October 4, 2007 5:41 AM PDT

Salesforce fund offers boost to developers

Salesforce.com's $25 million venture-capital fund could be great for developers, say analysts, as long as they prepare carefully for providing support to a global market.

Salesforce, with VC partners Bay Partners and Bessemer Venture Partners, has announced it will offer about 50 software start-up companies $500,000 each to develop on-demand applications on Salesforce's platform, Force.com.

The decision comes after Salesforce's chief executive, Marc Benioff, said that most people see Salesforce as only a customer-relationship management company--a perception its competitors in on-demand services, such as SAP, use against it. Salesforce is using the fund to attract developers to change this perception and boost the appeal of its services.

Intelligent Business Research analyst Joseph Sweeney said the investment fund is a relatively small but necessary step for Salesforce to take.

"Salesforce does not have a history (with developers)--now they're having to woo developers to the platform. But what that shows is a maturity in the market, an acceptance of SaaS (software as a service), and a maturity in Salesforce," Sweeney said.

"Especially for developers, platform-as-a-service is pretty attractive," a spokesperson for Salesforce said. "A developer gets free access to development tools, frictionless access to a market of at least 35,000 customers, which are familiar with on-demand."

One CRM company, Australia-based Sqware Peg, has already developed a SMS (short-message service) marketing application using Salesforce's platform. "Now they have customers in Mexico, North America and Eastern Europe. There's just no way that a small company could achieve that level of reach in a traditional channel," said Salesforce's spokesperson.

However, a significant challenge remains for developers: supporting newfound customers, most of which are based in the northern hemisphere.

"If you've got customers coming to you from Europe or the U.S. or Japan, and you're in different time zones, that's something to be ready for," Sqware Peg founder Shawn Stilwell said in an interview with ZDNet UK sister site Builder AU.

Analyst Sweeney agreed that managing support for a rapidly expanded client base is a critical issue for developers. "Support costs have killed many smaller (independent software vendors)," he said. "If you can't deliver support, you'll get no repeat customers, your business goes down the tube and you're left trying to fix investments that shouldn't have made it in first place."

Salesforce's spokesperson said smaller companies may be challenged but added they don't need to invest in channel infrastructure, marketing or sales support.

However, it might just be that VC firms will prove to be the greatest help to developers. VC firms typically use their investments in other countries to match the skills needed to keep investments afloat, said IBRS's Sweeney.

"I would expect over the next two years some of these companies that have been invested in will be making investments in each other and leveraging each other's support streams. Salesforce is small enough to broker these arrangements and, because they're small, hungry and flexible, they are less likely to cast you aside like some of the larger companies."

Liam Tung of ZDNet Australia reported from Sydney.

See more CNET content tagged:
Salesforce.com Inc., spokesperson, on-demand, software-as-a-service, venture-capital company

Powered by Jive Software
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right
  • News - Business Tech

    Samsung contemplating SanDisk acquisition

    South Korean consumer electronics giant is considering a buyout of the chipmaker to reduce its NAND flash memory costs, according to PaidContent.

  • Gallery

    Photos: Ron Paul's RNC alternative

    As the Republican convention took place just miles away, a crowd rallied for the former presidential candidate and his message of limited government, ensured civil liberties, lower taxes, and peace.

  • News - Apple

    iPhone to ingest EA's 'Spore Origins'

    The game that lets players design creatures and see them through a digital evolution is coming to Apple's iPhone and iPod Touch.

  • Beyond Binary

    Microsoft begins big ad push

    Microsoft's multi-year push, estimated at $300 million, begins with a spot featuring Bill Gates and Jerry Seinfeld aired during Thursday's NFL game.

  • Video

    YouTube plays party politics

    During the presidential campaigning four years ago, YouTube didn't even exist. Now it's a tool candidates must master to get their message across. CNET's Kara Tsuboi stops by the YouTube upload booths at the Democratic and Republican conventions to find out why Google's video site has such a big presence in Denver and St. Paul, Minn.

  • News - Wireless

    Was EarthLink's failed citywide Wi-Fi a blessing in disguise?

    Wireless Philadelphia, the nonprofit charged with providing broadband bundles to low-income families in Philadelphia, may be better off in the long run without EarthLink.

  • Video

    Political party playlists

    We know the Democrats and Republicans are split over policy issues, but does their musical taste fall down party lines too? And what kind of gadgets did they bring to the conventions to listen to their music? CNET reporter Kara Tsuboi finds out.

  • News - Politics and Law

    Video: Republican convention, day 4 recap

    John McCain offers his vision of what the country can expect if he and running mate Sarah Palin are sworn into office in January.

  • News - Cutting Edge

    Execs predict next Google-like tech

    On eve of company's 10-year anniversary, researchers and business pundits speculate about what technologies might someday have as much impact as Google.

  • Gallery

    Photos: The brains behind Google Chrome

    Here's a look at some of the engineers and executives who took the stage at the company's headquarters as they unveiled the new browser.

  • Crave

    Canon posts teaser ad for new dSLR--most likely the EOS 5D Mark II

    Canon has posted a brooding ad featuring a mysterious new dSLR that everybody thinks is the Canon 5D Mark II.

  • Green Tech

    Green news harvest: stolen solar panels, love for small wind

    Tata to bring small all-electric car to Norway next year; a banner years for wind power; a home hydrogen filling station; comparing the presidential candidates on plug-in cars; a microbial fuel cell for developing world; tips on greening your PC; large co