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SaaS as the New Paradigm

Tomorrow in New York, Microsoft is releasing its latest edition of Office 2010 Web Apps which, in my mind, will mark Microsoft’s full acceptance of the SaaS software delivery model.  Furthermore, Microsoft’s development of web applications for the cash cow that is MS Office, officially shifts the standard from legacy software to SaaS.

In an interview with USA Today, Marc Benioff, the CEO of Salesforce.com said, “We’re entering an entirely new paradigm.”  This new paradigm is one where businesses and consumers alike are no longer bound to physical locations or forced to use complex technology to manage networks and files but freed to move about freely in the clouds. About this paradigm shift, ECM chief executive Joe Tucci said, “We’re now going through what I believe is pretty much going to be the biggest wave in the history of information technology.’’

The Shift

This technology shift, started by Salesforce (who commercialized SaaS), Google (who brought SaaS to the consumer), and Facebook (who made SaaS a way of life), among others, has been christened by the full fledged acceptance by Microsoft. Microsoft’s Steve Ballmer said, “This is the bet for the company, [and] for the cloud, we’re all in.”

Though Microsoft has fallen behind in the SaaS and cloud market over the years, it will be interesting to see how their entrance into web applications will affect other products; will Office web apps mark the beginning of the end to the rise of Google Docs? Or will it go down as another Zune: a failed attempt to catch up to its competitor? Will businesses rapidly upgrade their Office Suite to 2010? Or will take this time to look at other alternatives? Though the answers to these questions remain to be seen, I personally believe that there is much excess capacity in this growth market and that a large number of companies will get their piece of the pie; however, the SaaS providers are not the true winner in this movement. The true winner is the consumer, the IT manager, small business owner, and the typical employee at a large company.

Who Benefits?

Consumer — The consumer is not only a winner, but the consumer is the one ignited the SaaS/Cloud movement by their adoption of web apps such as Facebook, Twitter, Gmail and Skype that are not only nice and fun services, but have become ways of life for millions of people.

IT Manager – No longer do IT managers need to deal with the hassle of legacy software as the maintenance and upkeep will be done by the provider. The IT manager now can focus on servicing the people in the organization and make sure the software is being optimized within the organization.

Small Business Owner – Due to the scalability and pay as you go model followed by SaaS, a small business owner can level the playing field by using the very same technology that the large companies use. With NetDocuments for example, a 3 lawyer law firm uses the exact same product, from the exact same code as the lawyers at an international firm with thousands of lawyers use.

The Employee – Wouldn’t it be nice if the benefits that we as individuals get in our personal life from SaaS offerings were available in the workplace? That dream is now a reality for millions of workers who now interact with fellow employees, collaborate and share documents, and service clients not only from within the network or through some confusing remote connection, but from anywhere in the world using innovative web based applications like Salesforce, NetDocuments, Advologix, Google Apps, Office Web Apps, etc

The New Paradigm

The SaaS paradigm allows lawyers, investment advisors, accountants, etc, the freedom to not only work from anywhere, but allows them to collaborate on cases, reports and contracts seamlessly and efficiently without the need for FedEx, pin drives or a confusing mess of various email attachments. It also allows them to go to a marketplace like Google’s or Salesforce’s and find all the tools needed for their business in one place.

SaaS has matured, and the stage where IT people and business could sit back and observe the market develop has passed, those still in that mode are getting left behind, it is now time to accept a shift in paradigms and embrace the cloud as the standard.

Post authored by Danny Johnson of the NetDocuments sales and marketing team




NetDocuments loved T3 Conference for Registered Financial Advisors, Mint.com, Client Portals and more…

Post Authored by Leonard Johnson, VP Marketing, NetDocuments

Leonard Johnson and Marc Duncan attended T3 Conference in La Jolla, California this past week on February 17th to the 20th. We not only enjoyed beautiful, warm weather at the Hilton La Jolla Hotel adjacent to the world-class Torrey Pines Golf Course, but more importantly we enjoyed visiting with many of our customers and consultants of this prestigious financial investment advisory industry. Marc works closely with our customers and prospective customers in this industry and he stated, “it was like a family reunion.”  We have wonderful customers who are great to work with and we greatly appreciate their business.

Torrey Pines Golf Course

NetDocuments provides an easy-to-use document management that provides these firms with business continuity, client-centric document organization, SEC/FINRA compliance, and client sharing. We also provide a market-leading Salesforce integration and as firms move that that CRM, they all migrate to NetDocuments for their document management.

Leonard presented in two panels, one on document management and the other on client portals. There were about 40 in attendance to each one.  The document management panel was interesting as we were positioned along with two other companies that were legacy, server-based DM and one other SaaS DM. It was clear by the questions and the follow up with people that this market knows that the industry trend is clearly moving to SaaS, cloud-computing based applications.  We had a significant interest following both of these sessions.

I would like to share a few observations regarding this market and potential trends that would be interesting. There are too many vendors, e.g. portfolio planning or analysis software, trying to provide a “one solution fits all” approach, attempting to offer everything and the kitchen sink…which only confuses the customer and provides less than best-of-breed in each solution. Client portals are one of these solutions that everyone tries to offer. Document archiving is another area that applies in some cases.

Additionally, there have been worthwhile attempts, e.g. YourSilverBullet, that has brought vendors together under the guise that they will “technically integrate” with one another and provide customer solutions. But in speaking with their representatives, they acknowledge that their standards (two years in the making) remain elusive (i.e. years away from being defined) and that the underlying focus of this group appears to be co-marketing and leveraging their membership for joint marketing activities and gaining discounts on events and advertising. I am concerned they are ignoring the market needs and what the customer wants.

When speaking with Bruce Moulton, creator of the XLR8 overlay for Salesforce, owner of consulting firm Moulton Strategic Partners and Director of Operations for Tolleson Wealth Management, he defined four essential applications needed in every RIA firm: 1)portfolio management software, 2) financial planning software, 3) Contact Relationship Management (CRM) and 4) document management (along with backend email archiving for compliance purposes), and every firm should have the choice of best in breed products/services. This makes sense to me. The advisor interface throughout the day is typically their CRM. Document management should not be offered by the CRM provider but should tightly integrate, and the same for any financial planning software.

Bruce feels that a client portal is a logical extension of a document management solution, since it can take advantage of the full document collaboration, permissioning, security, etc., yet not force the firm into maintaining multiple copies of the same document in disparate systems.

I was quite intrigued during the client portal session when one person in the front row stated that “Mint.com” should be the front-end client portal to the client. Now that’s a fresh approach (no pun intended). I really appreciated that comment as I tend to agree.

Here’s why? Wouldn’t it be amazing if NetDocuments integrated with Mint.com (now owned by Intuit) whereby the client or person not only managed their banking accounts and personal financial information with Mint.com, a free service by the way and thus can capture wide adoption, but had the investment statements sent directly there as well (as they now do), and there was a tab or integrated, single-sign on page within Mint.com to access the investment advisors work and documents being shared by him/her, i.e. NetDocuments client portal embedded within Mint.com.  NetDocuments would and should be embedded within the advisors CRM (which we do today with Salesforce.com and in future with Redtail.com), and NetDocuments should be accessible and embedded within the client’s Mint.com.as the portal or secure link from advisor to client. Mint.com truly becomes a client portal to his/her financial world. Communication by the advisor would be direct with the client via the related document and collaborative portal (NetDocuments) provided by the advisor but linked to Mint.com for a single client portal.  The accountant and the lawyer who works with the same client could also share via the netdocuments portal-all secured and all compliant across industry regulatory boards.

Interesting…. any thoughts?




A Google Wave Q&A

The Google Wave preview has been out for a little while now and a few of our employees have been testing it out. We talked to Danny Johnson of the Sales and Marketing team to see his initial thoughts about Google Wave.

Q: I know a lot of people covet invites to the Google Wave preview, how did you get on to Wave?

Danny Johnson getting ready to ride a wave

Danny Johnson getting ready to ride a wave

A: I applied to get a Wave invite from Google but I wasn’t on their initial list of guests; however, I knew that everyone that got invited received a limited number of invites to give to others so I did the logical thing and got on Twitter looking for one.  I did a search and found a Twitter user named @madmikeuk who was offering invites. I sent him a quick tweet and he in turn, invited me to wave.

Q: What were your initial thoughts when you started waving?

A: At first I didn’t know anyone else on Wave so I searched “with:public” for public waves and saw a wave for people from Utah and one for lawyers, so I joined those. My first thoughts were that it was pretty slow, and I guess a lot of people have noticed that and Google has said that this will not be an issue when beta comes out. Other than that, it is great! One specific way I think Wave will be used is at conferences and trade shows. Right now at trade conferences people are live tweeting at the shows but I think Wave will be a better platform for that. If I were a conference organizer, I would create various Waves for attendees to join to discuss events and broadcast notes from sessions. For example, Salesforce.com is holding their Dreamforce conference this week and there already is a wave for broadcasting the keynote session. Also, for those that were at ILTA this year, we ran a contest on Twitter which went really well. Keep this on the down low, but maybe next year we’ll do a contest using Google Wave.

Q: What else have you done on Google Wave?

A: I’ve done a little file sharing and tried to do some collaboration work but not a lot. I’ve used some of the gadgets though. For example, I started a Wave about the Utah Jazz and posted a Yes/No/Maybe gadget that comes standard for every wave user and asked if the Jazz would win their division. I added a few of my contacts and made the wave public. After about a week I checked back and a number of fellow Jazz fans had joined in on the discussion. Most of the comments however, were frustrated rants as the Jazz are struggling right now.

Q: Thanks for your time Danny.

A: No problem. If anyone reading this wants to wave with me, my Wave address is dannymjohnson@googlewave.com.

After talking to Danny, we asked Leonard Johnson, our VP of Marketing about his thoughts on how Wave will interact with NetDocuments.

Leonard: We announced in August our intention to integrate NetDocuments document management and collaboration service with Google Wave.  The majority of our customers are professional service firms, including law, accounting and financial advisors. The common thread is servicing their clients. There is a growing trend towards client portals in these industries to increase the value of their services and to have a “place” on the Web where their clients can go to interact, converse, share content, deliver information and in essence, increase client loyalty. We see Wave as a complimentary extension to NetDocuments–the home or repository to the intellectual assets of our customers–with collaborative features and also ease of use in collaborating through the social media reach of Google.  We share the vision of going beyond email.

Happy Waving!




NetDocuments is 16th highest rated app on Salesforce AppExchange

It has been over three years since the NetDocuments/Salesforce.com integration was developed and listed on the Salesforce AppExchange.

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Over that time, NetDocuments and Salesforce have built a strong base of joint customers that are leveraging the power of SaaS to handle their CRM and content management needs.

There are currently 811 apps listed on the AppExchange and the NetDocuments app continues to be one of the most popular and highly rated:

1.  NetDocuments is the 16th highest rated app on the AppExchange.

2.  It is the 58rd most popular app in the last 30 days (As of Oct 15th).

3.  It is the 53rd most popular app of all time.

There are currently 25 total reviews on the AppExchange from customers that have integrated NetDocuments with Salesforce. One user said, “NetDocuments if a very easy to use and works great within Salesforce. We are able to access files in NetDocuments without opening another site. It is very convenient.”

The NetDocuments go-to guy for all things Salesforce related is Marc Duncan. He has been helping customers implement this integration since it was developed and has seen very good results.

“There is a lot of buzz about the NetDocuments/Salesforce integration and it is all justified…these two services integrate so well together and really create some excitement. And when it comes to working with NetDocuments/Salesforce customers, one word comes to mind…’excited.’  Once they see how comprehensive and powerful the integration is they begin to get very excited about the possibilities it brings.”

Since it was founded, Salesforce has been a leading advocate of SaaS and cloud computing technology and is touted as the world’s number one sales application.

NetDocuments has also leveraged the power of crowds and offers a Marketplace which is similar to the Salesforce AppExchange. The Marketplace currently includes 29 apps that help customers specialize and customize their NetDocuments use. Some of the more popular apps include Payne Group’s Metadata Assistant, Quickfile for Outlook and Legal MacPac.