• On TechRepublic: Why VISTA HATERS will love Windows 7
April 15, 2008 9:22 AM PDT

Before Salesforce.com-Google lovefest came Zoho dalliance

by Martin LaMonica

Only months before Saleforce.com and Google integrated their Web applications, Salesforce.com offered to buy Zoho, a direct competitor of Google Apps.

Sridhar Vembu, the CEO of Zoho parent company AdventNet, divulged that juicy nugget in a blog posting following the much-ballyhooed Google-Salesforce.com tie-up. Zoho makes Web-based productivity and business applications.

Vembu said that the proposed deal was never close to consummation, but it wasn't over the price tag.

He said that the Zoho and Salesforce.com business models are fundamentally at odds because Salesforce.com spends much more proportionately on marketing and sales. He also accused Salesforce.com of being a lousy partner.

Talk of an acquisition grew from an effort to integrate Zoho with Salesforce.com applications through its development platform. But Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff decided to pull the plug, Vembu recounts:

We invested in R&D to make the integration work, and we were about a week from launch, when Marc Benioff decided to pull the plug. He invited me for discussions. He offered repeatedly to acquire Zoho outright, which we rejected. I told him there is absolutely no fit between our companies, particularly with his business model (as noted above) and our business model. I told him there is just no cultural fit between our companies and such an acquisition would be miserable for both parties. Finally, he offered to let us integrate Zoho into AppExchange, provided we pull the plug on Zoho CRM. We told him that kind of pre-condition is totally unacceptable, and it also completely negates his claims of openness of their platform. Needless to say, we never did agree on the issue, and we dropped the integration effort.

By contrast, working with Google--its primary competitor--over Google Gears has gone well, Vembu said.

Meanwhile, Salesforce.com has done with Google precisely what it appears to have set out doing with Zoho--close product integration.

It's easy to discount Vembu's comments as sour grapes. After all, it's Google, not Zoho, that now has better access to Salesforce.com customers.

But his comments shed light into how business does, or doesn't, get done among software-as-a-service companies as they compete to build the most vibrant partner ecosystems on their platforms.

Martin LaMonica is a senior writer for CNET's Green Tech blog. He started at CNET News in 2002, covering IT and Web development. Before that, he was executive editor at IT publication InfoWorld. E-mail Martin.
advertisement
Click here!
Recent posts from News Blog
Neil Young Archives Blu-ray: Rip off?
Acronis revises survey results about backup habits
Acronis miscalculates data on users' bad backup habits
Flickr co-founder presses beta button
Comcast, Sony open retail store
Cox to try coaxing the Internet into submission
Was InfoWorld's CTO of the Year award a year late?
VMWare VI4 renamed to vSphere
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
Size is all that matters...
by lmasanti April 15, 2008 10:25 AM PDT
quote:
"Salesforce.com offered to buy Zoho, a direct competitor of
Google Apps."

In SF/G talks... would Benioff "offered to buy Google"?

That's the difference when you talk to a smaller/similar/bigger
partner.
Reply to this comment
What about Yahoo?
by easybillonline April 17, 2008 6:59 PM PDT
I think Yahoo should buy ZOHO and add it to its small business services.
Reply to this comment
advertisement

With Chrome, Google reignites the OS wars

roundup Google Chrome OS, due in 2010, underscores the Web giant's cloud-computing ambitions and opens new competition with Microsoft.
• What Chrome OS has on Windows that Linux doesn't

Laying a guilt trip on military robots

q&a Georgia Tech's Ronald Arkin aims to configure armed robots with a built-in "guilt system" to help them avoid civilian casualties.

About News Blog

Recent posts on technology, trends, and more.

Add this feed to your online news reader

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right