Marketing automation and CRM: How we got here
Visit Qualified to learn the history of marketing automation and customer relationship management. The goal of creating a predictable selling model for B2B is here finally here.
Visit Qualified to learn the history of marketing automation and customer relationship management. The goal of creating a predictable selling model for B2B is here finally here.
For many people, even those in the technology industry, terminology like Marketing Automation and Customer Relationship Management can often seem overwhelming. In order to understand how we define the market today, it’s sometimes useful to take a look back at how the marketing automation industry evolved, and to understand the current world of marketing automation software, it’s sometimes helpful to rewind the clock, all the way back to the beginning of the customer relationship management industry.
Customer Relationship Management, also known as CRM, is a term coined back in the 1990’s by software industry veterans who were creating technology that was designed to help a company manage its relationships and interactions with existing customers and potential customers. The idea was simple, if you could track every interaction your company had with its customers, you could serve them better and build better and stronger relationships over time. Today when people talk about CRM, they are usually talking about a customer relationship management software, like Salesforce.
The early vision of customer relationship management software was that you would store data about your customers in one system, and then every customer facing person at your company who interacted with your customers would be able to see everything. The three major departments at B2B companies that interact with customers are commonly Sales, Customer Support, and Marketing.
Having one centralized system for sales, support, and marketing would allow a company to coordinate activities around a customer. Having a so-called “360 degree view of the customer” allows a company better support a customer, target marketing campaigns to a customer, and sell more products to a customer over time.
The company that many people credit for having the original vision for CRM and creating the most comprehensive customer relationship management software was Siebel, founded by long-time Oracle executive Tom Siebel. Siebel created a customer relationship management software with apps to automate the entire sales, support, and marketing process.
All 3 apps were tied into one centralized database giving everyone the single view of the customer. But the system had one major drawback, it was built as on premise software, which meant that it was incredibly expensive for a company to buy the software, buy computers, run a datacenter, and hire people to make it all work.
Enter Salesforce, the company that pioneered cloud computing. Salesforce started with a vision to replace on premise CRM software with a new style of customer relationship management software that would be run and accessed on the Web. But being a smaller company, they couldn’t tackle every aspect of CRM out of the gate. So they focused first on creating a salesforce automation app, hence the name of the company. And while there was early functionality in Salesforce for customer support and marketing, the functionality was quite limited.
With the early success of Salesforce and their salesforce automation app, customers gathered annually in San Francisco at the Dreamforce conference to share ideas, tips, and techniques for creating a modern customer relationship management software running on the Web. A pivotal presentation was delivered in 2006 by Tien Tzuo, one of the earliest executives at Salesforce and now founder and CEO of Zuora. His presentation was titled “21st Century Marketing” and in it he described how Salesforce (the company) had created a predictable selling model. Here is the key slide from his presentation:
At the time there were many in the audience who viewed his presentation and were already working on building marketing automation software for marketers that could be used to run campaigns, generate leads, and plug the new marketing process into Salesforce. At the conference were the founders of new marketing automation software companies that would come to create the next generation of Marketing Automation software: Eloqua, Marketo, Pardot, and Hubspot.
These were early stage companies at the time that could focus entirely on automating the marketing process that Tien laid out in his now infamous presentation. In doing so they set out to create an end-to-end system that, along with Salesforce, could automate the entire marketing and sales process. Early diagrams of that process looked something like this:
Today the total addressable market for B2B marketing automation software is north of $4 Billion globally and it’s no secret that the pioneers of Marketing Automation technology have all been insanely successful. Eloqua ended up being purchased by Oracle in 2012 for nearly $900 Million. Marketo sold to Vista Equity and later to Adobe in 2018 for $4.75 Billion, and Pardot sold to Salesforce in 2012 for $100 Million. Today Hubspot is a publicly traded company with a valuation of more than $5 Billion. And with such a huge opportunity there are numerous other players that compete for market share as well including ActOn, Unica, among others.
Today over 200,000 companies globally have some form of CRM in place, and the original vision of customer relationship management software still resonates with companies large and small. The combination of existing technologies and new technologies (like conversational marketing tools) will continue to push the envelope and help companies manage their interactions with customers to serve them better and build better and stronger relationships over time.
Stay up to date with weekly drops of fresh B2B marketing and sales content.
Visit Qualified to learn the history of marketing automation and customer relationship management. The goal of creating a predictable selling model for B2B is here finally here.
For many people, even those in the technology industry, terminology like Marketing Automation and Customer Relationship Management can often seem overwhelming. In order to understand how we define the market today, it’s sometimes useful to take a look back at how the marketing automation industry evolved, and to understand the current world of marketing automation software, it’s sometimes helpful to rewind the clock, all the way back to the beginning of the customer relationship management industry.
Customer Relationship Management, also known as CRM, is a term coined back in the 1990’s by software industry veterans who were creating technology that was designed to help a company manage its relationships and interactions with existing customers and potential customers. The idea was simple, if you could track every interaction your company had with its customers, you could serve them better and build better and stronger relationships over time. Today when people talk about CRM, they are usually talking about a customer relationship management software, like Salesforce.
The early vision of customer relationship management software was that you would store data about your customers in one system, and then every customer facing person at your company who interacted with your customers would be able to see everything. The three major departments at B2B companies that interact with customers are commonly Sales, Customer Support, and Marketing.
Having one centralized system for sales, support, and marketing would allow a company to coordinate activities around a customer. Having a so-called “360 degree view of the customer” allows a company better support a customer, target marketing campaigns to a customer, and sell more products to a customer over time.
The company that many people credit for having the original vision for CRM and creating the most comprehensive customer relationship management software was Siebel, founded by long-time Oracle executive Tom Siebel. Siebel created a customer relationship management software with apps to automate the entire sales, support, and marketing process.
All 3 apps were tied into one centralized database giving everyone the single view of the customer. But the system had one major drawback, it was built as on premise software, which meant that it was incredibly expensive for a company to buy the software, buy computers, run a datacenter, and hire people to make it all work.
Enter Salesforce, the company that pioneered cloud computing. Salesforce started with a vision to replace on premise CRM software with a new style of customer relationship management software that would be run and accessed on the Web. But being a smaller company, they couldn’t tackle every aspect of CRM out of the gate. So they focused first on creating a salesforce automation app, hence the name of the company. And while there was early functionality in Salesforce for customer support and marketing, the functionality was quite limited.
With the early success of Salesforce and their salesforce automation app, customers gathered annually in San Francisco at the Dreamforce conference to share ideas, tips, and techniques for creating a modern customer relationship management software running on the Web. A pivotal presentation was delivered in 2006 by Tien Tzuo, one of the earliest executives at Salesforce and now founder and CEO of Zuora. His presentation was titled “21st Century Marketing” and in it he described how Salesforce (the company) had created a predictable selling model. Here is the key slide from his presentation:
At the time there were many in the audience who viewed his presentation and were already working on building marketing automation software for marketers that could be used to run campaigns, generate leads, and plug the new marketing process into Salesforce. At the conference were the founders of new marketing automation software companies that would come to create the next generation of Marketing Automation software: Eloqua, Marketo, Pardot, and Hubspot.
These were early stage companies at the time that could focus entirely on automating the marketing process that Tien laid out in his now infamous presentation. In doing so they set out to create an end-to-end system that, along with Salesforce, could automate the entire marketing and sales process. Early diagrams of that process looked something like this:
Today the total addressable market for B2B marketing automation software is north of $4 Billion globally and it’s no secret that the pioneers of Marketing Automation technology have all been insanely successful. Eloqua ended up being purchased by Oracle in 2012 for nearly $900 Million. Marketo sold to Vista Equity and later to Adobe in 2018 for $4.75 Billion, and Pardot sold to Salesforce in 2012 for $100 Million. Today Hubspot is a publicly traded company with a valuation of more than $5 Billion. And with such a huge opportunity there are numerous other players that compete for market share as well including ActOn, Unica, among others.
Today over 200,000 companies globally have some form of CRM in place, and the original vision of customer relationship management software still resonates with companies large and small. The combination of existing technologies and new technologies (like conversational marketing tools) will continue to push the envelope and help companies manage their interactions with customers to serve them better and build better and stronger relationships over time.
Stay up to date with weekly drops of fresh B2B marketing and sales content.
Visit Qualified to learn the history of marketing automation and customer relationship management. The goal of creating a predictable selling model for B2B is here finally here.
For many people, even those in the technology industry, terminology like Marketing Automation and Customer Relationship Management can often seem overwhelming. In order to understand how we define the market today, it’s sometimes useful to take a look back at how the marketing automation industry evolved, and to understand the current world of marketing automation software, it’s sometimes helpful to rewind the clock, all the way back to the beginning of the customer relationship management industry.
Customer Relationship Management, also known as CRM, is a term coined back in the 1990’s by software industry veterans who were creating technology that was designed to help a company manage its relationships and interactions with existing customers and potential customers. The idea was simple, if you could track every interaction your company had with its customers, you could serve them better and build better and stronger relationships over time. Today when people talk about CRM, they are usually talking about a customer relationship management software, like Salesforce.
The early vision of customer relationship management software was that you would store data about your customers in one system, and then every customer facing person at your company who interacted with your customers would be able to see everything. The three major departments at B2B companies that interact with customers are commonly Sales, Customer Support, and Marketing.
Having one centralized system for sales, support, and marketing would allow a company to coordinate activities around a customer. Having a so-called “360 degree view of the customer” allows a company better support a customer, target marketing campaigns to a customer, and sell more products to a customer over time.
The company that many people credit for having the original vision for CRM and creating the most comprehensive customer relationship management software was Siebel, founded by long-time Oracle executive Tom Siebel. Siebel created a customer relationship management software with apps to automate the entire sales, support, and marketing process.
All 3 apps were tied into one centralized database giving everyone the single view of the customer. But the system had one major drawback, it was built as on premise software, which meant that it was incredibly expensive for a company to buy the software, buy computers, run a datacenter, and hire people to make it all work.
Enter Salesforce, the company that pioneered cloud computing. Salesforce started with a vision to replace on premise CRM software with a new style of customer relationship management software that would be run and accessed on the Web. But being a smaller company, they couldn’t tackle every aspect of CRM out of the gate. So they focused first on creating a salesforce automation app, hence the name of the company. And while there was early functionality in Salesforce for customer support and marketing, the functionality was quite limited.
With the early success of Salesforce and their salesforce automation app, customers gathered annually in San Francisco at the Dreamforce conference to share ideas, tips, and techniques for creating a modern customer relationship management software running on the Web. A pivotal presentation was delivered in 2006 by Tien Tzuo, one of the earliest executives at Salesforce and now founder and CEO of Zuora. His presentation was titled “21st Century Marketing” and in it he described how Salesforce (the company) had created a predictable selling model. Here is the key slide from his presentation:
At the time there were many in the audience who viewed his presentation and were already working on building marketing automation software for marketers that could be used to run campaigns, generate leads, and plug the new marketing process into Salesforce. At the conference were the founders of new marketing automation software companies that would come to create the next generation of Marketing Automation software: Eloqua, Marketo, Pardot, and Hubspot.
These were early stage companies at the time that could focus entirely on automating the marketing process that Tien laid out in his now infamous presentation. In doing so they set out to create an end-to-end system that, along with Salesforce, could automate the entire marketing and sales process. Early diagrams of that process looked something like this:
Today the total addressable market for B2B marketing automation software is north of $4 Billion globally and it’s no secret that the pioneers of Marketing Automation technology have all been insanely successful. Eloqua ended up being purchased by Oracle in 2012 for nearly $900 Million. Marketo sold to Vista Equity and later to Adobe in 2018 for $4.75 Billion, and Pardot sold to Salesforce in 2012 for $100 Million. Today Hubspot is a publicly traded company with a valuation of more than $5 Billion. And with such a huge opportunity there are numerous other players that compete for market share as well including ActOn, Unica, among others.
Today over 200,000 companies globally have some form of CRM in place, and the original vision of customer relationship management software still resonates with companies large and small. The combination of existing technologies and new technologies (like conversational marketing tools) will continue to push the envelope and help companies manage their interactions with customers to serve them better and build better and stronger relationships over time.
Stay up to date with weekly drops of fresh B2B marketing and sales content.
For many people, even those in the technology industry, terminology like Marketing Automation and Customer Relationship Management can often seem overwhelming. In order to understand how we define the market today, it’s sometimes useful to take a look back at how the marketing automation industry evolved, and to understand the current world of marketing automation software, it’s sometimes helpful to rewind the clock, all the way back to the beginning of the customer relationship management industry.
Customer Relationship Management, also known as CRM, is a term coined back in the 1990’s by software industry veterans who were creating technology that was designed to help a company manage its relationships and interactions with existing customers and potential customers. The idea was simple, if you could track every interaction your company had with its customers, you could serve them better and build better and stronger relationships over time. Today when people talk about CRM, they are usually talking about a customer relationship management software, like Salesforce.
The early vision of customer relationship management software was that you would store data about your customers in one system, and then every customer facing person at your company who interacted with your customers would be able to see everything. The three major departments at B2B companies that interact with customers are commonly Sales, Customer Support, and Marketing.
Having one centralized system for sales, support, and marketing would allow a company to coordinate activities around a customer. Having a so-called “360 degree view of the customer” allows a company better support a customer, target marketing campaigns to a customer, and sell more products to a customer over time.
The company that many people credit for having the original vision for CRM and creating the most comprehensive customer relationship management software was Siebel, founded by long-time Oracle executive Tom Siebel. Siebel created a customer relationship management software with apps to automate the entire sales, support, and marketing process.
All 3 apps were tied into one centralized database giving everyone the single view of the customer. But the system had one major drawback, it was built as on premise software, which meant that it was incredibly expensive for a company to buy the software, buy computers, run a datacenter, and hire people to make it all work.
Enter Salesforce, the company that pioneered cloud computing. Salesforce started with a vision to replace on premise CRM software with a new style of customer relationship management software that would be run and accessed on the Web. But being a smaller company, they couldn’t tackle every aspect of CRM out of the gate. So they focused first on creating a salesforce automation app, hence the name of the company. And while there was early functionality in Salesforce for customer support and marketing, the functionality was quite limited.
With the early success of Salesforce and their salesforce automation app, customers gathered annually in San Francisco at the Dreamforce conference to share ideas, tips, and techniques for creating a modern customer relationship management software running on the Web. A pivotal presentation was delivered in 2006 by Tien Tzuo, one of the earliest executives at Salesforce and now founder and CEO of Zuora. His presentation was titled “21st Century Marketing” and in it he described how Salesforce (the company) had created a predictable selling model. Here is the key slide from his presentation:
At the time there were many in the audience who viewed his presentation and were already working on building marketing automation software for marketers that could be used to run campaigns, generate leads, and plug the new marketing process into Salesforce. At the conference were the founders of new marketing automation software companies that would come to create the next generation of Marketing Automation software: Eloqua, Marketo, Pardot, and Hubspot.
These were early stage companies at the time that could focus entirely on automating the marketing process that Tien laid out in his now infamous presentation. In doing so they set out to create an end-to-end system that, along with Salesforce, could automate the entire marketing and sales process. Early diagrams of that process looked something like this:
Today the total addressable market for B2B marketing automation software is north of $4 Billion globally and it’s no secret that the pioneers of Marketing Automation technology have all been insanely successful. Eloqua ended up being purchased by Oracle in 2012 for nearly $900 Million. Marketo sold to Vista Equity and later to Adobe in 2018 for $4.75 Billion, and Pardot sold to Salesforce in 2012 for $100 Million. Today Hubspot is a publicly traded company with a valuation of more than $5 Billion. And with such a huge opportunity there are numerous other players that compete for market share as well including ActOn, Unica, among others.
Today over 200,000 companies globally have some form of CRM in place, and the original vision of customer relationship management software still resonates with companies large and small. The combination of existing technologies and new technologies (like conversational marketing tools) will continue to push the envelope and help companies manage their interactions with customers to serve them better and build better and stronger relationships over time.
Discover how we can help you convert more prospects into pipeline–right from your website.