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Dreamforce 12 – Crazy Big, with Lower Barriers

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Dreamforce is a big event. Crazy big. Nearly 90,000 people came to San Francisco this week for the annual celebration of all things salesforce.com.

The city shut down Howard Street between the north and south sides of the Moscone Center so that the company could pack in even more people. Salesforce did a slick job of turning a chunk of the city into a campus with Howard as its relaxing nexus. The street was laid with artificial turf, with bands jamming all day, and folks sitting on bean bags in the sun to watch keynotes on big screens, or just to chill out for a bit. I liked the casual, funky feel of it. There is more to life than software, and a nice touch was the Red Cross setup – a long table of essential items so attendees could walk the line and make a disaster readiness kit. I made one, of course. The Red Cross had lowered the barrier to participation so far that you could potentially save someone’s life just by throwing a few items in a bag.

I am pretty sure when the show is finished Salesforce CEO and chief impresario Marc Benioff will be thinking that 100,000 attendees is the target for next year. The limiting factor for scale will surely be San Francisco’s capacity more than anything else.

It’s easy to scoff at the obsession with size. Wouldn’t it be better to optimise for quality rather than quantity? Last year it seemed to me Benioff wanted to run a huge show primarily to have bragging rights over arch rivals Oracle, which first persuaded SF to close down Howard for its OpenWorld conference. But a conversation with Oren Teich from Heroku helped me see things differently. I had been a bit surprised a number of Salesforce competitors had lined up at Dreamforce 2011 to endorse the company’s Chatter platform. Oren smiled and explained that the Salesforce audience were effectively pre-qualified Cloud purchasers. With an audience that big, of course competitors wanted in, and were willing to pay for the privilege. Network scale is the charm, rather than size for its own sake.

In the press and analyst Q&A this year Benioff made a very interesting point. At most vendor conferences, the PR or analyst relations people are determined to manage your schedule, to keep different groups separate, to prevent conversations that don’t fit a specific corporate agenda. Heaven forbid an analyst would hang out with a customer un-chaperoned. Benioff said Salesforce didn’t take that approach – people were free to come and go as they please, talk to anyone, poll a customer, even, he said, “run a focus group [with my customers] while you’re here”. You have to manage your own schedule at Dreamforce – nobody is going to tell you who to talk to and when. The approach is refreshing. Benioff basically invites you to enjoy SF, rather than just Dreamforce.
Salesforce, then, is a very modern software company – and lives by many of the dictums that RedMonk recommends. The 20th century IT business was about creating barriers to entry for competitors, putting a fence around them, and locking them in with proprietary technology. The 21st century is about lowering barriers to participation and engagement, open networks encouraging scale and network effects – and multibillion dollar market caps.

Salesforce of course has its own proprietary APEX language, for business logic in core applications, but a more important future is being enabled via its PaaS subsidiary Heroku, which is dramatically amping up its Java efforts. Heroku Enterprise for Java, announced this week, brings comprehensive support for Java 6,7, and 8 -with one click deploy to Tomcat, and tighter Eclipse IDE integration.

With scale and network effects in mind some of most interesting news from the week was – introducing Salesforce Identity.

Identity management is a crucial underpinning for any network. Traditional single sign was designed with the enterprise, rather than the internet in mind. By moving forward aggressively with a more consumer web-like approach Salesforce.com is positioning itself to become a login for everything – a global identity provider. As I tweeted at the time –

And then came a great response

Of course Salesforce already has a vast network of users in place and the proven ability to work with a range of partners, including companies it competes with. Salesforce is a trusted brand for users. Salesforce had previously allowed customers to login to some apps with their facebook identities, but customers asked the company why they would login using Facebook when they could use their Salesforce IDs. Who would you trust most with your data, whether personal or business-Salesforce or facebook? If you were using a healthcare app would you really want to use a facebook login – this is not an academic question – the UK National Health Service has implemented facebook likes on at least one site, which means facebook is able to track users as they browse for medical information. While not strictly a login mechanism, clearly there is a danger of data leakage between different contexts. I personally prefer to not use facebook as my identity provider. While RedMonk is not a salesforce customer, I am happy to have the company maintain a Chatter identity for me, and I’d log into third party services with it. Salesforce Identity also supports white labelling, so customers can build their own federated identity networks. From a developer perspective Salesforce Identity supports the right standards- SAML for enterprisey stuff, and OAuth2 for web logins. We will know soon enough if the API layer is designed attractively enough that developers get behind it.

The consumerisation of IT is not a one way process, and I can see users and developers taking advantage of salesforce as a general login mechanism alongside Twitter, facebook and Google. Recent moves by Twitter to close its network means many application developers are considering alternative platforms, which creates a market opportunity. Another important aspect of the identity work is that unique IDs are not just for humans – machines need them to, and Salesforce is building momentum with companies like GE, which are network enabling their devices such as Wind Turbines, engines and medical equipment. The Internet of Things will require a strong identity management underpinning.

There was plenty more food for thought at Dreamforce but I wanted to get some thoughts down while they are still fresh in my mind.

Bottom line- Salesforce is getting more interesting as a set of platforms. The company is making a lot of really solid moves. Dreamforce is an epic event, and I left with a good impression of where the firm is.

Disclosure: Salesforce is a client, paid for my T&E, and I gave a talk in the developer zone.

3 comments

  1. I work in the neighborhood and like many locals I really resent the city allowing Dreamforce and Oracle World to block 3rd at Howard.

    Both are conferences for utterly uninteresting enterprise software (i.e. bloated, over-complex and overpriced compared to consumer technology) with an inflated sense of self-worth. They turn what is at best severely congested traffic in that part of town into utter chaos, as it essentially blocks the terminal outlet of i-280 into the city.

  2. Actually, the City of San Francisco told them they had to pay to block off the street and to collaborate with local talent for the stages. It was a massive expense to the company, but they wanted to honor the dity they love. This is what i understand.

  3. […] of San Francisco to close the road outside the Moscone convention center to create a city-in-a-city (See James Governor’s blog for a good description). […]

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