Salesforce.com detailed Tuesday the upcoming "Winter '09" release of its core CRM software product, which allows sales and marketing employees to track sales leads and transactions with their customers. During the morning keynote on the second day of Dreamforce, the company's main user and developer conference in San Francisco, Salesforce.com executives also announced the ability for two companies who use the product to share information if they partner in their respective markets.
In addition, Dave Girouard, president of Google Enterprise, gave conference attendees a brief update about the results of the Google and Salesforce.com partnership that was announced earlier this year. That deal brought Google Apps to Salesforce.com customers for free if they wanted the Web-based productivity apps that include Gmail (Google's e-mail service), calendar, documents, spreadsheets, and instant messaging.
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During his remarks, Salesforce.com chairman and CEO Marc Benioff showed deference to the challenging economy ahead, saying he believes CRM software will become even more important as companies try to hold on and gain customers.
"It's a remarkable time," Benioff says. "With the times that we're going through, there has never been a more important time to focus on our customers and our employees. There has never been a more important time for CRM."
The new version of Salesforce.com, due this winter, will be the company's 27th release in its nine-year history. Salesforce.com follows the SaaS (software as a service) model, where a technology vendor hosts all the data on its own equipment while customers access the application through a Web browser and pay a subscription fee (generally per user per month). It's a term the company pioneered in the software market, gaining nearly 48,000 customers for whom it hosts the data of 410 million customer accounts.
While many of the updates to the software announced Tuesday were minor, the "Salesforce to Salesforce" addition to the product allows two companies who both subscribe to the vendor's service to share sales leads and information that runs through their Salesforce.com accounts. This could be of great value to industries that have partnered for market reasons, such as airlines.
As an example, Salesforce execs noted, airlines that fly different routes and partner to reach the same customer base could allow each other to stream information back and forth from their Salesforce.com deployments.
"Delta and Air France, they need to go into account and co-sell together," says George Hu, Salesforce.com's executive vice president of applications and marketing. "They both have sets of routes, and now they're co-selling as a team more. You can connect your systems together. When you get a [sales] lead, it can flow right into your partner's system."
The winter release also includes the full integration of Instranet, a knowledge management system that Salesforce.com acquired back in August. Salesforce.com executives said the technology will help provide context (such as geography and product-related data ) for users as they search and query the system.
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