Advertisement
Promo

Office applications Toolkit

Salesforce.com moves into custom application hosting

Munir Kotadia ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 11 Nov 2003 16:30 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

At its user and developer conference in San Francisco on Monday, Salesforce.com announced it has updated sforce -- an application development utility -- to enable its customers to develop their own applications, host them on Salesforce.com's servers, and provide integrated access as part of its subscription service.

In his opening keynote address, Salesforce.com chief executive Marc Benioff said sforce 2.0 was designed for companies that wanted to customise and integrate Salesforce.com with their internal systems. "The idea that you can take your company's PC, laptops and PDAs and then use this service as your server, to manage your databases, documents and information," he said.

According to Benioff, in order to accommodate the new service, the basic Salesforce.com application had to be completely overhauled: "We rewrote Salesforce.com so it could sit on sforce. You can use the tools you love -- Borland, BEA, Microsoft, Java or whatever it is -- and once you have written those applications, for the first time, we will host them for you," he said.

Sforce 2.0 will take Salesforce.com into a new area, where the company will allow its customers to expand their salesforce.com subscription to include far more than simply customer relationship management (CRM), which is what the company was founded on three years ago. "With sforce 2.0 you can write totally new applications -- things that aren't even related to CRM -- using our servers and our service. If you are a medical company and want to add prescription management, you can -- we are going to host your code in our company," he said.

The ability to integrate Salesforce with other applications should help cure what many users see as a major problem with the company's hosted business model. "We're not able to connect [Salesforce.com's current software] to anything else," said one IT director. "We just don't get proper access to the database, and because it doesn't integrate with Oracle Financials, which we use, we end up repeating a lot of data entry, and that should not be necessary."

However, Salesforce.com's solution may still not please everyone. "One of the main problems we have is that they charge you according to how much space you use," said another customer, who asked not to be named. "To use the functionality properly we have to attach files, but as there is no archiving, the bill goes up. The longer you use it, the higher your bills get, and so the costs rise."

Sforce 2.0 will be switched on at the beginning of December.

Additionally, Salesforce.com continued its tradition of updating its on-demand CRM service every four months. The 14th generation of its service includes a "dashboard" to graphically present information, real-time alerts and triggers to improve business process automation and an operations and finance module that is designed to improve contract and customer tracking.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Did you find this article useful?
58 out of 119 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:












Video icon

Video

Discussions

hkommedal hkommedal

About collecting data etc.

Thursday 9 July 2009, 10:18 PM

9 comments
Moley Moley

Re: Privacy Issues

Thursday 9 July 2009, 8:15 PM

9 comments

Vista Upgrade Blog

PreSales Canabalize Retailers' Opening...

(My attempt at writing a tabloid headline.) A Very Interesting Microsoft event just occurred. Microsoft is offering at a deep discount and through direct retail sale their FUTURE... More

Post a comment

Windows 7 on a Read-only Flash Drive?

Considering that the price of a 4GB USB flash drive has been as low as 5 dollars on close-out specials, financially it wouldn't make sense UNLESS Microsoft decides to go into the Flash... More

Post a comment

Bizarre Windows 7 Downgrade/Upgrade Po...

Over at the ZDNet U.S. site, Adrian Kingsley-Hughes has posted about what will apparently be a new low in bizarre downgrade/upgrade policies involving Windows 7, Windows Vista and Windows... More

4 comments


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters