SAN FRANCISCO — GigaOm founder Om Malik’s third annual Structure conference here at the University of California, San Francisco’s new eastside campus June 23 and 24 brought out the heavy hitters in the cloud computing business, and they certainly delivered cogent insights for attendees to think about.
For example, Marc Benioff, CEO of super cloud service provider Salesforce.com, put forth the idea that a Cloud 2 era is about to dawn — never mind that Cloud 1 is still in the process of discovery by a fair number of old-school enterprise IT folks.
“The idea of Cloud 2 is what I would call a combination of cloud computing, social networking, and mobile applications,” Benioff said. “I used to think, back when I started Salesforce, that why isn’t all enterprise software like Amazon? Now I’m thinking: Why isn’t all enterprise software like Facebook?”
Facebook, with its more than 450 million regular users, is the most complex popular application ever, Benioff said. “It’s got a half-billion users going to more than 1 billion users. How can we bring that kind of capability into the enterprise?” he asked.
“There’s a shift going on from Amazon to Facebook: Where I was having to pull information from the Internet, now it’s being pushed at me,” Benioff said. “[We use] computers that we are touching, not clicking. We’re adopting this new technology really fast; you’re walking around with your iPad, but it’s subtle what kind of a change this is.”
The big existing players — IT companies such as Microsoft and IBM, Benioff said — are getting “dropped away, they’re just gone, in terms of new purchase decisions, new technology decisions, and great new technologies getting dropped straight into the mainstream of the market. That’s what’s really exciting to me right now.”
Salesforce.com is exceeding a $1.5 billion-per-year run rate, Benioff said, and is now at the 77,300-customer level. “That was the first shift — us [Salesforce] moving our customers from the client-server model of the old Siebel/Oracle/SAP stuff into the cloud,” Benioff said.
‘A door has opened and we’re all walking through it’
Cloud 2 is another shift that’s happening, Benioff said. “That’s where a door has opened that we’re all walking through that’s going to create more value and more capability,” he said.
Benioff cited Morgan Stanley analyst Mary Meeker’s recent report on the mobile Internet asserting that “Apple’s iPhone, iPad and iTunes ecosystem might well become the fastest-ramping and most disruptive IT product-service launch the world has ever seen.”
“These ideas that we’re moving into a new mobile, social world — this is going to create more value and more capability for the industry than the last shift, which I kind of characterized as Cloud 1,” Benioff said.
Fundamentally, Cloud 2 is an enterprise IT system that takes into account on-demand cloud computing services, making sure they are all adapted for use by mobile devices, and that they are interwoven with, and working hand-in-hand, with social networking services like Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter for immediate communication purposes.
If companies don’t recognize and embrace this soon, they will be left behind, because that’s where the future of business is going, Benioff said.
This coming shift means that Salesforce also will have to do some updating, Benioff said. Salesforce.com on June 23 released its new Chatter collaboration tool on June 23 as part of this upgrade.
“We have to transform. We’re working hard at that. We’ve been working on rewriting our core apps, a new version of our sales app was actually released on Friday (June 18); a new version of our customer service call center and contact center; a customer portal app that we also released on Friday; and a new version of our platform that will utilize Java,” he said.
Benioff cited Apple CEO Steve Jobs, “who has not only rolled out the iPad and now the iPhone 4 — you have to take that leadership imperative that he has, drop the gauntlet on it, and say: ‘Everybody needs to move forward again.'”

AI thrives on data but feeding it the right data is harder than it seems. As enterprises scale their AI initiatives, they face the challenge of managing diverse data pipelines, ensuring proximity to insights, and supporting a growing range of workloads. In this episode, Corey Knowles speaks with Vrashank Jain, lead product manager for Dell’s AI Data Platform, about how businesses can overcome these hurdles with solutions that simplify data management, enhance performance, and unlock the full potential of their AI investments.

In this episode of eSpeaks, Jennifer Margles, Director of Product Management at BMC Software, discusses the transition from traditional job scheduling to the era of the autonomous enterprise.

eSpeaks’ Corey Noles talks with Rob Israch, President of Tipalti, about what it means to lead with Global-First Finance and how companies can build scalable, compliant operations in an increasingly uncertain world. They explore how automation, AI, and integrated platforms are helping finance teams tackle today’s biggest challenges, from cross-border compliance and FX volatility to […]
-
Latest News - Resources Resource HubsFeatured ResourcesLink to The Real AI Power Play: Who Controls Your Enterprise Data Layer?
The Real AI Power Play: Who Controls Your Enterprise Data Layer?IT and data teams were promised that AI would make work easier. Instead, it's created new layers of complexity.Link to Building the Backbone of Agentic AI with Trusted, Context-Rich Data
Building the Backbone of Agentic AI with Trusted, Context-Rich DataIn this 10-minute take video, Reltio Principal Solutions Consultant Guy Vorster explains how organizations can overcome fragmented data challenges to power AI agents.Link to IHG scales real-time, trusted data across global brands
IHG scales real-time, trusted data across global brandsAccelerating time to value while powering data-driven engagementLink to Dell’s Vrashank Jain on The Data Problem That Could Break Your AI
Dell’s Vrashank Jain on The Data Problem That Could Break Your AIAI thrives on data but feeding it the right data is harder than it seems. As enterprises scale their AI initiatives, they face the challenge of managing diverse data pipelines, ensuring proximity to insights, and supporting a growing range of workloads. In this episode, Corey Knowles speaks with Vrashank Jain, lead product manager for Dell’s AI Data Platform, about how businesses can overcome these hurdles with solutions that simplify data management, enhance performance, and unlock the full potential of their AI investments.
Link to BMC’s Jennifer Margules on Intelligent Enterprise Orchestration
BMC’s Jennifer Margules on Intelligent Enterprise OrchestrationIn this episode of eSpeaks, Jennifer Margles, Director of Product Management at BMC Software, discusses the transition from traditional job scheduling to the era of the autonomous enterprise.
Link to Global-First Finance: Building Scalable, Compliant Operations in an Uncertain World
Global-First Finance: Building Scalable, Compliant Operations in an Uncertain WorldeSpeaks’ Corey Noles talks with Rob Israch, President of Tipalti, about what it means to lead with Global-First Finance and how companies can build scalable, compliant operations in an increasingly uncertain world. They explore how automation, AI, and integrated platforms are helping finance teams tackle today’s biggest challenges, from cross-border compliance and FX volatility to […]
-
Artificial Intelligence -
Video -
Big Data & Analytics -
Cloud -
Networking - Cybersecurity Cybersecurity
- Applications Applications
- IT Management IT Management
- Storage Storage
- Mobile Mobile
- Small Business Small Business
- Development Development
- Database Database
- Servers Servers
- Android Android
- Apple Apple
- Innovation Innovation
- PC Hardware PC Hardware
- Reviews Reviews
- Search Engines Search Engines
- Virtualization Virtualization
-
- Blogs Blogs
- Events Events