Google Should Consider Before Buying Salesforce
Say you've
a spare billion approximately lying around and you would like to shop for a
team. Are you purchasing the team due to its fans? Its stadium? It's a brand?
Definitely. But why does the team have this value?
It's because, at the heart of it, a valuable baseball franchise is all about its fan base and its fan base is all about its players. Ignoring the talent on the field will, over time, erode the team's popularity. Its fans will disappear. Its stadium will empty and its TV ratings will fall. Don't believe me? Just look at what happened to my Philadelphia Phillies after its 2007-2011 playoff run. The team - due to less talented players – painfully declined in all of these areas.
It's because, at the heart of it, a valuable baseball franchise is all about its fan base and its fan base is all about its players. Ignoring the talent on the field will, over time, erode the team's popularity. Its fans will disappear. Its stadium will empty and its TV ratings will fall. Don't believe me? Just look at what happened to my Philadelphia Phillies after its 2007-2011 playoff run. The team - due to less talented players – painfully declined in all of these areas.
Which brings me to Google. And Salesforce.
It's no
secret that Google's cloud division - which is trailing far behind its rivals
Microsoft Azure and Amazon Web Services (AWS) - is looking to make a big
acquisition in order to play catch-up ball. Now a new report from Business
Insider claims that the company may be considering a purchase of Salesforce.com
to fulfill this ambition.
At first,
the idea - which is being floated by investment firm RBC Capital - has some
attractive benefits. Salesforce's cloud platform - Force.com - has been growing
by double-digits as the company and its community continues to add users and
build great business applications. Acquiring this community, and its related
infrastructure would almost immediately vault Google ahead of Microsoft to
become the number two cloud-based platform in the world behind AWS.
But for
such an acquisition to succeed, Google would need to address a few enormous
questions. Among them of salesforce online training is the fate of Salesforce's dynamic CEO Marc
Benioff - a customer relationship management (CRM) and cloud pioneer - who has
been an instrumental part of the company's success and evangelist of CRM
worldwide. But the more important question Google will got to address is that
the fate of Salesforce itself. Because, sort of a great team, it’s the Salesforce
applications that are drawing the fans.
That's
because the worth of Salesforce isn't its cloud infrastructure. Its value is
that it’s a CRM company that delivers its world-class solutions via a cloud
infrastructure.
Salesforce’s brand is synonymous with CRM. Its stock ticker is CRM. Like Benioff, its
leaders are also CRM evangelists. Its mission statement is "to empower
companies to connect with their customers in a whole new way.” Salesforce has
used its cloud infrastructure as a platform for its very passionate community
to develop solutions for their customers, always with the intention (but
admittedly not the requirement) of eventually connecting to Salesforce
products.
When my
customers are evaluating Salesforce, they're not comparing it to Azure or AWS.
They're comparing it to other CRM applications. That's because of both Azure and
AWS is modeled very differently from Salesforce. AWS's mission is "to
enable developers and businesses to use web services to easily build and be
paid for sophisticated, scalable applications." Microsoft's definition of
Azure is "an ever-expanding set of cloud services to assist your
organization meets your business challenges.” These aren't CRM companies. They
are cloud service companies that host many applications, with some of them
happening to be CRM.
Does Google realize this?
Does Google
understand that, like the fans of a baseball team that come to watch great
players, swallowing up Salesforce and prioritizing cloud over CRM would - over
time – ultimately sabotage the very reason that attracted them? How long would
it take for Google to start watering down Salesforce's brand and neglecting CRM
as it brings other, unrelated applications and its own search and advertising
tools to the cloud platform it acquires? If this happens Benioff, an iconic
entrepreneur and philanthropist, would likely not stick around very long under
a Google regime. Neither would the passionate community that he built which
underscores the success of Salesforce’s cloud platform.
Maybe
Google knows this and doesn’t care. But it should. That’s because, as the
fans of a baseball team that abandons its players, the very people that are the
core of Salesforce’s cloud success will abandon their team if Google abandons
Salesforce’s core CRM applications. It would be inevitable. I saw it happen,
here in Philly.
No comments: