Almost $28 billion. I said they should have done this five years ago.
That's every big acquisition they've made. Exact Target, Mulesoft, etc. It's not just Salesforce, it is almost all acquisitions of this size.jh0400 said:
I don't get it and based on sell side reaction I'm not the only one.
Yep, that's what they intended for Chatter and it just never took. I tried to find use cases for it with us and I just couldn't get there outside of the very limited use case I mentioned earlier and ultimately gave up on it for the most part.ORAggieFan said:
Real time collaboration has been non existent in SF. Years ago they had a messaging app, but it wasn't adopted or good. This one makes a lot of since. And, Benioff needs to grow revenue and that's easiest via acquisitions.
Disagree. Different use cases. Chatter isn't real time, it's like email. Chatter is used for discussions over days/weeks. Chatter definitely has it's uses when adopted properly. But, like you mentioned, it works best when everyone is on it and that only happens at Salesforce. Chatter on objects is great though.YouBet said:Yep, that's what they intended for Chatter and it just never took. I tried to find use cases for it with us and I just couldn't get there outside of the very limited use case I mentioned earlier and ultimately gave up on it for the most part.ORAggieFan said:
Real time collaboration has been non existent in SF. Years ago they had a messaging app, but it wasn't adopted or good. This one makes a lot of since. And, Benioff needs to grow revenue and that's easiest via acquisitions.
With this buy, Chatter will get retired or incorporated and/or rebranded into Slack. Coincidentally, Salesforce Slack rolls off the tongue so it will make sense for them to go all-in on Slack as their full collaboration tool.
Agree with your use cases differences. My argument is that when Chatter came out they were pushing it as THE future of collaboration right or wrong.ORAggieFan said:Disagree. Different use cases. Chatter isn't real time, it's like email. Chatter is used for discussions over days/weeks. Chatter definitely has it's uses when adopted properly. But, like you mentioned, it works best when everyone is on it and that only happens at Salesforce. Chatter on objects is great though.YouBet said:Yep, that's what they intended for Chatter and it just never took. I tried to find use cases for it with us and I just couldn't get there outside of the very limited use case I mentioned earlier and ultimately gave up on it for the most part.ORAggieFan said:
Real time collaboration has been non existent in SF. Years ago they had a messaging app, but it wasn't adopted or good. This one makes a lot of since. And, Benioff needs to grow revenue and that's easiest via acquisitions.
With this buy, Chatter will get retired or incorporated and/or rebranded into Slack. Coincidentally, Salesforce Slack rolls off the tongue so it will make sense for them to go all-in on Slack as their full collaboration tool.
Slack is real time and already integrates with Salesforce in some ways. What is needed is launching Slack directly in Salesforce, especially when you look at things like Service Cloud.
Let them know they dropped the DC years ago. I've thrown out resumes for people putting the .com in there.Duncan Idaho said:
My main complaint about salesforce is the idiots I work with that call it SFDC. I mean they vocally call it SFDC. In writing, sure use the acronym. But when you are ****ing talking to me why would you say "ess eff dee sea" instead of salesforce?
Why? Most of the people that have a problem with it are users that had a crappy implementation of it. That's not on Salesforce.Picard said:
Salesforce is the spawn of satan
ORAggieFan said:Why? Most of the people that have a problem with it are users that had a crappy implementation of it. That's not on Salesforce.Picard said:
Salesforce is the spawn of satan
ORAggieFan said:Let them know they dropped the DC years ago. I've thrown out resumes for people putting the .com in there.Duncan Idaho said:
My main complaint about salesforce is the idiots I work with that call it SFDC. I mean they vocally call it SFDC. In writing, sure use the acronym. But when you are ****ing talking to me why would you say "ess eff dee sea" instead of salesforce?
Yeah, I worked there about five years and still have many friends there. Have been to 8 Dreamforce's (plus interviewed during one). A lot different now then when I joined and it was 8000 employees.Duncan Idaho said:ORAggieFan said:Let them know they dropped the DC years ago. I've thrown out resumes for people putting the .com in there.Duncan Idaho said:
My main complaint about salesforce is the idiots I work with that call it SFDC. I mean they vocally call it SFDC. In writing, sure use the acronym. But when you are ****ing talking to me why would you say "ess eff dee sea" instead of salesforce?
I had an interview with them last year....it was a reach for my background but it was the single most professional recruitment experience I had since on campus recruitment. Just everything about it was first rate, fair, and well communicated.
Premium said:
Is Dynamics a good replacement for Salesforce? We've been with Salesforce for 5-6 years but I hate how they try to screw your on every product add-on. It's always a big dance to negotiate price...
ORAggieFan said:Premium said:
Is Dynamics a good replacement for Salesforce? We've been with Salesforce for 5-6 years but I hate how they try to screw your on every product add-on. It's always a big dance to negotiate price...
It depends. It can be cheaper and right for some. Depends what clouds you're using. You also need to know how to negotiate with Salesforce.
Do you really need Enterprise? BTW, Service gives you everything Sales has, shouldn't be extra cost for a user that has both. Only reason different licenses is to allocate commissions to Service AEs.Premium said:ORAggieFan said:Premium said:
Is Dynamics a good replacement for Salesforce? We've been with Salesforce for 5-6 years but I hate how they try to screw your on every product add-on. It's always a big dance to negotiate price...
It depends. It can be cheaper and right for some. Depends what clouds you're using. You also need to know how to negotiate with Salesforce.
My best negotiating seems to come when I ignore them after showing interest and talking about how they need to give me good pricing to allow us to scale.
Small company here - 13 licenses, about 7 sales cloud and 5 service cloud and 1 that has both. We are in the $110 per month range on average for Enterprise.
Was trying to get CPQ and they are around $52 right now. They may go 10% lower but that's about it.
ORAggieFan said:Do you really need Enterprise? BTW, Service gives you everything Sales has, shouldn't be extra cost for a user that has both. Only reason different licenses is to allocate commissions to Service AEs.Premium said:ORAggieFan said:Premium said:
Is Dynamics a good replacement for Salesforce? We've been with Salesforce for 5-6 years but I hate how they try to screw your on every product add-on. It's always a big dance to negotiate price...
It depends. It can be cheaper and right for some. Depends what clouds you're using. You also need to know how to negotiate with Salesforce.
My best negotiating seems to come when I ignore them after showing interest and talking about how they need to give me good pricing to allow us to scale.
Small company here - 13 licenses, about 7 sales cloud and 5 service cloud and 1 that has both. We are in the $110 per month range on average for Enterprise.
Was trying to get CPQ and they are around $52 right now. They may go 10% lower but that's about it.
CPQ can be a bit of a monster. Shoot me a PM if you have any questions. Not my area of expertise, but I run the team for us that is the experts.
Proposition Joe said:
I use Slack quite a bit, but it's still crazy to me that someone took circa 1998 mIRC, fancied it up a bit, and convinced people it was a billion dollar idea.