Welcome | Sign In
CRMBuyer.com
Enterprise Apps

Salesforce Widens Footprint With Latest Version of the AppExchange

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Salesforce Widens Footprint With Latest Version of the AppExchange

Salesforce.com has completely rewritten its code base and replaced its hardware over the last few months in anticipation of the AppExchange's general introduction, Phil Robinson, global VP marketing, told CRM Buyer. Currently there are 150 or so partners participating in the marketplace.


Reading the Avaya-Nortel Roadmap requires a navigator
The release of the Avaya-Nortel roadmap has many people wondering what lies ahead for their customer contact initiatives. Join Ovum’s Ian Jacobs and Aspect CTO Gary Barnett to discuss how the integration of two product lines may affect you. Register for the webinar.

Salesforce.com (NYSE: CRM) has made a newly expanded version of the AppExchange -- a platform that extends its CRM suite to other business lines -- generally available with its Winter '06 release. The AppExchange connects users with new applications developed by such third-party vendors as Adobe, Business Objects and Skype.

Introduced last September on a limited basis, the AppExchange functions as a marketplace for on-demand software, services and components built by some 150 Salesforce.com partners that, taken together, vastly enlarges Salesforce.com's original functionality.

"With AppExchange, Salesforce.com is empowering their platform so their CRM application can be used in other business lines and areas," Yankee Group analyst Sheryl Kingstone told CRM Buyer.

Customers like it because they can build and customize new applications very easily, she added. Partners like it because they also find it easy to work with the new applications and can use them to broaden their footprint within a particular company.

Complete Rewrite

Salesforce.com has completely rewritten its code base and replaced its hardware over the last few months in anticipation of the AppExchange's general introduction, Phil Robinson, global VP marketing, told CRM Learn how SugarCRM will improve your business. Free Trial. Click here. Buyer. Currently there are 150 or so partners participating in the marketplace. The platform can support an almost unlimited ecosystem, though.

"Eventually, we would like to be able to offer customers thousands of applications on AppExchange from which to choose," Robinson said.

The applications currently available on the AppExchange include products for finance, electronic signatures, document management, project management, credit and collections, mobile workforce management, data cleansing, professional services management and human resources, designed by such Salesforce.com partners as Adobe, Ascendus, Comergent, DreamFactory, Eloqua, Factiva, Forcelogix, Harte-Hanks Trillium Software, Remend, Skype, Talisma and USA.NET.

Some of the applications expand Salesforce.com's footprint far beyond its original CRM mission. Remend REO Agent, for instance, which is going to be highlighted during CEO Marc Benioff's presentation at the San Francisco kickoff, is a real-estate application that helps brokers manage properties from multiple servicers and lenders on the Web or by disconnected laptop.

Others, such as Skype for the AppExchange, are closer to the CRM family. This app, for instance, provides communications features -- such as global outbound one-click voice calling, integrated inbound calling, presence, instant-messaging and multi-chat -- directly within Salesforce.

"The AppExchange and our on-demand partners represent billions of dollars in company resources devoted to managing and sharing business information on demand," Benioff said.

Upgraded Features

Salesforce.com's Winter '06 includes many feature upgrades, including a new user interface that is better able to support the multiple applications provided by the AppExchange, a territory-management engine that maximizes sales opportunities, an integrated campaign builder, customizable forecasting, streamlined analytics, Outlook Edition 2.0 and Offline Edition 2.0.

Salesforce.com also announced the availability of Salesforce Sandbox, a tool that allows users to create a customer replica environment for customization, integration, testing, development and training purposes for Enterprise Edition customers.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Erika Morphy


More by Erika Morphy

Palm Beats Itself to a Pulp
March 19, 2010
Palm's inability to excite consumers over the Pre is a colossal marketing failure, suggested Patrick Gilbert, CEO of 4Smartphone. "This is not a tech or design issue -- the problem is they haven't been able to reach out to users or the developer community," he said.
Survey Totes Up Value of Excellent Online Customer Service
March 19, 2010
There's gold in the e-commerce hills for companies willing to take their customer service to a higher level. Consumers are willing to pay almost 11 percent more to get excellent customer service along with their purchases, according to an Ovum survey, yet few e-tailers meet that standard. Heading a list put together by StellaService, which commissioned the study, are Zappos.com, Diapers.com and BlueNile.com.
Twitter Flies the Coop
March 16, 2010
Twitter has found a way to flit around to other Web locales through a feature called "@anywhere." Amazon, eBay, The Huffington Post, YouTube and others will be able to open a Twitter window to users, allowing them to send and receive messages without leaving the site. Social media marketers are salivating at the possibilities.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network