We are nearing year-end, and that means it’s time for my annual year in review. This is not an attempt at a quantitative inventory — just my assessment of things that happened that will matter in the long run.
From my spot, it looks like marketing took a big step toward greater relevance in 2013, the importance of being a partner in an ecosystem increased — as did the significance of software platforms — and reports of CRM’s demise were greatly exaggerated.
Marketing’s Good Year
It’s not just the fact that Oracle bought Eloqua that made marketing significant — and the price reportedly paid, US$800 million, still seems light to me. Marketo had a successful IPO; Microsoft bought Net Breeze and Marketing Pilot; and Salesforce.com declared its Marketing Cloud. In 2013, marketing was definitely on the agenda. It helped that all of the above-mentioned companies did something revolutionary.
Instead of killing their new acquisitions by trying too hard to fit them into the corporate portfolio, the big buyers of 2013 let their new acquisitions figure things out for themselves. You could argue that bringing marketing expertise into some of these companies increased their MQ (marketing IQ) significantly, and that they had no choice but to let the experts run things for a bit. The buyers didn’t have much clue in some cases and were more or less forced into it.
The approach worked so well that by fall, marketers had firm control of their agendas and were leveraging their new companies’ considerable resources to go to war. The best example was the Eloqua Experience user meeting held in San Francisco, which attracted a crowd of “modern marketers” sufficient to fill the Hilton Hotel to overflowing.
Today, Oracle seems to be one of Eloqua’s biggest customers, and you can sense that in its go-to-market approaches. Kudos to Marc Organ, Thor Johnson, et al, who got the ball rolling 10 or so years ago but who were no longer involved when the big payday came.
The Partners
The traditional partner channel got an upgrade too. Typically, moving to a channel strategy is a great idea for maturing companies that want to reduce overhead by getting someone else to sell for them. Older products under price pressure and margin erosion are frequently what partners get, but that was less obvious in 2013.
The leader in the new channel was Salesforce. Its partners leverage the core platform to build an impressive array of new products in all areas of the front office and beyond, rather than just adding a little implementation value and customization to an established product.
Salesforce’s channel strategy is unlike almost any other. Everybody wins. Salesforce has a greatly expanded sales team selling its product, and its partners have a well-defined platform and source of raw material on which to build. Everybody wins in this scenario, which is why item No. 3 on my list is platform.
Also in the partner bucket, Sage decided to simplify its portfolio by selling SalesLogix and ACT! so that it can concentrate on selling SageCRM.com. It’s a good idea, but this traditional ERP company still has to prove it understands the CRM market beyond cross-selling to its accounting customers.
Platform Prominence
Partners and platform reached a crescendo at Dreamforce when Salesforce introduced Salesforce1 calling it a “customer platform” that incorporates Force.com, Heroku, all of CRM, ExactTarget Fuel, and some other bits.
Whether you are a partner or an enterprise looking for a Swiss Army knife software tool, Salesforce1 might be for you. The company went into hyperdrive and developed an order of magnitude more APIs that brought it all together. Older apps can peacefully co-exist with newer stuff from all of its acquisitions in a single entity that Salesforce hopes will drive enterprise computing for many years.
Salesforce is not the only player in the platform space but it has typically given itself a year’s grace while the rest of the market catches up. Look for Oracle, Microsoft and SAP to be all over platform in 2014 like white on rice, like a cheap suit, like a junkyard dog — but I don’t want to overstate the issue.
CRM’s Demise
People have been predicting CRM’s demise — or at least its radical restructuring — since the Clinton administration. They’ve been right, but it’s still here. In a late 2013 report, consulting group Bluewolf was at it again.
This time, in its second annual survey of the Salesforce customer base, Bluewolf found that many customers think community will be the new or next CRM. I think this has a lot of validity but… aren’t we already there? To a degree, we are. I think most market observers would agree that the traditional silos are rapidly being bridged by social to enable greater and more instantaneous information sharing throughout the enterprise.
Nonetheless, the importance of the Bluewolf study is not to state the obvious, it is to put a marker down saying watch what happens from here. As the front office continues to socialize, you will see more new apps and sectors with increasing benefits.
Siebel at 20
It would be wrong to end without a tip of the hat to Siebel. Bruce Daley pointed out to me that Siebel turned 20 over the summer, and to celebrate he relaunched the Siebel Observer to deliver insights on the company and the market on a frequent basis.
Siebel is important for multiple reasons. It is the granddaddy of the industry, and many of CRM’s brightest stars got their starts there and are now populating numerous other companies. I am happy to say many are friends.
Siebel is on a very short list of companies that matter in CRM’s history, along with Salesforce and Oracle — Tom, Marc, Craig, Zach, Bruce and many others all came from there and were Larry’s protgs. If you have followed them for any amount of time, last names are superfluous.
There were many other highlights during the year, and others will no doubt offer their analyses and insights but for me, it’s it and that’s that.
It was a great year for the CRM and marketing automation domains. I found the CRM death reports rather exaggerated as well. Products like Agile CRM that cater to both CRM and marketing automation are proving to be very successful in today’s market, and I only expect the demand for such products to go up in the next couple of years. CRM, especially, is at a place where I think it’s heading to become the main spine of an organization, no matter what size, due to the overwhelming abundance of data today, thanks to social media.