Last week, I attended Dreamforce, Salesforce’s conference. Like the now defunct TechCrunch 50, it is a great place to see a lot of very different companies; in this case with a thin layer of similarity. It is the common ground of Salesforce integration that makes the companies so ripe for assessment and comparison.
I met some old friends, saw the next version of some familiar technology and had a few people lie to my face.
I’m not necessarily in the market for new vendors/technology, so for me it is a perfect time to skim the surface of new companies. There are definitely some interesting things happening.
Without a doubt, social has become more integrated into the mainstream consumer experience over the last 18 months and will continue to expand into the enterprise in creative ways. Having said this, the next significant wave seems to be new ways to leverage business intelligence and predictive analytics. This makes sense given both the technology evolution and the desire for companies to prepare for whichever direction the economy/business may go.
So getting back to the people lying to my face. Enterprise sales and marketing have often sold ahead of what is actually generally available. I get this. If you assume it will take at least two to three months to roll out new software that could push the software into the next release. With the increasing adoption of SaaS and PaaS, this is becoming less likely, but in many cases could still be a legitimate assumption. For startup companies with limited resources, there is also the development plan that builds what customers want, also called customer-sponsored development. If customers understand the timeframe of receiving newly-developed capabilities, this also seems a legitimate approach. I am not labeling either version of this selling technique as a bold-faced lie.
Unfortunately, there are companies so eager to close deals, they promise features and capabilities that are several releases into the future. If prospective customers don’t know this timing, this can only be seen as intentionally misleading, and if the company in question is promising what it does not intend to deliver, it can be defined as fraud. This has happened throughout the history of business, but combatting it is more important than ever.
Although the percentage of companies guilty of this might be small, their reach is large. Dreamforce is a good illustration of the reach of SaaS companies. Obviously, main companies around the world use Salesforce. Now these companies are starting to, or are about to start making significant investments with other SaaS vendors. If what they purchase does not meet baseline expectations, it damages the reputation of that vendor, the cloud computing sector and potentially the bottom line of the business that purchased it. “Bad seed” companies can only survive for so long, but it’s the potential for them to drag the rest of us down a peg or two on their way down that will hurt.
I love startup companies and I love optimism. All I need now is a BS meter for the next conference.
Comments