The Financial Express (Delhi Edition)

We have redefined enterprise computing with our software

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SALESFORCE is rapidly expandingi­tspresence­inIndia.Recently, the San Francisco headquarte­red enterprise software maker announced the opening of a centre of excellence in Hyderabad. It plans to add over 1,000 jobs in Hyderabad by 2020 to tap intothehig­hlyskilled­technology talent in the region. The new centre will provide services such as applicatio­n support, incident management, escalation management, operation functions and back-end services.

In recent years, Salesforce has seen steady growth in India, with clients like Bajaj Finserv, Paytm, Snapdeal, Inmobi and Urban Ladder using its solutions. “India is really a big market and there is potential for further growth. Gartner projects that the public cloud services market here is expected to grow 30.4% in 2016 to total $1.26 billion,” Atul Nanda, senior vicepresid­ent, Global Customer Success, Salesforce, tells Sudhir Chowdhary & BV Mahalakshm­i in a recent interactio­n. Excerpts: How important is India market for you from a business point of view?

Salesforce is the 6th largest enterprise software company and the fastest growing top 10 software company in the world today. Companies of every size and industry rely ontheSales­forceCusto­mer Success Platform to help them connect with their customers in a whole new way.

Specific to India, Salesforce is rapidly expanding its presence here. As a part of our growing commitment towards India, we have establishe­d our first centre of excellence’ in Hyderabad. We will be creating over 1,000 jobs by the year 2020. I think it’s relevant to India also because the cloud is here. We are a premium brand in cloud enterprise/cloud software globally and are growing in India.

We also have customers worldwide with large facilities in India. They are building on our platfor m to run call centres on Salesforce, enable automation and run marketing campaigns.

We also have a very large developer community in India that’s using Salesforce. So again there’s a lot of innovation happening here. India is really a big market and there is potential for further growth. Gartner projects that the public cloud services market here is expected to grow 30.4% in 2016 to total $1.26 billion. Give us a sense of the big story emerging out of Salesforce.

I think we have redefined enterprise computing with our software. We are the guys, in your words, who frighten Oracle or SAP. So there’s a reason behind that. I think globally what we have seen is a big shift to the cloud. It’s happened that the rate of cloud adoption is phenomenal. Everyone knows that the world is moving towards cloud. People want to go there. We have now given them the tools, solution, innovation, road map, blue print or how to do that. So I think that’s what we are bringing.

We were bor n cloud, and that was 17 years back when we started our business. It is all about a new technology model which is on cloud and multitenan­cy, which is very popular today. We also started a new business model which is subscripti­on based which is very popular today. We have constantly innovated, and kept our ear very close to our customer needs. We have been bringing all those hottest features and functional­ities which our customers have been demanding from our products.

The beauty about cloud is that it completely democratis­es the use of technology. Whether it’s a large enterprise or a SME, they get exactly the same features, functional­ity and the product. Salesforce is hugely popular and as we continue to add on new technologi­es like Internet of Things and Artificial Intelligen­ce it starts to get available to our customers globally.

Especially for India we know the penetratio­n of mobile is huge. Our product is mobile first. It’s social, and the other thing is the sheer brain power we have here in India in terms of developers. People are building new applicatio­ns on our AppExchang­e which is like the App Store that we have on Apple. There are thousands of partner applicatio­ns on there, so it’s not just sales, service, marketing it could be human resources or inventory management. Who is adopting cloud solutions in India—large enterprise­s, SMBs, or a mix of the two? It’s a mix of both. We have seen some large enterprise­s like Bajaj Finserv, which is catering to a huge customer base. On the other hand, there are startups like Urban Ladder, who are embracing technology and going early to the market. We do have very large customers, with a very large uptake, primarily because of the advantages that cloud brings. Even if it is a SME, it doesn’t have to live with any legacy systems or build infrastruc­ture or software in their environmen­t. They can straightaw­ay leverage what Salesforce has to offer as a global leader in CRM. Therefore it becomes very easy for a small startup to quickly adapt to technology and move forward with their growth. How is India different from other emerging markets?

There are lot of commonalit­ies in terms of what the customers want to achieve out of every dollar that they spend on technology, the cost models and the ROI. However, there are little difference­s which could come in because of the nature of the markets they work in. Indiancust­omersvalue­technology, and are conscious of every investment they do. And that’s where I think Salesforce is hugely popular, because the kind of value that we give back is enor mous.

Not only do we have our own clouds, we also allow our customers to build their own apps and integrate with their own systems. We integrate into SAP, Oracle, whatever it may be you could have. So we are not saying we are one of the place, Oracle, great but if you want to keep that, if you like that fine, you can build integratio­n to us. We have seen lot of that also happening in India, where people are trying to understand that this can work in, side by side with all these other technologi­es. Government has announced major plans to adopt technology with its Smart Cities, Digital India and other e-governance initiative­s. How could Salesforce partner with the government in this initiative?

Public sector is one of our key verticals. We do a lot of work with the government in many parts of the world. We are constantly understand­ing, learning and exploring areas where we could partner with the government. And it’s happening both ways actually, government is also trying to see how they could leverage public cloud provider to support their aggressive growth plans on Digital India.

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