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Salesforce.com and Cisco Partner to Provide Cloud-Based Customer Services

Written by Alex Williams / October 5, 2009 3:35 PM / 3 Comments

sf-logo.gifSalesforce.com and Cisco announced a partnership today that brings together Salesforce.com's online customer service software with Cisco's strengths in IP Telephony. The service, called "Customer Interaction Cloud," is designed to provide a complete, cloud-based customer service offering for small to medium sized businesses.

The offering integrates Salesforce.com Service Cloud 2 to Cisco's Unified Contact Center, providing an extension for Salesforce.com offerings. The partnership further demonstrates Salesforce.com efforts to partner with third parties instead of developing their own technology.

The service has some real benefits as agents can take calls from directly within the Salesforce.com application.

Perhaps even more compelling is the increased leverage of the social web. For example, the service allows users to pull Facebook comments into a knowledge base that can be used for future reference.The service also provides the ability to respond to customer concerns posted on Google, Facebook and Twitter.

Salesforce.com also announced a new service to go with Service Cloud 2 called the "Five Minute Upgrade," a service that exemplifies how the traditional methods of software upgrades may be permanently transformed with the advent of cloud computing.

Traditional software upgrades can at times take hours, interrupting customers and their workflows. The new offering by Salesforce.com and Cisco, allows users to continue running their applications with only a five-minute interruption. While upgrades happen in one data center, users may still access applications through Salesforce.com other global, real-time, mirrored data centers.

Analysts have been pretty bullish about the partnership. For Cisco, it is an opportunity to leverage Salesforce.com brand strength in the small and medium sized business markets. In combination with the Tandberg acquisition, Cisco finds itself at the gateway of a very lucrative market.

For Salesforce.com, the deal provides it with Internet telephony, providing another important feature to strengthen its online software suite.



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  1. Great Article!
    Software deployments are one of the most delicate steps in SaaS. Having some thing that is bullet proof require tons of testing..

    Posted by: logitech lautsprecher | October 5, 2009 9:03 PM



  2. The market of Cisco is large companies and corporations.
    The market of SalesForce is small to medium sized businesses.
    No match.

    The Cisco equipment is too expensive for the SalesForce customers. A typical SalesForce customer uses a SonicWall VPN/firewall and a Barracuda spam filter.

    Posted by: engagoteam | October 5, 2009 11:25 PM



  3. There is obviously some straight forward consolidation happening in the industry and I would love to hear from anyone who has got an up to date Internet Technology quadrant and willing to share??
    Which direction is this transformation going? We saw giants legacy software companies buying SaaS start-ups - "buy the skills and IP to make a foot print on this new market"; we then saw SaaS pioneer Salesforce buying off a financial legacy software company- acquire customers base and leverage off each other offerings - and now , we are seeing this partnering of giants Cisco and Salesforce which in fact stitches a few offerings together making a suite of technologies available to the mass market- merge capabilities to reach the mass market.
    thoughts?

     Posted by: Smina Author Profile Page | October 6, 2009 8:17 PM



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