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Up in the Clouds

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Up in the Clouds

If you think you've already heard everything you need to know about Software as a Service, it's time to gear up for the next evolutionary step: Platform as a Service. Salesforce.com and Google are accelerating the movement to the clouds. All the increased efficiencies may have some unforeseen side-effects, though -- like staff breaking out into song.


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The Google-Salesforce.com partnership grows ever more intertwined. The latest development occurred Monday when Salesforce.com (NYSE: CRM) released a Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) Data client library for the Force.com platform that provides access to the full suite of Google Data application programming interfaces using Apex code, allowing developers to integrate their Force.com applications with Google Apps.

Salesforce.com has been leveraging the efficiencies that cloud computing can deliver for some time. Increasingly, though, firms in other industries -- for example, financial services -- are beginning to catch on to its benefits, as Shore Communications notes.

"A lot of the action in financial information is taking place well away from the desktop and in the bowels of computer networks that support securities trading and sales Download Free eBook - The Edge of Success: 9 Building Blocks to Double Your Sales. Not all of these stories are about the dominance of the Web as the cloud of choice -- the financial marketplace has many specialized networks that support its sophisticated information-driven marketplaces -- but certainly the concept of cloud computing popularized by the Web in which desktop technology is just an interface to sophisticated services from potentially any network providing information and execution services."

101 Reasons to Opt for SaaS

Althouth he doesn't actually list 101 reasons, John F. Martin, senior vice president of Strategy and Technology for IQNavigator, devotes a lot e-ink to making the case for the Software as a Service business strategy .

Some of Martin's reasons have a familiar ring (see above), but he points out some areas of savings that may escape the general business case.

"I read a fascinating study on [enterprise resource planning] staffing ratios by Computer Economics, which underscored just how much big companies are paying in personnel costs to support on-premise software operations, upgrades, customizations, and testing," he recounts.

"For each ERP user who used any module, the top-quartile performance had one support person for every 50 users," Martin continues, "which represents close to [US]$200 monthly support costs per user. Notably, while ERP systems have much more broad-ranging functionality than most process-focused SaaS solutions, support costs actually did not change based on scope of functionality implemented, as different users typically used different ERP modules -- so the HR module had about the same support costs as the sales module, financial module, etc., and these support costs were linear by module. With SaaS solutions, almost all of these customer-incurred support costs go away."

By now, the SaaS argument has been accepted in most industries in the United States, Yankee Group analyst Sheryl Kingstone told CRM Buyer. "Companies by and large know the business case and appreciate the model. If they are sticking with on-premise, it is usually for a specific, internal reason."

The next battle for acceptance, said Kingstone, will be in Canada and Europe, where many businesses are still unsure about the model.

Customer Etiquette

Customers have certain expectations when they send an e-mail Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse to a company, Bryce Marshall at Knotice blogs. He gives a good primer on what should be part of the response.

Briefly: Thank the customer for the transaction. Confirm the details of the transaction. Provide details related to the transaction and -- perhaps most critical -- provide contact information for customer service.

"It's a marketing truth: Respond to your customers and they will respond to you," Marshall says.

Sales Ops Hero

Some folks at LucidEra, an on-demand analytics vendor, might have just a bit too much time on their hands.

The following lyrics, are sung to Foreigner's "Jukebox Hero":

Standing in the room, with her head hung low
Couldnt get a login, they were all out of dough
Heard the roar of the team, she could see their screens
Put her ear to the wall, then like a distant scream

She heard one "get smart ping," just blew her away
She saw reps in her eyes, and the very next day
Bought a beat up group edition in a second hand store
Didn't know how to use it, but she knew for sure

That one application, felt good in her hands
Didn't take long, to understand
Just one Appexchange, slung way down low
Was her one way ticket, only one way to go

So she started bloggin
Aint never gonna stop
Gotta keep on bloggin
Someday she gonna make it to The Force

And be a sales ops hero, got reps on her mind
Shes a juke box hero
She took one app, sales ops hero, reps on her mind
Sales Ops Hero, she'll create reports through the grind

In a User Group without a name, in a heavy downpour
Thought she saw her own sandbox, by the old data center door
Like a trip through the past, to that day in the rain
And that one application made her whole life change

Now she needs to keep bloggin
She just can't stop
Gotta keep on bloggin
That girl has got to stay logged on

And be a Sales Ops Hero, got stars in her eyes
She's a Sales Ops Hero, got stars in her eyes
Yeah, Sales Ops Hero, got stars in her eyes
With that one application she'll login tonight
Come alive tonight

Yeah, shes gotta keep bloggin
She just cant stop
Gotta keep on bloggin
That girl has got to stay logged on

And be a Sales Ops Hero, got reps on her mind
She's a Sales Ops Hero, got stars in her eyes
Just one application, put reps in her eyes
Shes just a Sales Ops Hero, aah aah aah
Sales ops hero, Sales Ops Hero, she's got reps on her mind
Reps on her mind


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Erika Morphy


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