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

International

Search: How Salesforce Finds All That Content For Us Across Their Sites

Posted on by Jeff Grosse in Analytics, AppExchange, Customization, Data Mining, Dreamforce, Integration, International, Productivity, Social Networking, Tools | 4 Comments

SuccessforceSuccessforce is the mack daddy source for info you need as a Salesforce user, developer, administrator, executive, or competitor.  (OK, you need some other bloggers too)  Not a walled garden, they’ve made Successforce open to all who want to read and even contribute to the content therein.  But how does Salesforce make it easy to find what you need?

GoogleThe answer lies in Google Custom Search Business Edition.  Ryan Pollock, a Product Marketing guy from Google wrote a blog post and did a short video interview about Custom Search with Salesforce VP of Developer Relations, Adam Gross.  Adam talks about how easy it was to integrate the Google Custom Search across all their pages and ensure we find what we need, regardless of what technology their assets lie on in the Salesforce back end.

Looking a little deeper into the pricing model, it wouldn’t be hard to see a quick ROI with an inexpensive service like Google Custom Search. 

Custom Search Business Edition is available in a number of plans:

  • Search less than 5,000 web pages: $100 per year
  • Search less than 50,000 web pages: $500 per year
  • Search less than 100,000 web pages: $850 per year
  • Search less than 300,000 web pages: $2250 per year

It’s good to know Salesforce sees it important to draw together all their resources for us, across so many sites.  Site searches are often neglected due to our experience of them providing us little or no value.  I wonder how many corporate websites could use a quick, inexpensive search makeover like this and see their customers find some real value from all the content they’ve spent millions producing.

Idea: Salesforce, you’ve got a “Who We’re Reading” section on Successforce pointing to many blogs, including my own.  How about adding our sites to your Google Custom Search Results?  There’s some good content out there people would get value in finding. Salesforce heard my request, and they’ve updated the custom search to include my blog and others; proof that they’re listening.  Thanks!

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Dreamforce 07 Breakout Sessions Begin Showing Up Online

Posted on by Jeff Grosse in Analytics, AppExchange, Customization, Data Mining, Dreamforce, Integration, International, Local, Marketing, Mobile, News, Productivity, Prototype, Sales, Service and Support, Social Networking, Tools | 1 Comment

Logo_videoSee the sessions you missed at Dreamforce 07.  They’re starting to show up on Google Video.  About 50 of the breakout sessions are available already and more will be added soon. 

To see what’s available now, search Google Video for Dreamforce and sort the results by Date.  If you’d like to know when new videos are posted, you can subscribe to the RSS feed for new videos with the Dreamforce tag.

You’ll also find some user submitted videos of the excitement of Dreamforce as well as some footage from the volunteer project run by the Salesforce Foundation held Saturday, September 15. 

As the keynote sessions are added, I’ll be sure to let you know as they are worth a second watch.

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Dreamforce is Live! – Watch it Now on Jaiku

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

DflogoGet all your Dreamforce 07 news from one location, live as it happens.  Numerous bloggers including myself are building out one gigantic news feed of all the happenings at Dreamforce, Salesforce.com’s annual user and developer conference here in San Francisco, California.

JaikuTune into the Dreamforce Channel to see what’s happening all throughout the conference.  Subscribe to the RSS feed for it and you’ll for sure be in the know.  Feel free to leave your comments there as well.  On my blog, you can look to the right side to see the Jaiku channel rolling in the news.  To see the whole feed check out the whole channel.

Huge License Wins for Salesforce.com at Dell and Japan Post

Posted on by Jeff Grosse in International, News | 1 Comment

CalculatorThe license leaderboard is counting up by leaps and bounds.  This week, Salesforce announced that Dell will be adding 25,000 more users to their already substantial 15,000 licenses of Salesforce.com.  That translates to roughly half of Dell’s employees soon having access to Salesforce.  Japan Post also revealed more of its plans to add 40,000 more users to their starting number of 5,000.

Just a short time ago, Salesforce announced their excitement to land the 5,000 seat deal with Japan Post, the soon to be privatized letter service and financial institution.  On initial announcement, the 5,000 user deal sounded like a toe on the water considering Japan Post employs 400,000 people.  As it turns out, that was just the first group to get the CRM apps started.  With this new announcement, these additional 40,000 users are not about the CRM apps, they’re about the platform.  Those users will be using the custom developed customer service and compliance issues apps.  That vote of confidence by Japan Post should help ignite a wildfire of other companies using Salesforce not for the CRM apps, but for the “everything else you could imagine to build, but didn’t want to deal with hosting it yourself” apps.

During the last earnings call, Salesforce alluded to the coming news that an international deal would become their biggest license deal ever.  Japan Post was that deal.  Just wait though, I’ll bet we’ll hear about more surprise wins in the next two weeks with Dreamforce coming up.  Out of curiosity, I wonder when we’ll see a new AP1 and AP2 server on trust.salesforce.com to handle the coming business. 

Here’s how the license leaderboard Top 5 stacks up.  Who’s next?

Japan Post – 45,000
Dell – 40,000
Cisco – 30,000
Merrill Lynch – 25,000
Sprint/Nextel – 20,000

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The $200 Sixth Reason to Get Involved

Posted on by Jeff Grosse in International, Local, Social Networking, User Groups | Leave a comment

DF07GreenBulbI know of a sixth reason you should join a Salesforce local user group.  Up to $200 off your registration for Dreamforce 07, the Salesforce event of the year.  (See my other five reasons to get involved)

Anyone who registers for Dreamforce before July 16 automatically gets the $100 off, but when you join a local user group, you’ll be able to get a promotional code that gives you the additional $100 off when you register by July 13.  User group leaders will be distributing the code within the next couple weeks so expect an email from yours.

If you have any issues receiving your promotional code, you can contact me at jeff [at] crmfyi [dot] com and I’ll help make sure you get it.

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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.

 

Asia Warms its Welcome of Salesforce.com

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

A fair portion of the Salesforce earnings call this week focused on their international growth and wins, both across Europe and Asia.  Who can blame them for celebrating?  Asia has been a tough market for traditionally North American companies to penetrate.  This quarter, revenue in Europe was up 71% year over year and 13% from Q4.    Revenue in Asian was up 85% year over year and 14% from Q4.  The revenue generated outside North America now accounts for 23% of their total.

With the recent announcement of 5,000 Salesforce licenses for Japan Post, the national (soon to be privatized) postal service and banking institution, don’t be surprised if that number grows significantly upon implementation.  With over 400,000 employees at Japan Post, Salesforce hopes to boost that number far beyond the initial 5,000 seats.

Existing customers in Japan alone include quite a number of businesses in banking, software, retail, manufacturing, non-profits, and business services.  Even the AppExchange has applications specifically geared towards the Japanese market. 

Last month Salesforce announced Salesforce China Edition, with appropriate pricing to entice businesses there to try CRM whereas other software has usually been cost prohibitive.  Not only that, but with the release of Apex later this year, don’t be surprised to find a wealth of new applications put out by the growing number of developers across China.  On a side note about the announcement from Salesforce, a friend of mine from Singapore pointed out to me though that they haven’t used Traditional Chinese for probably almost two decades in Singapore.

Part of the difficulty of breaking into Asia is somewhat the “nature of the beast” of enterprise software, particularly in the client-server model.  Applications and technology from dominant enterprise vendors has usually been ported to languages like Chinese and Japanese after the fact, and months, if not years after the new versions are released in English.

It’s much like enterprise customers running i/Series (AS/400) platform applications are used to the late release of applications and technology as compared to many of their other colleagues who run on other platforms like UNIX or Windows.

Out the chute, when Salesforce releases a new version like their recent Spring 07, native applications and help text are already prepped for all 14 languages they support which gives all non-English users a real sense of being treated equally. 

Even such commitments that Salesforce has made to tools such as the Translation Workbench, show that they’re serious about making it easy to put even your custom objects and applications into native languages.  If you haven’t used the Translation Workbench before, it’s extremely intuitive, easy to use, and helps ensure your users can easily use Salesforce in the language of their choice.

Growth in Asia is not only a good sign of financial benefit for Salesforce, but part of the validation of Software as a Service (SaaS).  Many of these companies are running their business on applications in their native language, yet the applications and data resides in North America.  In traditional client-server software, you’d rarely set yourself up that way.  I suppose with the time difference, they probably get great performance from the North American servers as most of us are asleep. 

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