March 10, 2009
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Analyzing Analytics 2.0

February 17, 2009
Hurwitz and Associates
Demandbase — Can it Turn Your Web Traffic Into Treasure?

February 16, 2009
CRM Buyer
Selling to the Other 97 Percent: Q&A With Demandbase CEO Chris Golec

February 10, 2009
DemandGen Report
Demandbase Pro Launch Aims To Convert Anonymous Web Traffic Into Sales Leads

February 9, 2009
PC World
See Which Companies Are Visiting Your Web Site

February 9, 2009
BtoB Online
Demandbase adds Web analytics tool for lead gen

Demandbase In the News

Jason Stewart

Mr. Stewart leads demand generation programs for Demandbase and is a recognized thought leader in the B2B lead generation and lead management space. He founded and leads the Salesforce.com user group in Salesforce.com’s headquarters location (San Francisco) and was one of the first 500 people to complete the Salesforce.com Certified Administrator process. He has spent 10+ years in B2B telesales, demand generation, lead management and marketing operations with a variety of businesses including Maxager Technology, MarketLive, and Inference Corporation. Mr. Stewart has advised emerging software companies including Spoke and Kieden (acquired by Salesforce.com). He earned his BA in English from Rutgers University.

View Jason Stewart's profile on LinkedIn


Chris Golec

Mr. Golec is CEO of Demandbase – a provider of On Demand Software and Services to improve demand generation at B2B companies. Prior to founding the company in 2005, he co-founded Supplybase in the mid-90’s. Supplybase was a successful supply chain software company that created significant customer value before being acquired by i2 Technologies in 2000 as part of the largest software merger in history. Before entering the software industry, Mr. Golec spent the previous 10 years of his career with GM, DuPont, and GE serving in engineering, sales and marketing roles. He holds a B.S. in Chemical Engineering and an M.B.A.

Top Three Best Changes at Dreamforce 2008

Dreamforce has always been a fantastic event, but there were three things this year that set it apart and made it quite simply the best event of its kind. None of these three things have to do with the first-rate content of the "break-out" sessions (I plan on writing about some of the content tomorrow) or the big announcements which were, as usual, artfully unveiled with all the bells, whistles and flourishes we have come to expect from Marc Benioff and his stellar marketing team. What made Dreamforce really great this year was the level of attention they paid to the comfort and convenience of their attendees.

Dreamforce 2008 was the most user-friendly event that I have ever attended.

The reality of attending events these days is that more often than not, the people attending them are still expected to fit their regular work responsibilities in while leveraging their attendance at the event for learning, networking, and finding the tools to help them do their jobs better. Locals are stretched particularly thin, as they are often expected to hit the office either on their way to or from an event like this.

Salesforce.com took this to heart and made three changes that really illustrate their understanding of the needs of their customers and the on-demand workplace.

1) Completely Open WiFi Internet Access
This may sound like a no-brainer, but I have been to many events over the past year where this is far from a reality. I went to one event where WiFi was available for free...if you happened to be a guest of the hotel that the event was held at. A steep fee was required if you were not. Other events make you hunt down a password. Some allow it in the common areas, but not in the session rooms. Still others offer some cut-rate version that doesn't allow secure VPN access to your corporate networks. At Dreamforce I could log in no matter where I was, with no password required. Awesome.

2) The Attendee Portal
Sorting through all of the breakout sessions, finding the ones you like, and then applying them to an event calendar so you know exactly where you want to be and when. You could also schedule time to go and see any specific vendors you might be interested in. It was simple to use, convenient and a tremendous help in making sure I got to see everything I wanted to see. Because there was a TON of great stuff to see.

3) The "Cloud Dine" Lounge
I harped on the need for an area for attendees to comfortably sit, work, meet and unwind last year, and was so happy to see it executed. Lounge is a grossly inaccurate term for what it was, though -- basically, they left a huge area set up with hundreds of tables and chairs and left it open throughout the conference (rather than just at lunch time). Dreamforcers were able to comfortably sit and work, or meet with colleagues whenever they had down-time or simply needed to get caught up on email or voicemail. Gone were the days of wall-to-wall people trying to find an open patch of carpet at Moscone to get some work done, or trying to find a quiet corner to have a meeting or make some phone calls.

As much as many event planners would like to believe that their event is the most important and impactful thing on their attendees lives while they are there, the reality is that the event itself is just one of many things competing for attention. By taking these three simple steps to acknowledge that the other stuff is important too, Salesforce.com made it possible for people to remain at the show rather than waste valuable workday time dashing back and forth from hotel, office and event. It's like Salesforce.com took the best practices of its own software to heart, creating a sticky, friendly, easy to work in environment that does everything that it possibly can to make sure that you have no need to leave. Well done.

Dreamforce 2008: Notes from the Keynote

There’s a full house today for Marc Benioff’s keynote at Dreamforce 2008, the Salesforce.com annual user and developer conference in San Franciso. Considering the fate of most event marketing budgets during tough economic times I am hoping that it is a sign that things are not so bad, rather than the possibility that the market crashed after the final date to get a refund came and went.

Software as a Service and “Cloud Computing” (the utilization of servers and services hosted by third parties to handle your business needs) proponents will no doubt claim it is a direct reaction to a struggling economy, and they could be right. Some of the first words out of Mr. Benioff’s mouth were “There has never been a better time for cloud computing!...” And, of course, he could be right on the money.

Big Announcement One:
Force.com Sites. Salesforce.com customers can now host their websites on the Force.com platform. Existing Salesforce.com customers (Group Edition or higher) have generous page allowances for this service included in their subscription price.

Big Announcement Two:
Force.com integration with Facebook. "A new class of Business apps that leverage the social graph." Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg joined Benioff on stage to share how this is going to work...more and more businesses looking to understand and utilize social network marketing. Creation of Facebook Apps on the Force.com platform could be a great introduction to this, and a great way to capture info from those apps and quickly and easily get it into your Salesforce.com instance. The example the shared was a recruiting app that works on Facebook and sends the captured information into a Salesforce.com recruiting object. They also shared the example of Starbucks pushing their "My Starbucks Idea" site to Facebook, using Force.com. Slick.

Big Announcement Three
Integration/partnership with Amazon Web Services. Applications built and hosted on Amazon can be displayed on Force.com sites with easy integration into Salesforce.com. The example they used was an application called "Card Lasso" which allows you to take a picture of a business card, upload it at a Force.com site where it gets processed on an Amazon Web Services back end, and then the text from the business card gets populated into your Salesforce.com instance where you can actually use it.

Big Announcement Four:
A little anticlimactic, but still interesting...more and more companies running their businesses exclusively from the "Cloud" -- CRM, HR, ERP, Financials, Email, Office Productivity, etc. etc.

Rock legend Neil Young then took the stage to talk about...electric cars. Neil is involved with a company called LincVolt, which apparently has its website running on Force.com. For the big finish, they rolled out Neil Young's vintage Lincoln Continental which has been converted to run on 100% electric power with a very long range. It was a thing of beauty.

For the rest of the conference I’ll be looking for B2B marketing tips and best practices to share from the breakout sessions, and of course I'll be sharing details from any interesting partners and vendors with marketing functionality. I will share my personal favorite keynote moment, though - waiting for the speeches to begin, watching the dancing “NO SOFTWARE” button working the stage like a deranged college mascot, staring at the back of Scoble’s head two rows in front of me.

Dreamforce 2008 Partner Preview: TimeDriver

After my post about ActevaRSVP I was contacted by another Salesforce.com partner that is going to be at Dreamforce. Dave deBronkart, Marketing Analytics director for TimeTrade Systems called me for two reasons … he really likes to talk about marketing in general, but also thought I might be interested in their TimeDriver product and a promotion they have going on at Dreamforce. He left a message I didn’t get back to right away, but he also sent an email.

I was immediately fascinated by a single line nestled within his email signature…

To schedule time with me, click here: 15 min | 30 min | 60 min

Huh.

I had gotten that voicemail from Dave, and I halfway/kinda/sorta listened to it that first time but not enough to remember exactly what he said his company did. Sorry Dave, not your fault – I was having one of those days! But then I saw the email signature and remembered that he had mentioned something about having a time scheduling application I might like. So I did what any curious marketer would do. I clicked on the link to book 15 minutes with Dave.

I was taken to a landing page with some simple, clear messaging and Dave’s picture, asking me if I wanted to check Dave’s availability for a meeting. Yes, I do! I was greeted with a simple-to-navigate calendar view, complete with Time Zone preferences showing me when Dave was available to talk.

TimeDriver Calendar ScreenshotI picked my time, entered some information on how Dave could contact me and what I hoped to talk about, and was able to save it to my Outlook calendar (or Google calendar) right from the confirmation page.

How cool is that!

The immediate, obvious use is as a great addition to the email signature line of a salesperson who is looking to book appointments - but who may be frustrated with the back and forth it usually takes to find a time that works for everybody. But as a B2B marketer, I was also struck by how amazing it would have been to incorporate this simple link into an email campaign I had just sent out to 7000 members of my house list, hoping to drive appointments to our inside sales team. The email had performed well, but how many more appointments might I have booked with a simple scheduler like this, that synchronized with the calendars of choice for my whole sales team?

When I spoke to Dave (who called me promptly at the appointed 9am at the number I provided) we talked a bit about that. He mentioned an A/B test he ran to his house list, half with the link and half without. They booked 56% more appointments from the emails with the link.

Granted, this is Dave running an email campaign against his house list and not Marketing Sherpa running the analysis - but let's do that math on that with a hypothetical  situation. Let's say you sell a product that costs $10,000. If it takes 100,000 emails to generate 15,000 opens (15% open rate) to generate 375 clicks (2.5% click-through) to book 20 appointments (5% conversion) of which 4 end up as sales (if you're lucky!) that's $40,000 in revenue. If you could increase the number of appointments booked by 50% with the same message, your new revenue number would be  $60,000. Not bad at all.

Do you want to hear the best part? It costs less than $30 per user. Per Year. With a 90 day free trial. Subscribers can open up their calendars completely, or they can set specific availabilities for TimeDriver-fed meetings.

Check out the TimeDriver Dreamforce offer here (start by clicking on the "Click to Schedule" Button), and stop by their booth to learn how it integrates with Salesforce.com.

Thanks, Dave!

"Guerilla" Salesforce.com

I gave a little bit of background on the Salesforce.com user group community in this post a few months ago, and I wanted to bring it up again and send out a special request to the SFDC community at large out there...

I'm looking for recommendations and examples of great tools and reports and dashboards that you Salesforce.com power users and junkies have downloaded off of the AppExchange and use for free. I'm not interested in tools that have a "free trial" or tools that have pay-as-you-go features -- I am only interested in honest to goodness free tools. So, anything from the community that has been posted to the AppExchange, anything from Salesforce Labs, any reports or dashboards you have found on the AppExchange...let me know in a post down below.

The next San Francisco Salesforce.com User Group meeting is on Thursday, September 18th and the theme is "Guerilla" Salesforce.com -- since much of the Salesforce.com user community is from companies with sales or marketing departments of less then 10 people, it is always interesting to see how much these small groups can accomplish with limited resources and limited budgets. Hence my interest in what users have been able to accomplish with the free tools available to them. I'd love to hear some stories. Let me have them!

We'll also be talking about Dreamforce and sorting the the tracks and sessions, with alumni sharing thoughts on sessions that are being brought back and exploring all the new stuff coming up in November. If you are in the Bay Area and are interested in attending the meeting on the 18th, register for the San Francisco user group here.

Becoming Certifiable

Don't know if you've heard...Salesforce.com is now offering a certification program for Salesforce.com administrators. Coming out of a posting on the Idea Exchange, now it's becoming a reality. Nice! Check it out here.

Quick thought on SFDC, SaaS and Exchanging Ideas

I was thinking about the previous post, specifically about the Salesforce.com IdeaExchange community...

In the client/server world new releases are a big deal and can be very compelling...but do you know of anyone who is rabid with anticipation over the next release of Microsoft Office? Of course not. When you need to lay out that kind of money on an upgrade, you want to take a slower approach which analyzes the performance of the new software (is it buggy?) and you need to justify the cost of these new features to management (are 100 new fonts really worth the extra money?).

SFDC now has a dedicated community of users putting hours of effort into their suggestions, monitoring their performance on the exchange, voting, commenting, and competing with colleagues over whose idea is better. Users are jumping into new releases and updates with a gusto you don't normally see outside of video game addicts or Apple fanboys. 

Isn't it cool that people can get this excited about their job and the tools they use in it? And what a great marketing touchstone to get people talking.

Do You Know What Would Make Dreamforce Better?

Well, if you do, Salesforce.com would like to hear about it.

The SFDC IdeaExchange, has been up and running for a long time now. It's a place customers can share their ideas for feature requests with the community to solicit feedback and votes in order to try and get them higher up on the developmental "to-do" list. It's really interesting to have this kind of visibility into their feature request world, and the amount of detail and work some of their customers put into the feature requests that they post is pretty impressive.

SFDC has created a Dreamforce portion in the Idea Exchange, in order to solicit input from the community on content at this November's event. If you are a Salesforce.com customer you can vote on the presentations you would like to see, or if you have an idea for a presentation you want to deliver (that is not simply an advertisement for your product or services) you can out it up there and see if anyone votes for it.

One idea I particularly like was Salesforce Marketing for Small Businesses, although I think it is something that deserves an entire track as opposed to a single session. I actually wrote a bit about just that after the last Dreamforce, part of my Five Things to Make Dreamforce Better post. Here's an excerpt:

"Create a new track: Guerilla Salesforce.com -- Bigger does not necessarily mean more interesting. At the keynotes, at the awards, and in the breakout sessions the customer references and case studies are overwhelmingly dominated by big customers. I understand -- big customers are cool. But last time I checked, the vast majority of customers (heck, the vast majority of partners) all have less than 100 employees. I was in one marketing track where the speaker asked how many attendees worked in marketing departments with less than five people in them. Most of the room raised their hands. Here's what you do. Create a track dedicated to best practices and creative ways to use Salesforce.com without a lot of extra development, and without a single App off the AppExchange that you can't download for free....and create an Appy Award that a customer with less than 100 seats has a shot at winning. "Most Creative Use of Salesforce.com Without Spending a Penny."

Salesforce.com User Group Community

I just sent out the invitations to the upcoming San Francisco Salesforce.com User Group meeting, and it occurred to me that many of you Salesforce.com users might not be aware of the incredible resource you may have available to you in your own back yard. To see if you have a group near you, click here. You will find listings by geography as well as by special interest.

I run the San Francisco group, but here in the Bay Area there are is also a group in Silicon Valley as well as a Bay Area Non-Profits Group.

If you are a Salesforce.com user in the bay area you are welcome to join us for breakfast on May 15th, from 8AM 'til 10AM. Location is to be determined, but save the date.

The theme this time is Sales Operations. Here's the agenda:

  • 8-8:15AM -- Welcome, Coffee, Treats
  • 8:15 to 8:35 -- SFDC 101: How to set up automated lead assignment rules
  • 5 minute break
  • 8:40 to 9AM – Word from our sponsor, Xactly
  • 9AM to 9:15 - Salesforce.com User Experience Team
  • 5 minute break
  • 9:20 to 9:45 – Salesforce.com “Deep Dive” – Best Practices for Sales Operations (Productivity and Data Quality)
  • 9:45 – 10AM – Questions, Answers, Discussion and Networking

Hope to see you there!

Isn't It Ironic

Thinking about the Salesforce.com and Google announcement yesterday, one of the hot buttons was collaborative work on documents or presentations...

The ironic thing about switching to a SaaS version of your office applications is that while it would force people to work more collaboratively from the latest versions of your most important documents (which is good), the very thing that drives this collaborative work (being forced to work online) will keep it from getting on to the laptops of the road warriors and field personnel who could benefit most from a system like this.

And then, once Google Apps releases the "desktop" version of the product as they have promised which could be what wins over more users, people will go back to their old bad habits of just using what is already on their machine rather than going online for a more recent version of that document or presentation. And then the "collaboration" benefit is gone.

Salesforce and Google Apps ... Is This Really a Big Deal?

The story has been broken already in a number of places, and as Mark Mangano says over at SalesforceWatch.com the web is "atwitter" with people putting in their two cents about Salesforce.com announcing tight integration with Google  Apps.

My feelings are mixed. On the one hand, I am extremely pleased that one of these announcements has to do with improvements or enhancements to the core product as opposed to "the platform." I use SFDC every day for my job, and I feel like the CRM product hasn't been getting the attention it deserves lately.

Also, it is nice to see that SFDC is doing something that will help small businesses and start-ups, which are the ones who are more likely to utilize Google Apps as opposed to Microsoft Office. The big names and big customers get all the press, but it is still the companies with fewer than 100 employees that make up the lion's share of the SFDC customer base.

But on the other hand...Google Apps? Am I alone in not really being moved here?

The last time I used Google Apps was when someone sent an Excel file to my Gmail address...it asked me if I wanted to open it using Google Apps, and when I did it didn't look right. I ended up having to save it to my desktop and open it with Excel anyway.

It sounds good on paper, sure -- and if the word Google is involved the press goes into a fit of collective apoplexy -- but I am just not feeling the love. Tighter integration with a set of applications that neither I nor anyone else I know uses on a regular basis just doesn't get me as excited as I feel like I am supposed to be.

I'm attending the "official" announcement today, and maybe I'll come around. What do you think?

This just in...Fake Steve Jobs has a very funny take on the announcement.  Check it out here. Too funny.