About two weeks ago Marc Benioff the founder of Salesforce offered to do a Q&A for the Startup School community.
1. How important are mentors for aspiring entrepreneurs from your personal experience?
I have been very lucky to have had some incredible mentors in my life. I had a fantastic run at Oracle for 13 years, and I consider Larry Ellison a mentor and a chief executive whom I admire for great vision and endurance. General Colin Powell has had a profound influence on my career, and has played a huge role in helping me define the values that have shaped salesforce.com. Powell told me that the "business of business is not just business." He said that businesses have to have a real sense of social responsibility and give that goal a central place in its values. That led to our 1-1-1 model of integrated social responsibility: one percent of our equity was set aside in a charitable foundation; one percent of paid employee time to community causes; and one percent of our product is used to run non profit organizations. Without the influence of mentors like Powell and Ellison (and many others), salesforce.com would not be the company that it is today.
It all starts with with having a clear vision and the right values.
3. How has your philanthropic philosophy served you in the early years of Salesforce?
My co-founders, Frank Dominguez, Parker Harris, Dave Moellenhoff and I agreed to set aside one percent of employee time, one percent of our equity, and one percent of our product when we started the company. It was easy at the time, because, we had no employees, our equity was worth nothing, and we had no product! But if we had waited even a year or two later, we would have said "we're too busy" or "we'll get to it after five years". It was important to do it at the outset. I am very proud of the fact that not long after we had established our model, we had the chance to introduce it to a room of students at Stanford, which included Larry Page and Sergey Brin of Google. They were interested in our model and eventually adopted it for their company, creating a billion-dollar foundation when their IPO hit the market. Sharing this model might be one of our most important legacies.
4. Would you consider the path to your success as entrepreneur as easy & fun or as hard & rocky?
Yes to all. You have chosen the wrong path if it's not fun. And you are probably not taking enough risk is it's not hard and rocky sometimes.
Our mission is "The End of Software" and with every day, we become a little bit closer. When we started salesforce.com, we set out to make business software that was as easy to use as amazon.com, Google, or eBay. No updating. No patching. No software. It was exciting and challenging at the same time. No one had done this before. It was a new technology model and a new business model.
Once our idea caught on, other companies adopted the models for themselves, often pitching themselves as "the salesforce of XX". We took this as a compliment. It was important validation. I've always seen other companies that enter our space as "karmic partners." You never want to be completely alone at what you do. Competition is good foreveryone. In our case, it helped us spawn a giant industry that became know as cloud computing.As cloud computing applications caught on, the movement grew broader. Amazon developed EC2 and S3 and Google rolled out AppEngine. And of course, we introduced Force.com. This was a new category: cloud platforms, or platforms-as-a-service. I think this category got huge validation when Microsoft announced that it would develop Windows Azure, which brings their operating system (and all its complexity) to the cloud.I could not be happier that what started out as our simple mission grew into a phenomenon that is much bigger than salesforce.com. After all, when Microsoft says that it's "The End of Software", you know it has to be true.---
cheers,
Bjoern Lasse Herrmann
http://startup.supercoolschool.com
ATTENTION:
Startup School is an invite only plattform for entrepreneurs. If you would like to join please contact me bjoern@supercoolschool.com