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Companies I Like

  • Centive
    Centive is in a dog fight with several other compensation management vendors such as Xactly and Callidus. What I like about Centive is that they are based on a solid architecture thatmakes them very scalable. More importantly though, Centive has a big picture idea of compensation as a strategic tool and their system aims at not just getting the sales representatives paid but also at helping managers develop plans and manage territories. Watch Centive develop into a company that does a lot more than ensure the accuracy of the commission check.
  • Communispace
    You know those little 100 calorie snacks that help dieters stick to their regimines? Ever wonder where they came from or who got the idea? They were the result of involving customers in the product development process through innovative on-line focus groups hosted by Communispace. This company has a knack for bringing customers and vendors together to share ideas and capture "The Voice of the Customer." Lots of major companies are flocking to Communispace because they're on to something.
  • Eloqua
    Eloqua is bringing a true methodology to marketing and customers are showing great results. Rather than blindly sending out email or generating tactical campaigns designed to find low hanging fruit, Eloqua's approach is to conduct marketing that establishes a dialog that naturally results in more leads and more efficient closes. This on demand tool is closely integrated with Salesforce.com and other implementations are coming soon.
  • Firepond
    This is cool. In an era when we spend more and more time and effort focused on governance and compliance issues too many companies rely on spreadsheets to configure and price complex solutions. The result? Orders with missing parts, too many parts, the wrong parts. Also, who is in charge of pricing and disscounts? All the time? What falls through the cracks? Do you know? Fixing the situation is often labor intensive and expensive. Better to avoid them in the first place. Firepond is a CPQ -- configuration, pricing and quotation tool that no sales organization should be without. It generates accurate quotes fast and everything that goes on in it is auditable. Gotta like that...
  • Kadient
    Kadient is another company in the mold of trying to improve how we sell. There is no doubt about the primacy of SFA but increasingly it is not enough. Sales people are continuously looking for resources and best practices and often sales departments are short on the systems and techniques of organizing such information. As a result, reps rely on email to each other and brute force effort to re-invent the wheel each time a presentation or proposal needs to be created. Kadient's solutions enable sales people to work smarter and therefore faster. The result is more and better shots on goal. Who wouldn't vote for that?
  • NetSuite
    I like what NetSuite does. One stop for accounting, e-commerce and CRM. For a small or emerging company, NetSuite can deliver all of the functionality it needs to inventory product, run all of the accounting functions and all the CRM as well as eCommerce. Pretty good. The company is doing well and is poised for an IPO. I look for them to make a lot of noise in the near future.
  • Sage Software
    Lots of us forget that the most used contact management software solutions is ACT! with more then 2.5 million users. Sage owns ACT! as well as SageCRM (formerly ACCPAC), and SalesLogix -- CRM for every budget. But they also own a lot of back office accounting software like the MAS series, Simply Accounting, and PeachTree accounting -- accounting for every budget. They have a powerful combination of solutions for SOHO, SMB and mid-size companies. Worth paying attention to.
  • Salesforce.com
    I've been covering these guys since the earth cooled and I have always believed the OnDemand model would be a major disruptive innovation. They have a few rough edges but if you want to start a successful software company you could do a lot worse.

PGreenblog

People to Read

  • Paul Greenberg
    Perhaps the dean of CRM writers, Paul wrote the book (literally) on CRM -- CRM at the Speed of Light. His insight and analysis are always interesting and frequently humorous. He is a witty and urbane observer of human nature.
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December 21, 2005

Sitting in the Catbird Seat

I once thought collecting what I called ‘Americanisms’ — unique phrases that come from deep within our culture might be a fun undertaking.  It seemed like the business world was always full of them and it would be easy to collect some into a dictionary or encyclopedia-like book — the kind your aunt Muriel might give you for the holidays.  I got a good start with things like “They’ve been rode hard and put up wet” and others I can no longer remember.  But then the Internet happened and ideas like this became the fodder of Web sites.  I was tooling around one of them, World Wide Words the other day in search of the origins of another favorite, “The catbird seat”.

The catbird seat is one of those phrases that you might instinctively know from growing up speaking American.  It means sitting pretty, having an advantageous position.  In the middle of the 20th century, hall of fame baseball announcer Red Barber would apply it to batter with a count of three balls and no strikes — the upper hand.  But finding its origin might be problematic, and what might this have to do with CRM anyway?  Well maybe a lot, read on.

There really is a species called the catbird, and it’s a relative of the mockingbird.  Like its cousin, the catbird is a great imitator and one of its specialties is the feline meow.  The catbird has a seemingly innate sense of its own superiority, possibly because it can intimidate its competitors by imitating a predator, and when it stakes its claim to territory, the catbird instinctively selects the highest perch available from which to issue its song and it is that perch that is signified as the catbird seat.

As I look at the CRM market in early 2006 I see a vastly changed landscape than was evident a year ago.  At the beginning of 2005 Peoplesoft was still fighting its hostile takeover by Oracle and Siebel was an independent entity, leading the CRM market.  There were others in the hunt too, most notably SAP and Salesforce.com as well as a burgeoning group of vendors building out the on demand space.

A year ago Siebel was the CRM leader with SAP nipping at its heels.  Critics (myself included), loved to point out SAP’s funny accounting methods that brought it into a virtual tie for market share leadership in the conventional space.  And Salesforce.com led the on demand market with a crusade that at times looked more Ken Kesey-esque than high-tech.

A year later everything has changed.  Having gobbled Peoplesoft and on the verge of ingesting Siebel, Oracle dominates many of the leadership categories by the numbers.   But the numbers don’t tell the whole story.  It is SAP and Salesforce.com that have market momentum and each is a more likely successor to the catbird seat than the Oracle alliance.  And the two, though vastly different in product lines and outlooks, have more in common than might first appear. 

To my mind, the lesson of the moment — who sits in the catbird seat today — has a lot to do with the financial paths each took to their present situations.  Recall back to the Internet bubble, a time that is receding from us now but which still has all of the resonance of the big bang, when companies were forming and reforming.  IPOs were common and stock valuations were so high that companies were using their certificates like cash to buy one another.

Some companies, like Siebel, grew by acquisition buying up competitors and complementary parts as fast as they could, cementing them together to build bigger and bigger product suites that customers found difficult to deploy and maintain.  If early vendors gave the world a taste of the power and utility of CRM they also drove demand for better, faster, and above all cheaper solutions that later entrants would deliver.

What’s interesting to me right now is that most of the vendors that grew like mushrooms after a summer rain have been sidelined by financial pressures — either leaving the field bowing to the verdicts of the market or obeying the imperatives of finance by being acquired.  Today’s market leaders are SAP, a company with a strong cultural bias toward building what it sells and another, Salesforce.com, which, to my knowledge, has never acquired another company.  In the mergers and acquisitions arena as everywhere else, Salesforce.com has blazed its own trail by making complementary product integration part and parcel of its value proposition.  Why spend the money buying and integrating when partners are willing to do the work themselves?

For the moment it appears that the companies in the catbird seat got there, dare we say it, the old fashioned way.  They listened to the market, built what customers told them they needed and sold what they had.  It’s an instructive message as new companies form around interesting ideas and venture firms try to figure out whom to back.

A one way trip to Palookaville?

The Boston Red Sox team bus made a detour on its trip to Palookaville yesterday. The team stopped in New York just long enough to let Johnny Damon go to the Yankees. That leaves the former World Series winner significantly depleted. Just something like 4 or 5 players from the team that won it all 14 months ago remain. The Red Sox now have two (count em) general managers, no center fielder, a left fielder who wants out, no short stop or first baseman, and I could go on but why? In case you ever wondered, Yankee fans are not born, they are made by the countless idiotic decisions that emanate from Yawkee Way in Boston.

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What I'm reading

  • Thomas H. Davenport: Competing on Analytics: The New Science of Winning

    Thomas H. Davenport: Competing on Analytics: The New Science of Winning
    Read this book. I offers lots of insights on how companies are using analytics technology today to manage and most importantly to see the future of their businesses. Recent acquisition of the remaining analytics companies by titans like Oracle, SAP and others shows how important they think analytics will be in the years ahead. Lots of application to CRM. See why. (****)

  • Jen O'connell: Cell Phone Decoder Ring

    Jen O'connell: Cell Phone Decoder Ring
    Full disclosure: I know this author. I like her too, she's smart and a rising media star. Jen O'Connell is going to do for cell phones and other communication technologies what Martha and Suze did for entertaining and finance. It's about time too. If you've ever felt stupid trying to figure out how to use your cell phone or just what the difference is between GSM and the Gross Domestic Product, this book is for you. Full of insights and advice about how your phone works and how to work with your phone. (*****)

  • Eric D. Beinhocker: Origin of Wealth: Evolution, Complexity, and the Radical Remaking of Economics

    Eric D. Beinhocker: Origin of Wealth: Evolution, Complexity, and the Radical Remaking of Economics
    Like Paul Ormerod, Eric Beinhocker is another economist exploring the relationship between evolution and the dismal science. Beinhocker is just as readable as Ormerod but offers more research in support of the evolutionary-economics thesis than any other economist that I have read. In dealing with evolution in economics Beinhocker ventures deeply into a new field called complexity economics that does for this field what General Relativity did for physics. I'd read it again. (*****)

  • Walter Isaacson: Einstein: His Life and Universe

    Walter Isaacson: Einstein: His Life and Universe
    Wow! I bought this book in San Francisco and read it all the way home. That's not to say that it's a potboiler, it's biography afterall, but Einstein was one of the great minds of the modern era and it is fun to retrace his life, to understand his genius as well as his all to human foibles. The author also does a credible job of making Special and General Relativity understandable to the average reader. Good stuff. (*****)

  • Al Gore: The Assault on Reason

    Al Gore: The Assault on Reason
    Ok, I try not to be political in anything i do in business but, hey, I consider myself a fairly logical guy and the political environment of the last few years has, shall we say, defied logic. Regardless of what you think of Gore, his arguements are pretty good. (*****)

  • Paul Ormerod: Butterfly Economics: A New General Theory of Social and Economic Behavior

    Paul Ormerod: Butterfly Economics: A New General Theory of Social and Economic Behavior
    Anything by this accomplished economics writer will be thought provoking and entertaining. He's done a lot of work explaining the intersection of economics and evolutionary thought. Economics is, like many social sciences a study in human behavior as much as anything else and this slim volume is a great way to get started updating your thinking about this science. Still think economics follows strict rules and formulae like Physics? Read this book. (****)

  • Geoffrey A. moore: Dealing with Darwin
    Geoffrey Moore has done it again. In this book he takes aim at the ways established companies can effectively compete on "main street". Like earlier books, "Inside the Tornado," and "Crossing the Chasm," which deal with how companies develop into market leaders, this book examines strategies for effectively dealing with the world we live in now, which is not about exponential growth but the indefinite equilibrium point of continuing to understand and meet customer needs. (*****)
  • Fred Reichheld: The Ultimate Question: Driving Good Profits and True Growth

    Fred Reichheld: The Ultimate Question: Driving Good Profits and True Growth
    Fred has been studying loyalty for a long time and he has championed ideas like the Net Promoter Score (NPS) which is a simple measure of whether your customers are happy and willing to tell others about you or not. Great companies have high positive scores, others don't. A simple idea that has a lot of traction. (****)

  • Lynne  Truss: Talk to the Hand: The Utter Bloody Rudeness of the World Today, or Six Good Reasons to Stay Home and Bolt the Door

    Lynne Truss: Talk to the Hand: The Utter Bloody Rudeness of the World Today, or Six Good Reasons to Stay Home and Bolt the Door
    Yes, it's a book about manners, though not the kind to give any guidance about your salad fork. This is about impersonalizing influences in our lives. At the top of the list is technology. Without talking about CRM directly, Truss makes more than a few valid points about how technology associated with CRM is driving us nuts. Automated phone systems come in for a hit but so do surly store clerks, and, sadly, our fellow citizens making use of the public commons. In its own humorous way, it gives a lot to think about. (****)

  • Eric von Hippel: Democratizing Innovation

    Eric von Hippel: Democratizing Innovation
    First, you can get this as a free download if you don't mind reading a book in PDF. It's worth reading too. Von Hippel looks at some of the things we don't do with customers right now that we might want to do. For example, "free sharing" might sound a bit dorky but only until you realize that he's really taking about co-innovation -- asking the customer about needs before building product. Given the fact that something like 80% of the 36,000+ new products that hit the shelves in 2005 were projected to fail, this guy might have a point. (****)