Shannon Duffy, CMO, Asana, shares her journey from leading marketing efforts at Salesforce to transforming the way people work at Asana.
0:00
(upbeat music)
0:02
- Welcome to Inside the Ohana.
0:07
I'm Dan Darcy, Chief Customer Officer at Qualified.
0:10
And today I'm joined by my great friend,
0:12
Shannon Duffy, Shannon, how are you?
0:15
- I'm doing great.
0:16
Hello.
0:17
- Hello, okay.
0:19
I wanna dive right into our first segment, Ohana Origins.
0:22
So how did you discover Salesforce and start your journey?
0:27
- Yes, I like to say that Salesforce discovered me, Dan.
0:29
And that's because I was acquired by Salesforce in May of 2010.
0:34
And my company, a little tiny company called Jigsaw
0:37
was the first real business or people acquisition
0:41
that Salesforce had done.
0:42
Up into that time, they had done technology or some tuck-ins,
0:45
but we were like a full-fledged business
0:47
and we were one of the first, of course,
0:49
many since, many huge acquisition since then,
0:51
but we were the largest back in the day.
0:53
- Well, I mean, give me some of the details.
0:55
Like, what year was that?
0:57
What was your job, your title?
0:58
Like your initial impression?
1:00
- So, so many things.
1:01
So that was May 10th of 2010,
1:03
that date is sealed in my brain.
1:05
And I was like director of marketing,
1:07
we had like an eight-person marketing team.
1:09
I was the lead, so many impressions.
1:12
I was so like, overwhelmed.
1:13
People were welcoming, but also questioning.
1:17
And I tell people like Salesforce really,
1:19
Salesforce at that time wasn't big.
1:21
I think Salesforce was 3,000 people, maybe 4,000 people.
1:24
But you had like product marketing and PR and demand.
1:28
And I remember people would be like,
1:29
"Well, who does product marketing?"
1:31
I'd be like, "Me."
1:32
They're like, "Who does PR?"
1:33
I'm like, "Also me, who does demand gen?"
1:35
I'm like, "Still me."
1:35
And they were just like, "What?"
1:36
Like, we don't understand.
1:38
So that was kind of my first impression.
1:40
But also just being so impressed about this company
1:43
that had been such a force,
1:44
even back then in the industry, to kind of be inside
1:47
and see how they operated from a marketing perspective
1:49
was just really, really exciting for me back then.
1:53
- Well, you know, for the listeners and the viewers out there,
1:55
Jigsaw obviously was an acquisition company,
1:58
but then rebranded.
2:00
So what was the rebrand name?
2:01
- We rebranded as data.com.
2:04
And that, you know, we bought the URL.
2:06
We did a huge sort of dream force launch around it.
2:09
And yeah, data.com.
2:10
And I hear allegedly that maybe data.com
2:13
will come back for some other products someday.
2:14
So I don't know.
2:15
So stay tuned.
2:16
- I mean, it's always about the URL.
2:18
So glad we got that, you know.
2:20
- It's a great URL actually.
2:21
And Mark was the one that bought it,
2:23
which was very a good marketing move.
2:25
- All right, Shannon, it's time for you to brag a little
2:27
because I know you've had a lot of incredible success
2:30
during your time at Salesforce.
2:31
But what's one of the biggest successes you've had
2:34
while working with Salesforce
2:35
or something that you're really just proud of?
2:38
- I don't want to say that the,
2:39
no one expected me to be successful, right?
2:41
Like I was this Rando from the small company that we bought
2:44
and I'm like trying to figure stuff out.
2:46
And I worked on data and then I worked on part of
2:50
and then I worked on marketing cloud
2:51
and I worked on platform.
2:52
And then by the time I left, you know,
2:55
really their share, I was running all product marketing.
2:57
And so I just feel very proud that the company trusted me enough
3:00
to give me more challenges and helped kind of do my unique
3:04
brand of marketing across all of our products.
3:06
I'm very proud of that.
3:08
- Let's take the opposite side of the spectrum.
3:10
What would you say is one of the biggest lessons you learned?
3:12
- I learned so many lessons.
3:14
I mean, I'm definitely the marketer I am today
3:17
because of Salesforce and because of Mark
3:19
and all the great mentors I had along the way.
3:21
I think my biggest lesson is to be resilient.
3:23
Despite all the successes that, you know,
3:26
no one's journey is linear and I got some feedback
3:30
and some setbacks and there were failures along the way.
3:33
And at any time I let that get into my head and stepped out.
3:37
I wouldn't have continued to have that trajectory.
3:39
- Yeah. I mean, that well said
3:41
because I think it happened, it does happen to all of us.
3:44
It's just something that just continues on.
3:46
I mean, I obviously share in that, you know, in that path.
3:50
- We used to talk about it.
3:51
We had moments together back in the day, right?
3:53
- Yeah, absolutely.
3:55
Now, if you could go back and talk to the Shannon
3:58
that just started out with Salesforce
4:00
as you were coming on as, you know, through Jigsaw,
4:02
what advice would you give to yourself?
4:05
- I would say be fearless.
4:06
I actually thought about this a lot
4:08
and I would say be fearless.
4:09
I think I was so, again, in my own head
4:10
and like, oh, I'm different.
4:11
I came from an acquisition.
4:12
I don't know.
4:14
And what I learned throughout my tenure at Salesforce
4:16
is people wanted different.
4:18
Salesforce supports sort of bold ideas
4:22
and doing things different,
4:23
not always the status quo.
4:25
And I wish I had more confidence in myself
4:26
earlier out of my career to be like that
4:29
from the beginning versus having to evolve in that
4:31
through various different situations.
4:33
- I love it.
4:34
Be fearless because it's like your idea
4:36
is just as great as the idea next to you.
4:39
- And the fearless and the resilience go hand in hand, right?
4:42
'Cause then I'm your fearless and they're like,
4:43
nope, that's wrong.
4:44
I mean, I think honestly the first words
4:47
that Mark ever said to me was,
4:49
I see what you're saying, but you're totally wrong.
4:51
And he said it in a kind way.
4:52
Like it wasn't a bad thing, but again,
4:54
if I had been like, oops, well, I'm done.
4:55
Like where would I be now?
4:57
But I was like, oops,
4:58
I will give you another idea someday that you might not like,
5:01
but I'm gonna keep trying.
5:02
You're less, really, it's.
5:04
- I love it, I love it.
5:05
So I wanna ask you about the meaning of O'Hanna
5:07
because I asked this of all my guests
5:09
and everyone describes it a little bit differently.
5:11
But what does O'Hanna mean to you?
5:13
- I think what's fascinating to me about Salesforce
5:16
is there is this concept of friendly competition
5:20
or co-opertition or whatever that word is.
5:23
Like there is a level of competitiveness,
5:24
which in a lot of ways it's a good thing.
5:27
It pushes us to be better.
5:29
But if you were having a bad day
5:31
or if you need something from someone,
5:34
the organization will rally around you at the same time.
5:36
And so again, like we're all,
5:38
this group of people are working together
5:39
to do something bigger, to change an industry,
5:42
to market and sell in whole new ways.
5:45
And sometimes there's again,
5:47
some competition or some tension that that creates,
5:50
the things that really, really matter,
5:53
the people will step up and they will help
5:56
and they will do more work
5:57
and they will go outside of their way to help you.
5:59
So that's kind of what it means to me.
6:02
- Well, I love it.
6:02
Well, Dreamforce is coming up
6:04
and I know we're gonna get into where you are now,
6:07
which is at Asana and we'll talk a little bit more
6:10
about that in the next kind of segment and piece.
6:12
But Dreamforce, as you know,
6:13
is something that we would live and breathe
6:15
every single year and it was a big event.
6:17
And both you and I are not there
6:20
as part of Dreamforce anymore,
6:21
but I want to like ask you,
6:24
do you have any special Dreamforce moments or stories?
6:27
- There are so many, there are so many
6:29
and some of them probably are not appropriate
6:31
for podcasting right now, but I love Dreamforce.
6:35
Like Dreamforce is that like,
6:37
you're so tired and you're delirious,
6:39
but when you're done, you're like,
6:40
"Oh my God, I did this."
6:41
And everything from like being in the office
6:44
on a Sunday or nine o'clock at night
6:47
and having conversations about like which version of Cody,
6:50
the bear do we put on a slide?
6:52
All the way to like dancing on stage at concerts too.
6:56
My favorite Dreamforce story is one year
6:59
when I was working on "Part Out,"
7:00
we had the cast of Silicon Valley at an event
7:03
and that was when Silicon Valley was like the show, right?
7:05
But I think it was like a show forever,
7:07
but like for like tech people was the show,
7:10
like other people watched it and we had this event
7:13
and we did not realize we were gonna get the amount of interest.
7:16
And so we literally had people lining up
7:18
like the police were called like to see
7:20
the Silicon Valley people and we had the cast,
7:22
these guys that play these, you know, characters
7:25
and they were like, "What's going on?"
7:27
'Cause we needed to get police to escort us
7:29
from one building to the other
7:30
'cause there were so many people.
7:32
They're like, "Are these people here for us?"
7:34
I was like, "You don't realize in our industry
7:37
"how much the show means to us?"
7:38
They're like, "Dude, we live in LA.
7:39
"No one even knows who we are."
7:41
I'm like, "Welcome, welcome to the Bay Area and tech.
7:43
"You are rock stars here."
7:45
They're like, "That's awesome."
7:46
- I love that because, you know, it's funny
7:49
'cause I always used to tell people
7:52
I had a hard time watching it because we lived it every day
7:55
and I know it is something big,
7:57
but and everyone was like, "Is that real?"
7:59
No, it felt like a docu-series.
8:01
It didn't feel like a show.
8:03
(laughs)
8:04
Yeah.
8:05
I mean, and what's funny for people who don't recognize,
8:07
they actually, you know, the writers of Silicon Valley
8:10
would come to the different tech companies
8:12
and find these stories
8:14
and then they would get displayed in this.
8:16
Anyway, I know I digress, but it was,
8:19
that would fit a great draw.
8:20
What a great draw though.
8:21
I mean, of like getting people to come there.
8:23
So, you know, I know SANA is part
8:27
of the Salesforce ecosystem as well,
8:28
but are you looking to attend Dreamforce
8:32
or, you know, is SANA gonna, you know, like, I don't know,
8:35
if you are, like, what are you looking forward to?
8:37
- You know, Dreamforce is a forest and industry.
8:39
It's one of the worlds are just tech conferences.
8:41
It is where you go.
8:43
So we are working on sponsoring, exhibiting,
8:47
because that's where I think the industry goes,
8:49
to see who the vendors are
8:52
and how people who are using Salesforce
8:53
can be more productive, which is right in our sweet spot.
8:56
- Well, let's get into our next segment, What's Cooking?
8:58
So, Shannon, you're now the CMO,
9:00
the Chief Marketing Officer at SANA.
9:02
I want you to talk about how you got to where you are now
9:05
and what your journey has been like
9:06
to get to your current role.
9:08
- Yeah, so I had a great run at Salesforce.
9:10
I was there 12 years.
9:11
I loved it.
9:12
I learned so much and I'm so grateful for Salesforce
9:15
for teaching me so many things
9:16
and making the market, me, the marketer I was.
9:18
It was fascinating being a company like Salesforce
9:22
that literally was changing an industry and cheat.
9:25
Like, it was a revolution in a lot of ways
9:26
and changing the way, you know, software
9:28
and people use software and how they use software
9:30
to connect with customers.
9:32
And I think for me, like, I was very picky
9:35
about where I was gonna go.
9:37
And when I found SANA, it was such a natural next step for me
9:41
because I had been on the forefront of this revolution
9:43
around cloud and CRM and no software.
9:46
And I look at what we're doing as SANA is radically
9:49
transforming the way people work for the better,
9:51
how do you make work more productive,
9:52
how do you work more enjoyable?
9:54
And I was like, this is perfect.
9:56
This is the next step for me.
9:57
I see how this is the next changing force in the industry.
10:01
I see why every company is going to need this
10:03
and I can take all the amazing things
10:05
I learned at Salesforce and put it to, you know,
10:08
a different model, a different type of software
10:11
that is completely complementary to Salesforce
10:13
and not competitive in any way.
10:14
So that's kind of why I joined and why
10:16
I was really excited about SANA.
10:18
- Well, what challenges then are you seeing now
10:20
and like, how are you applying what you've learned
10:22
really at Salesforce to those challenges?
10:24
- So I think we're creating a,
10:27
I don't wanna say we're creating a category
10:29
because the category exists.
10:30
I think so many companies are just doing things the old way
10:33
using spreadsheets and Google Docs and things to,
10:40
that's how we work.
10:41
I mean, that's how we worked at Salesforce
10:43
a lot of the time.
10:44
And SANA is revolutionizing that.
10:46
We're like, how can you look at work differently?
10:48
And how are we facilitating cross-team collaboration
10:52
and how are we making sure that the work
10:53
that people are doing lines up to company goals
10:56
and objectives, right?
10:57
Like that's really meaningful.
10:58
Like, so the challenge is how do I make sure,
11:01
I know everyone knows that they need it.
11:03
How do I make sure every company know that they need it
11:04
that there's a better way.
11:06
It's not just about, you know, spreadsheets.
11:08
It's eliminating work about work
11:09
and it's freeing you up so you could focus on the things
11:12
that are important and having this sort of underlying,
11:14
you know, platform or layer that facilitates
11:17
these connections across an organization.
11:19
- Well, what is next then
11:20
and how are you guys shaping the future?
11:22
- We are doing a lot.
11:24
So we are, AI is huge for us.
11:28
The great thing about SANA is our underlying technology,
11:31
the work graph makes AI sort of seamlessly added
11:36
to our product.
11:37
And if you think about AI, everyone's talking about,
11:39
how do I use AI to make my work better?
11:41
Well, guess what?
11:41
A SANA has that built in, right?
11:43
So you're struggling with like,
11:44
how do I use AI for work by a SANA?
11:46
'Cause we have it for you built in
11:47
and you could use it right away.
11:49
So that's gonna be huge.
11:50
I mean, it's huge for everybody.
11:51
It's particularly huge for us and in this space.
11:54
- Well, let's get into our final segment,
11:56
the future forecast.
11:58
What do you envision as the future
11:59
of the Salesforce ecosystem?
12:01
- The Salesforce ecosystem is going to continue to expand.
12:05
I mean, when I joined Salesforce
12:07
and you were already there,
12:08
it was we had what Sales Cloud Service Cloud platform
12:11
and kind of data.com and look at where it is now
12:14
with marketing and commerce and, you know,
12:17
CBP data cloud technology analytics with Tableau Slack
12:21
for communication, it's just gonna get bigger.
12:24
I think that anything that you kind of need
12:28
to sort of run your business
12:30
or have that 360 degree view of your customer,
12:32
Salesforce will have kind of built into their platform.
12:35
- Well, can you give us a prediction
12:37
of what the future of Asana looks like?
12:39
- It's going to implement AI so fundamentally and so deeply.
12:44
It's going to be a completely seamless experience
12:47
for all our customers.
12:48
It's gonna help them be more productive.
12:49
It's gonna help them get worked on faster
12:51
and it's going to help them foster really deep connections
12:54
and collaborations at their company.
12:56
So they grow faster.
12:58
- I am so excited and our CEO Dustin is just such,
13:03
he is an expert in AI in a way
13:06
that I feel really, really lucky.
13:07
Like, you know, when I joined Asana,
13:09
you know, all of a sudden kind of AI came out of nowhere
13:11
and I feel so lucky that I joined a company that has a CEO
13:14
that is such an expert in this space
13:16
and is so passionate about having it part of our product
13:20
but also done with sort of like principles
13:22
of what it means and how AI plus humans work together
13:25
not sort of one or the other
13:27
or one displacing something else
13:28
to feel really, really lucky about that.
13:30
- What I love about your story is that you started with data
13:34
and now you're back in data, you know?
13:38
- Now we're back.
13:39
- Yeah, we're back, especially, I mean,
13:41
with training, you know, obviously these big learning models
13:44
and especially in the world of like how you think about,
13:47
you know, transforming work with Asana,
13:49
I think that's really awesome.
13:51
What advice do you have for aspiring marketing leaders?
13:54
- Be flexible.
13:57
I think if you're going to excel in marketing today,
14:02
you have to be constantly willing to pivot
14:05
and you have to be looking at what's happening,
14:06
looking at the trends, looking at what people are buying,
14:09
looking at the macro economic conditions
14:11
and you have to be constantly looking at your marketing
14:13
and being like, does this resonate with the buyer?
14:16
Is this relevant now?
14:17
And that can be really hard.
14:19
I think you need to be very data driven
14:23
but also creative.
14:24
And so what I talk to people like marketing leaders,
14:27
I'm like assess yourself on the various different skills
14:31
that you need, creativity, you know, messaging,
14:33
being data driven.
14:34
And if you rank lower than like a three out of five
14:38
in any of those, make sure you're hiring to augment you
14:41
and give those people sort of the autonomy and empowerment
14:44
to build out that aspect of your marketing work.
14:49
- All right, before letting you go,
14:50
let's have fun with a quick lightning round.
14:53
Are you ready?
14:54
- I'm so ready.
14:55
Let's do it.
14:56
- All right, Shannon, secret skill not on the resume.
15:00
I know all the moves to Britney Spears,
15:02
I'm a slave for you dance.
15:04
(laughs)
15:05
- Wow.
15:06
- I know you didn't know that about me.
15:07
- I did.
15:08
I mean, is that on YouTube?
15:09
So where is Britney?
15:10
- I know, it's actually that though.
15:12
- You feel like that's very late at night with those.
15:15
- Yes, exactly.
15:16
- In the keynote room, especially.
15:18
- Yeah, exactly, right before keynote.
15:20
- Yeah.
15:21
All right, best way to spend an evening after work.
15:24
- I honestly, I really love tacos and margaritas
15:27
in Mexican food, and if I could go to a Mexican restaurant
15:31
with friends and just sit and gab and drink margaritas,
15:34
that makes me very happy, very simple lady.
15:37
- Well, I'm a huge fan of Celia's and San Mateo's
15:39
so huge shout out to all of us.
15:40
- I went to Celia's yesterday, I love Celia's, it's so good.
15:44
- Yeah, yeah, I love it, I love it.
15:46
- Yeah, I went to the Menlo Park one, but yeah.
15:48
- Oh, that's nice, nice, nice.
15:49
All right, favorite brand of anything?
15:52
- Sephora.
15:54
I love Sephora, the makeup shop store,
15:57
and I almost like have an addiction there.
15:59
Like I need some sort of like special VIP card.
16:03
I go there so much.
16:04
Happy, happy, happy, happy.
16:05
- I think I have a feeling I know what this answer
16:07
to the next question is.
16:08
You just run front row to get your dream event.
16:11
What is it?
16:12
- Britney Spears and she'll tour again, mark my words.
16:15
- Yeah, I know.
16:17
Oh, free Britney and she's been freed, so.
16:20
Well, Shannon, this has been so much fun,
16:23
but before I let you go, I would love for you
16:25
to let the listeners know where they can find you.
16:27
And if there's anything else you'd like to share or plug,
16:30
like your open role, please.
16:34
- I will say, so many things.
16:36
You can find me on LinkedIn, Shannon Sullivan Duffy
16:39
or Shannon Duffy at asana.com.
16:42
I would encourage you to sign up for an asana org.
16:46
It's free and you will literally transform
16:48
the way you work and connect your goals
16:51
and collaborate across teams.
16:53
And that's it.
16:55
That's all I have to say. - Awesome.
16:57
Well, I loved hanging out with you, Shannon.
16:59
Thank you so much for the call today
17:01
and really appreciate your time.
17:03
- Always a pleasure.
17:04
(upbeat music)
17:07
(upbeat music)
17:09
(upbeat music)
17:12
(upbeat music)
17:15
(upbeat music)
17:17
(upbeat music)
17:20
(upbeat music)
17:22
(upbeat music)
17:25
(upbeat music)
17:28
(upbeat music)
17:30
(upbeat music)