune is priced below iPod. And why Windows CE is priced below BlackBerry. And why Microsoft CRM is priced below Salesforce.com.”

It’s my humble opinion that there’s a lot of truth to that.  I was a part of the RFP process when evaluating Salesforce.com and Microsoft Dynamics CRM.  The Microsoft partner pulled out citing too complex requirements….Salesforce didn’t pull out though. 

The question on many people’s minds is will Microsoft get to the point where they have the same features that Salesforce has today?  I’d say there’s a pretty good chance they’ll get there someday.  But by that time, Salesforce will significantly farther ahead.  Salesforce is innovating constantly and responding to what the users want. 

And just going on past experience, what was the last product that Microsoft put out that had three major releases in one calendar year?  If you think of one, please email me.

Technorati Tags: , , ,

Salesforce Exec Points to SAP’s Flaws in New A1S “SaaS”

Posted on by Jeff Grosse in Competitors, International | Leave a comment

Reluctantly, after saying Software as a Service (SaaS) is just a fad, it looks like SAP is trying to catch the wave now with it’s A1S offering which it’s floating in front of customers and partners.  Will it catch the wave or will it be chained down by old business models and thinking?

In a CIO article, Lindsey Armstrong, Salesforce.com Co-President for EMEA points out how SAP’s strategy is flawed.  The core business model of Salesforce.com makes it unique and few companies have been able to embrace that….particularly well established “traditional” vendors.

Watch and see, but I think without significant overhauls to the way SAP, Oracle, and Microsoft architect their solutions and business, they’re just going to play “catch-up” while Salesforce continues to innovate.

 

I’d Rather They Buy Yahoo!

Posted on by Jeff Grosse in Competitors | Leave a comment

Kevin Kelleher of The Street.com compiled a list of companies he’d rather see Microsoft buy over Yahoo!

Salesforce.com came in 3rd in his list.  The overlap of CRM applications is quite apparent, though I still have yet to believe that Microsoft will be able to successfully deploy multi-tenancy scalably with Dynamics. 

Salesforce’s acquisition of Koral last month though is what Kelleher thinks puts Salesforce squarely in competition for document collaboration, project, and contract management. 

While Kelleher would rather see this happen over the Yahoo! deal, most Salesforce users, admins, and developer would cringe at the thought of Microforce Dynamix.  The innovation would end and they’d find a way to make us move to Vista.

Fortunately, I think the Yahoo! deal is more likely to go through, but it makes one ponder and be thankful for what you have.