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Salesforce.com yields to pressure over pricing

BOSTON, MASS. โ€“ Salesforce.com will include some new analytics capabilities at no additional cost with the Enterprise and Unlimited editions of its CRM (customer relationship management) software, following complaints from customers who argued that the features should have been used to fill long-standing gaps in the productsโ€™ core functionality, not sold separately.

Salesforce.com Chief Operating Officer George Hu announced the change in a blog post due to be posted late Tuesday.

โ€œWe got it wrong, and we sincerely apologize to our customers,โ€ he wrote. While Salesforce.com initially considered the analytics capabilities to be an entirely new product, โ€œfeedback from customers clearly show they view these features as enhancements to our current functionality.โ€

The features, first announced as an Analytics edition, now will not be sold separately, Hu said in an interview. Salesforce.com planned to charge US$40 per user per month for the capabilities. It charges $125 per user per month for the Enterprise edition of its CRM suite, and $250 for the Unlimited edition.

A user affected by the turnabout expressed pleasure at the move.

โ€œItโ€™s an amazing example of a company listening to their customers and responding quickly,โ€ said Salesforce.com customer Jeremy Farber, who mounted a social media campaign against the pricing last week.

Salesforce.com has made social media in businesses a central theme of its marketing and product strategies. In Farberโ€™s view, the pricing reversal is an explicit demonstration of โ€œthe power of social media.โ€

โ€œThey certainly could have just sat on [the complaints] and ignored it,โ€ Farber said. โ€œTen years ago Iโ€™d just be in my office [complaining] to myself.โ€

The outcry gave Salesforce.com a chance to show it can listen to its customers, and perhaps get some good publicity as well.

โ€œWeโ€™ve been preaching for a while now about the power of the social enterprise,โ€ Hu said. โ€œWe want to practice what we preach.โ€

That doesnโ€™t mean Salesforce.com will relent in every case, but complaints like these havenโ€™t been the norm, Hu said. โ€œWeโ€™ve announced many products over the years with a separate price and had little to no push-back. This is the first time weโ€™ve seen this, and thatโ€™s a message from our customers.โ€

One industry analyst took a measured view of the announcement.

โ€œAnalytics is the last frontier for Salesforce.com. Theyโ€™ve got social, theyโ€™ve got mobile. The weakest piece of the link is analytics,โ€ said analyst Ray Wang, CEO of Constellation Research. โ€œThe good news is itโ€™s being included in the pricing. The bad news is that there are probably third-party tools that can do a better job.โ€

That said, โ€œthe bottom line is, other than exporting out to Excel, people want to use analytics in the environment theyโ€™re in.โ€

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