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Google, Salesforce.com partner on business apps

Google, Salesforce.com partner on business apps

By:  Chris Kanaracrus  On: 14 Apr 2008 For: IDG News Service (SS) Creator

The search engine giant's online productivity applications will be integrated with the customer relationship management offerings of the on-demand specialist. Customers share their reactions

Salesforce.com has integrated Google's online productivity applications with its on-demand CRM (customer relationship management) offerings, the companies announced Monday.

The deal, which was the subject of rumors recently, heightens an existing partnership between the companies, marked in part by their pact to plug Google's AdWords service into Salesforce.

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The good, the bad and Google Apps

The companies have "always had similar models and philosophies," Google CEO Eric Schmidt said in a statement.

One industry observer said the deal has clear benefits for both companies.

"The corporate standard [for productivity applications and e-mail] is, of course, Microsoft, but if you look at [Silicon] Valley and the startups, they are using Google Apps because of the collaborative aspects," said Ray Wang, an analyst with Forrester Research. "There are a lot of startups using Salesforce.com, especially here in the Valley."

The move could provide a stronger foothold for Google among business users, Wang said. "Google is already quite pervasive, but they want to be more pervasive in the enterprise."

The Google Apps integration will enable Salesforce users to work in concert with Gmail, Google Docs, Google Talk and Google Calendar. A demo provided by a Salesforce spokesman showed how users could perform various tasks, such as pushing Gmail messages sent regarding a particular customer into the appropriate place in Salesforce.

Salesforce customers hailed the integration, terming it an ideal fit for their business needs.

Douglas Menefee is chief information officer of The Schumacher Group, a Lafayette, Louisiana, company that provides medical staffing for emergency departments. TSG works with 2,000 to 2,500 independent contractors and uses Salesforce to manage its relationships with them, according to Menefee.

TSG is now starting to build out a "Google framework" involving Google Apps, he said: "It just creates a brilliant environment to deal with 2,500 individuals that aren't employees of ours, but whom we need to collaborate with."

Another key factor is that TSG's contractors in most cases are granted access to the Web when on a given job, but aren't able to install software on a machine, he said. Google Apps, accessible by default through a browser, neatly circumvents this problem, he said.

Mike Epner heads the services team at CollabNet, maker of a Web-based platform for distributed software development teams.


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Chris Kanaracrus Chris Kanaracrus is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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