Behind the Cloud - Critical summary review - Marc Benioff
×

New Year, New You, New Heights. 🥂🍾 Kick Off 2024 with 70% OFF!

I WANT IT! 🤙
70% OFF

Operation Rescue is underway: 70% OFF on 12Min Premium!

New Year, New You, New Heights. 🥂🍾 Kick Off 2024 with 70% OFF!

1051 reads ·  4 average rating ·  55 reviews

Behind the Cloud - critical summary review

Behind the Cloud Critical summary review Start your free trial
Corporate Culture & Communication, Technology & Innovation and Startups & Entrepreneurship

This microbook is a summary/original review based on the book: Behind the Cloud: The Untold Story of How Salesforce.com Went from Idea to Billion-Dollar Company-and Revolutionized an Industry

Available for: Read online, read in our mobile apps for iPhone/Android and send in PDF/EPUB/MOBI to Amazon Kindle.

ISBN: 978-0470521168

Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell

Critical summary review

Marc Benioff is regarded as the father of the software industries as a service and cloud computing. His company, Salesforce.com, is simply the biggest success case of setting up a company that has made $ 1 billion in revenue in just 10 years. Behind the Cloud reveals how Benioff took a new idea, a powerful concept from paper, and differentiated himself from his competitors by creating a whole new movement where users no longer need to install software on their computers. The softwares are always available, on demand, in the cloud.

Believe In Your Ideas And Execute Incessantly

Benioff's secret to putting Salesforce's plan into action is simple. According to him, just focus on and execute the idea you believe in, even if it means going against the crowd. The concept of Salesforce.com emerged after Benioff spent years as Oracle's Vice President and decided to leave the company to take a well-deserved vacation and understand the new dynamics of the market. The category of CRM (Customer Relationship Management) was something new until then, and the leading company in the segment was called Siebel. Siebel's product allowed salespeople and account managers in large companies to control contacts, information about their customers and manage potential opportunities. However, there some problems. The system was extremely expensive. It needed a lot of maintenance and similar to contemporaneous softwares, it needed to be installed on the customer's computer, inside the company where he/she worked.

Benioff thought he could improve CRM software by using a software-as-a-service concept (something the industry prefers to call Software as a Service or SaaS) through cloud computing, that is, without requiring software installation on the client's computer. With the idea in mind, Benioff sought to talk to Tom Siebel, founder of Siebel Systems, who, while sympathetic, did not believe that it could conquer a significant part of the market and become profitable. That's why Benioff, focused on his idea, decided to start Salesforce alone. He knew he had to think big and recruit the best programmers for his new company. For Benioff, Salesforce represented "the end of current business models and software technology." He knew that this reference would intrigue a good developer and help attract the best talent. So he was able to hire highly experienced application developers, who worked with him in a tiny apartment in San Francisco.

Marketing From Day 1

Promoting a new product is a way to grow fast when you are still a startup. Salesforce.com bought a huge fight with the market leader as if their business was the new market leader since Day 1. Salesforce was Anti-Siebel, for proving unique and adopting a new distribution model. Wherever he went, Marc was spreading the good news of the future of CRM systems and quickly caught the eye of the Wall Street Journal, who wrote a cover story on "The Birth of a New Industry ". Benioff knew that he had to offer a clear message to the media about how Salesforce.com was different from other companies. Salesforce.com needed a motto, a slogan, and for that, Benioff hired Bruce Campbell, a legendary advertiser who created the "NO SOFTWARE" logo cut by a red line. Not all programmers liked the idea, but Benioff felt that his concerns were needless as the logo soon spread in newspapers and magazines and the campaign was recognized as one of the best of the year. The logo represented a big battle.On the one hand, there was Salesforce and the media pointing to the end of the traditional software era and on the other, the industry giants. Marc bought a big fight with Siebel, staging a protest over the end of traditional software at the Siebel user convention. All participants of the event saw the action, which was covered by the media. The protesters were also invited to the SF software launch party, which featured a mega-band, the B52's.

Bet On Events To Create A Community

One of the first marketing strategies adopted after Salesforce launch was to take advantage of event promotion to build a community around the brand. For Benioff, the best marketing strategies that result in more sales are news stories, containing unbiased reviews in the mainstream media and customer testimonials, that is, the word-of-mouth, enthusiastic about their success stories. Already in its second year, Salesforce began organizing a tour in several US cities, with keynote presenters, customer presentations, and demonstrations. That brought together potential clients, journalists and analysts, curious to know what the "NO SOFTWARE" movement was. This end-user meeting made a big difference in the company's marketing success. Traditional software companies went after executives who, while controlling budgets, were less likely to use the product to convince them. Salesforce.com found it better to work with realcustomerswith its potential. They held events filled with interesting content and fun and relaxed parties at the end. The result was the impressive conversion of 80% of those present into business opportunities.

The Client Always Comes First

Business software from the pre-Salesforce era was complex, difficult to use, and the negotiations took months to materialize. Salesforce did not believe in this model and wanted their customers to feel the product before buying. They should evaluate before buying, so SF started offering free product testing through their website. The first version of the software cost $ 50 per user per month, and the free trial greatly reduced the risk to the customer. To ensure product quality constantly improved, SF also created an exclusive area for customers to identify problems and communicate them to the company so they could be corrected quickly.

With these customer feedbacks, they were able to avoid rework and refine the software immediately, unlike the traditional software installed on clients' computers. With the bursting of the .com business bubble, a crisis that has affected most Internet companies, Salesforce has lost many customers, and this has created serious capital problems. The great solution for the company was to change the collection model from monthly to annual. With this change, more than 50% of new customers agreed to migrate to advance payment, and within 1 year the company became profitable by retaining most of its customers. This was only possible because they had gained the trust and loyalty of their customers long before and the same customers now felt confident in advancing the payments.

SalesForce Scalable Product Model

Salesforce's biggest innovation was to create a product that shared its infrastructure with all other customers and allowed for great cost savings. Traditional software companies like Oracle or Siebel had a different product running on each user's computer within the company. Salesforce's mission was to create a flexible product that could be used by all its customers, even in different ways. Each customer could perform their different tasks with their own data in one product. There were never two versions of the Salesforce system running and that greatly increased its efficiency. In the beginning, the traditional companies did not bet on the model or believed that it could work. But this was actually a big advantage for SF because maintenance and new software updates were automatically installed for all customers. They were actually creating a world "WITHOUT SOFTWARE" or at least without infinite software installations on the client's computer. The Salesforce product was simple and prioritized speed and ease of use. If the features were simple, bug fixes and system speed would be good. However, for customers not to be frustrated and create their own system variations, SF created its application platform, which allowed customers to create their own resources directly from the servers in the cloud. This flexibility greatly increased the possible utilities, further increasing the potential market for Marc Benioff's small CRM startup.

Each Market, A Culture

Salesforce.com now dominated the US market, but as the need for CRM software adoption was gaining the world, Marc Benioff was eager to expand overseas. Salesforce.com opted for Europe to get started and, to have a promising start, started out in Dublin, Ireland. At this time Dublin was attractive to large companies like Oracle due to the English-speaking population and the favorable tax rate of only 12.5% (In Brazil it can reach 27.5%!). They also decided to hire only natives from different countries. So when a customer from England called they would think they were speaking with an English person. Although they had a simple, functional office, they conducted meetings in most of London's luxury hotels to demonstrate their SaaS software. Using hotels for meetings created a picture of success for their clients, and was cheaper than renting traditional offices. The company quickly began to adapt its marketing strategy to different markets. Salesforce's aggressive marketing strategy was extremely effective in the United States and Europe, so now they set out to reach Asian markets, starting with Japan. After conducting a simple survey, they recognized that they needed to approach Japan with a slightly different positioning. Japanese companies are traditionally cautious about foreign products and are looking for products known in Japan. To have their first sales, they had to air some references to other growing companies which the Japanese were more familiar with, such as Google or Amazon. When the biggest Japanese companies started using Salesforce.com on a daily basis, many other business owners decided to follow suit.

Family And Friends. They Can Help You Finance Your Ideas

In the early days of Salesforce, no investor was enthusiastic about the "no software" concept. Benioff, however, focused on pursuing his idea and remembered large companies such as Starbucks and Cisco, which were also dejected by investors. Benioff went after those who believed in him: his family and friends. To his surprise, he found many people in his immediate circle who fully supported his idea. He managed to raise $ 65 million to fund his growth using these tactics. In 2002, Salesforce.com was aiming to become a $ 1 billion company, and they decided to open their capital. However, as the market still had memories of the bubble burst of .com ventures, companies now needed to demonstrate significant revenues. Taking the opposite direction from the conventional, Salesforce.com began an audit before the public offering of shares to the market, called IPO (or initial public offering). After more than a year of internal preparation in 2003, Salesforce.com increased its annual revenue from $ 25 million to $ 100 million. It is more than double what other companies had achieved. In 2004, it entered the stock market to become the most successful software-as-a-service company in history.

Final Notes:

Salesforce.com is a great reference for anyone who wants to start their company in the cloud and selling to other companies, the B2B market. Its marketing and sales machine and its excellent products have created the largest SaaS company in the world.

12min tip: If you liked this successful case from Salesforce, how about knowing another successful case of a SaaS company? Check out our microbook of The Hard Thing About Hard Things and see the trajectory of Ben Horowitz at the helm of Opsware!

Sign up and read for free!

By signing up, you will get a free 7-day Trial to enjoy everything that 12min has to offer.

Who wrote the book?

Mr. Benioff is the CEO and founder of Salesforce, the largest CRM and Software as a Service (SaaS) company in the world. It has transformed the way software is distributed through cloud computing. He is the creator of the term "platform-as-a-service" and has expanded Salesforce's reach, enabling customers to build their own applications in the company's architecture or in the Salesforce cloud. Benioff is a remarkable philanthropist. In 2000, he established the "1-1-1 model",... (Read more)

Start learning more with 12min

6 Milllion

Total downloads

4.8 Rating

on Apple Store and Google Play

91%

of 12min users improve their reading habits

A small investment for an amazing opportunity

Grow exponentially with the access to powerful insights from over 2,500 nonfiction microbooks.

Today

Start enjoying 12min's extensive library

Day 5

Don't worry, we'll send you a reminder that your free trial expires soon

Day 7

Free Trial ends here

Get 7-day unlimited access. With 12min, start learning today and invest in yourself for just USD $4.14 per month. Cancel before the trial ends and you won't be charged.

Start your free trial

More than 70,000 5-star reviews

Start your free trial

12min in the media