
Today was CloudForce in London – SalesForce.com’s big event, which is touring the world, and touted as “your chance to get the insight you need to take advantage of cloud computing and salesforce.com applications in 2009.” And that’s probably where the problem starts. There wasn’t much cloud on show, at least not cloud computing as I understand it.
They had me in the palm of their hand. I was waiting to be wowed. Marc Benioff, Salesforce.com’s highly energetic Chairman and CEO took to the stage and had at it like a fervent preacher, although one who’d slightly forgotten his gospel, having to glance down at his autocue as he stumbled over customer and competitor names, but that didn’t dim his obvious passion for what SaleForce.com had to offer. SalesForce.com has done a great job of selling to sales people. It is an excellent pipeline management tool for sales managers, and dashboard provider for exec teams, and I’ve used it successfully from both of those angles in the past.
However, during the day, salesforce was promoted as a customer service management tool, a financial data management tool, a content management tool and a social media monitoring tool. That’s a big stretch from where they started. Add to that, a firm claim on the cloud space. Benioff said that they had been “talking cloud” for ten years.
Salesforce.com is certainly evolving from a SaaS-based CRM provider, where it has done well, to a PaaS (platform as a service) provider. That puts it on a direct collision course with the likes of Amazon and Microsoft’s emerging Azure platform, as well as Google’s very own App engine. Those are big players, one’s that know their apples and pears.
During the morning Benioff made a big play about their ‘live demos’ and that’s where the wheels came off for me. Not in the demos themselves, they were super slick and flawless, almost too good to believe. And indeed they were. Orange was touted as a major customer, with 10,000 Orange customers claimed to be using SalesForce.com’s Facebook monitoring application. The problem was, the orange customer service twitter account used in the ‘live demo’ was a fake, as Redmonk’s James Governer discovered after tweeting about it (tweets in reverse chronological order):


And digging into the account they used as the example customer, well, that was a fake too, as you can see from their stream:
2 updates, 4 followers. In fact there’s a veritable ecosystem of fake accounts around ddbenson. Now, I have nothing against demos with dummy accounts. I’ve done the occasional one myself. Sometimes needs must, and they are important to protect people’s privacy, but when you do them, call them as such. Both James and I had asked our Twitter followers if they had any experience of interacting with Orange customer services via twitter. That’s a good few thousand people between the two of us. The answer? Nothing. Not a sausage. And why would there be? If Facebook asked you to install a SalesForce.com app into your profile would you? No, you probably wouldn’t. I even trawled Facebook trying to find this mystery app, but couldn’t see anything with more than 40 users. I’m clearly missing something here, since the Facebook integration was heavily promoted during the day.
There was much talk of how great SalesForce.com is, what wonderful things they do and their commitment to ‘the social contract’ (and their 1:1:1 model) and heavy claims for their social media credentials. A fair few people left during the keynote session, some tweeting their departure, and there was a general shuffling of feet around me as the pitch went on.
The sales pitch just didn’t seem to be connecting with those around me. Sure, the bloggers and journalists were comfortable at their big desks, with coffee and Ethernet connections, but talking to the customers and potential new SalesForce.com users in the pews, there seemed to be a general disquiet. “How am I going to use this for my support organisation?” asked one attendee, “the maintenance windows don’t allow me to run 24/7″. And indeed, while SalesForce.com proclaims >99.9% (the same uptime as this web hosting provider), that doesn’t include the scheduled maintenance windows, when they do their software upgrades. That’s the “No software” company’s software upgrades.
They are certainly transparent about system availability, with a real-time view of their operations, although that is fairly standard for a large service provider these days.
no software dude hugs me at cloudforce 09 on 12seconds.tv
Now, maybe I’m just smarting because I didn’t get hugged by the no software guy, but maybe that was because he was keeping his distance. I wanted to ask about the software the sales team had to run on their Blackberries to use SalesForce.com. I wanted to ask about the iPhone software from SalesForce.com. I wanted to know if they were going to support the Nokia platform that I happen to like, and what their plans were for Windows Mobile. Lots of software to ask about.
Anyway, you can watch the whole keynote - the SalesForce.com team got the content up quickly. I’ll write more about the new features just as soon as I have checked them out.

(+2 rating, 2 votes)

Add Your Comment