In this episode, Bala Balabaskaran shares his firsthand experiences of crafting automation solutions that played a pivotal role in Salesforce's expansion during the 2010s.
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(upbeat music)
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- Welcome to Inside the O'Hanna.
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I'm Dan Darcy, Chief Customer Officer at Qualified.
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And today I'm joined by Bala.
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Bala, how are you?
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- Doing great, Dan, how are you?
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- So I wanna dive right into our first segment,
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O'Hanna Origins.
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How did you discover Salesforce
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and what started your journey?
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- Yeah, no, Salesforce for me was all Maria Martinez.
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I mean, she was the one that talked to me about Salesforce.
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I had worked for her at Microsoft
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and I left Microsoft to go do a startup.
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And Maria actually was in town as it was wrapping up
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that startup opening up the Seattle office for Salesforce.
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And she said, "I want you to talk to a few people
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"because I have this problem.
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"I'd like you to help."
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And so that's kinda how I got introduced to Salesforce.
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You know, I was in the Microsoft bubble
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and yeah, Maria was the person that kind of pulled me in.
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- That's great.
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And now Maria Martinez, just for the listeners and viewers
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or is the, she's the COO.
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- COO, COO at Cisco.
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- COO at Cisco now, which is,
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she's had an incredible journey.
1:14
She was the, you know, basically head of customer success
1:17
at Salesforce for a very long time.
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But give me the details.
1:20
You know, what was your job?
1:22
You know, what was your title?
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What was your first initial impression?
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- Yeah, no, I think when Maria called me, she said,
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"Hey, look, I've got a team of people
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"that are trying to figure out processes around org 62."
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I said, "What is org 62?
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"That got me interested."
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And, you know, and then as I got talking to people,
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just understood this behemoth of an internal instance
1:46
that we had that was, you know, a showcase of Salesforce.
1:49
Yeah.
1:50
And it was a great showcase for everything
1:53
that the platform can do.
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But it's also a great showcase for how people
1:57
can get things wrong on it.
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And, you know, and from a scale standpoint,
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struggle with how to sort of move the organization forward.
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So, she had known me at Microsoft coming in
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from the product side, so I've never worked
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in an operational role.
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And her point to me was,
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I want you to take a look at this
2:17
from a product perspective,
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like how would you use automation to solve this problem.
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And that was kind of how what got me interested in it.
2:25
And the scale of the issue seemed like it was
2:29
the right time for Salesforce as it was, you know,
2:32
we were scaling like crazy at around the 2012 timeframe
2:36
when I joined.
2:37
And so it was a really interesting problem
2:40
for me to dig my hands into.
2:41
It was a quite meaty one.
2:42
So that's how I got started.
2:45
And then we actually had a team called GoToMarketScale.
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That was the name of the team that Maria had created.
2:53
So I took over that team working with IT
2:57
to sort of look at all the pre-sales, sales
3:01
and co-sales processes on top of our internal instance
3:04
and just kind of scaling it.
3:06
And after about six months of that,
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we figured it was too big for one person to handle.
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So we kind of split the sales and the post sales.
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So I took on more of the sales side of the house
3:18
and inherited the annual planning cycle,
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which we used to call Fast Start or Quilfer Growth.
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And that was working with over 400 people
3:28
across the company to build out territory models,
3:31
the compensation models and so on for the sales team.
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And then also all of the product owners
3:40
that worked on processes on August 62,
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the internal instance of Salesforce.
3:46
And the operational side of it,
3:50
so the field operation side.
3:51
So regular day to day management of territories
3:55
and accounts and data quality and all of that fun stuff.
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- Yeah, I mean, so GoFor Growth is definitely
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a bohemith project.
4:04
And I mean, if you think about our calendar,
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Salesforce's fiscal year start date is Feb 1.
4:11
That's when everyone needs to hit the ground running
4:12
for the new fiscal year.
4:14
- GoFor Growth's planning starts when?
4:17
- July, August.
4:18
- July, August, yeah, yeah.
4:20
Because part of the process was actually updating data,
4:23
cleaning up data and doing all of that stuff.
4:26
So we used to go through these massive data projects
4:28
for a month and a half or so.
4:31
And then you start building out what the growth plans are,
4:35
building out territories, capacity models,
4:37
how many people are we gonna hire,
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what roles are we gonna build.
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So all of that process took us a good six to eight months
4:45
to kind of get in place.
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And then we would February 1st, you know, for school,
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we would deploy it after the start of the fiscal year
4:53
and things would sort of settle down around March, April.
4:57
So we got a couple.
4:58
- And then you took a vacation.
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- For a couple of months, we were back at it again.
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- Yeah, well, Paul, I want you to brag a little
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because I know you've had incredible success
5:08
during your time at Salesforce.
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But what would you say is one of the biggest successes
5:11
you've had while working at Salesforce
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or something that you're just really proud of?
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- So I think my time at Salesforce
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I really focused on kind of turning this,
5:22
what was a very heavy manpower spreadsheet,
5:26
kind of a problem into a lot of auditions.
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So we had great support from our IT organization,
5:33
Russ Mykord and his team to really look at the problem
5:38
and build out automation that would sort of help us
5:40
deliver territories and quota plans and things like that
5:45
before school.
5:47
Believe it or not, up until that point,
5:49
they hadn't delivered territories or quota letters by school.
5:53
So when the year kicked off,
5:55
it was there was still some time before the reps understood
5:59
what they were selling and so on.
6:01
So the automation took us about a couple of years to build
6:04
and put in place.
6:04
And I'm happy to say that when I exited that role,
6:09
that was the first time in like 17, 18 year history
6:13
of the company that we had actually delivered territories
6:15
by school.
6:16
So that was quite a big uplift in terms of automation.
6:22
But we learned a lot,
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we learned a lot about how we can do this at scale.
6:29
Salesforce was growing at, I think like 600 or 700 new reps
6:33
every year in all parts of the business.
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And we were acquiring companies,
6:38
I think the exact target was an acquisition around that time.
6:40
So we were just adding to the team
6:44
and continuing to do that with people is just not possible.
6:48
And so automation was the way out.
6:51
And that's really kind of,
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I drove a lot of that project with Ross
6:56
and the rest of the team to sort of build that out
6:59
for Salesforce internally.
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- I mean, that's incredible.
7:02
So on the opposite side of the spectrum,
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what would you say was your biggest lesson learned?
7:07
- I think the inherent complexity in the tribal knowledge
7:12
was something that I didn't expect.
7:16
So you go in and when you approach the problem
7:18
as an automation problem,
7:19
you kind of miss out on so much of the tribal knowledge
7:24
that's built into org 62.
7:26
And it almost felt like every little thing you touch
7:29
impacted some team somewhere.
7:32
And so that I think was one of the biggest learnings for me,
7:36
approaching a problem like that.
7:38
You know, I was a product guy before that.
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So for us, we didn't have to look at how the system
7:43
was implemented, we just built new features.
7:46
And that was, you know, perfectly the way we approached it.
7:50
But with this sort of an environment
7:53
where you have all of the businesses and processes
7:55
running on top of it, it was always interesting
7:59
and learning experience for me to sort of understand
8:01
all of those relationships and all of the unset,
8:04
undocumented kind of things that happened.
8:07
- Yeah, I mean, I'm actually curious on that, you know,
8:11
with the tribal knowledge, how do you take tribal knowledge
8:13
and code it into software?
8:15
How did you think about that?
8:16
- I'll tell you an example of something that we needed to do
8:19
before we started the automation, right?
8:21
So we would think about sales policies.
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We were about a 4,500 sales person organization at that time.
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But we didn't have sales policies written down, right?
8:31
And there was no policy organization
8:34
that looked to standardize how things were written down
8:38
and so on.
8:39
So a lot of it was assumptions that the ops teams
8:42
were the creators, the arbitrators and the executors
8:45
of policy and there was none of it was written down.
8:48
So one of the first things that we had to do
8:51
was actually say, okay, let's get people in a room
8:53
and actually start writing down some of the critical policies
8:56
that we're looking at automation.
8:59
Because without that it's impossible to scale it, right?
9:02
And because everybody came in with their own assumptions
9:04
and as you know, sales and especially in field ops,
9:08
every interaction is emotionally charged
9:11
because this is how the sales team makes money.
9:13
So, you know, there's a winner and there's a loser
9:17
and we have to arbitrate that
9:19
and doing that without written down policies
9:22
and thought processing to it was a problem.
9:27
And so that's one of the first things we solved
9:29
is let's write it down, let's publish it
9:31
so that everybody knows here are the rules
9:33
of the road in a sense.
9:35
- Wow, that's pretty crazy, that's awesome.
9:38
Now if you could go back to Balla
9:40
just starting out at Salesforce,
9:42
what advice would you give yourself?
9:44
- I think, you know, one of the things that I learned
9:47
to do through my tenure is actually take things
9:52
a little bit slower than I actually intended to do.
9:57
I was like, you know, I want things to move fast
9:59
and Salesforce was a startup culture
10:01
so why aren't people making decisions
10:03
and getting things moving, you know?
10:05
That was kind of the way I approached it
10:07
and not realizing that the organization
10:11
is actually pretty large and huge
10:14
behind this sort of facade of a startup
10:17
that was so many things that was going on
10:19
which is, you know, big huge credit to Salesforce
10:23
to be able to behave in that way
10:24
but it also meant that you couldn't, you know,
10:27
just make changes on the fly and move things quicker.
10:31
So that was a big learning for me
10:33
is just slow down and really understand
10:35
the organization first before getting into the job itself.
10:42
- Nice, nice.
10:43
So I asked this question of all my guests
10:47
because everyone answers it a little bit differently
10:50
but I want to ask you,
10:52
what is the meaning of Oohana to you?
10:55
What does that mean for you?
10:56
- So for me, you know,
10:58
I, for the longest time I didn't know what it meant,
11:02
you know, the word Oohana
11:03
but the feeling I can describe, right?
11:06
And the feeling for me is the incredible relationships
11:09
that you build working in a company like Salesforce
11:14
that I haven't worked in a place that was as conscientious
11:18
about how people treated each other.
11:21
You know, I came from unnamed previous large companies
11:25
that were, was just cutthroat, you know,
11:28
everybody was waiting to stab you behind your back
11:30
on a culture, that competitive culture and so on.
11:35
And that was not the case at Salesforce.
11:37
It was very, very comfortable to be in, you know,
11:41
people cared about each other,
11:42
people cared about your personal situations
11:45
that you were going through
11:47
and there to support each other.
11:48
So I had an incredible team that,
11:52
where, you know, I had some personal issues going on
11:55
with my family when I was at Salesforce
11:58
and health issues as well.
11:59
And the first people that I would turn to are my teammates
12:02
and they would say, no problem, we've got you.
12:04
Well, I wouldn't even think about doing that somewhere else,
12:07
you know, but that was the comfort that I think
12:11
that Salesforce had built as a culture and mark, you know,
12:16
is generally a quite warm guy and it sort of flows down
12:19
from him, I think, as you work in the organization,
12:24
you understand that a lot more.
12:25
I mean, well, I mean, to your point around the competitiveness,
12:28
I would say we were competitive
12:30
and beating the other competitors in our market.
12:33
That's hard. Not internally.
12:35
But not internally is your 100% right.
12:37
It was all collaborative around achieving a goal.
12:40
Everyone was focused and, I mean, your point around, you know,
12:45
just really caring about each other was so spot on.
12:48
I mean, to that point, you know, even when we were talking
12:51
in the earlier things and how we've been, you know,
12:54
our time at Salesforce together,
12:55
you were there from 2012 to 2016 plus.
12:58
I, you know, obviously was there at the same time,
13:01
but I feel like I know you even though we didn't really
13:04
interact that much, right?
13:05
And it feels like that we're still on the same team
13:08
in that regard, so.
13:09
And even, you know, folks like Brian,
13:12
it was so, I was so comfortable to just ask Brian
13:16
for a meeting and I say, "Hey, Brian, I've got this problem.
13:19
Can you give me your advice on this?"
13:20
And he was very open, you know,
13:22
and just having that level of accessibility
13:25
to folks like Brian Millum, that was.
13:28
- Yeah, that's what I was gonna say.
13:29
Brian Millum, the now COO at Salesforce
13:32
who has taken on a lot more responsibility.
13:35
But yeah, you're right.
13:36
And he would open up and, you know,
13:40
had an open door policy.
13:41
And I felt like that was, that permeated everywhere,
13:44
which was pretty incredible.
13:46
So now speaking of that, are there any special, you know,
13:50
Ohana moments that are a little behind the scenes
13:52
that you'd like to share?
13:54
- I think for me, you know, I brought on a bunch of folks
13:58
at Salesforce when I was there
14:00
and the people that were there, I learned a lot from them.
14:03
And, you know, I was coming into this
14:06
from a product guy coming into an operational world
14:09
and everything I sort of understood and learned
14:12
are from the people there.
14:15
And to me, the biggest success of that is where
14:18
all of those folks have gone on to have, you know,
14:21
really rich careers at Salesforce
14:23
and also in the startup ecosystem.
14:25
And, you know, I talk to them all the time
14:27
and those relationships still remain.
14:31
And so for me, I think at that point,
14:34
you didn't really, you know,
14:36
there's not a moment like that,
14:38
but it's sort of a continuous, you know,
14:41
realization of the relationships
14:43
that we built at Salesforce, right?
14:45
For me, even today, somebody called me and said,
14:47
"Hey, I'm finishing up 10 years at Salesforce.
14:50
Thank you for hiring me."
14:51
And, you know, and that to me is not just one moment.
14:55
It's like, it's sort of continuous.
14:57
It's still happening.
14:58
That's the incredible part about it.
15:00
- I love that.
15:01
Have you, how many dream forces have you been to?
15:04
- I did four dream forces.
15:07
- Yeah.
15:08
Now, are there any special, you know,
15:11
dream force stories?
15:12
Like, what was your first dream force
15:14
and like, you're in a pressure there?
15:15
- So honestly, I was an events guy
15:20
as a product person in my previous roles
15:23
and previous company.
15:24
So I was averse to go into events.
15:28
(laughing)
15:30
So I approached it that way the first time I went,
15:33
but it's not an event.
15:34
It's sort of a cultural event, right?
15:36
It's not like a broadcast event from a product company.
15:39
- An experience, if you will.
15:40
- That's right.
15:41
Yeah.
15:42
And so that was the big light bulb moment for me.
15:44
It's like, wait a minute.
15:45
This is not like other tech company events
15:48
that you go to where they're just broadcasting you
15:50
what they're building.
15:52
This is Borba Connecting and so on.
15:53
So I enjoyed the four that I attended.
15:56
A lot of it was actually customers asking us
16:01
in my role about how we solve the problems
16:04
that I was responsible for.
16:06
And they were very interested to see how we scaled it.
16:09
Like how did you apply sales force technology
16:11
to that problem?
16:12
- Yeah.
16:13
- So that was very exciting for me kind of learning
16:15
about customers that are going through the same kind
16:17
of challenges that we are and be able to share what we do.
16:21
I think those were really exciting moments for me.
16:25
- That's great.
16:26
Let's get into our next segment, What's Cooking.
16:28
So, Bolin, you're now obviously the co-founder
16:30
and CTO at full cast.
16:32
Talk about how you got to where you are now
16:34
and what your journey's been like.
16:36
- Yeah.
16:37
So a lot of the learnings that we've incorporated into full cast
16:41
both me and my co-founder, their mesh thing.
16:44
We've worked together at Microsoft at Salesforce
16:49
and now at full cast.
16:51
So we've been working together
16:52
and we've been eating around this sort of operational
16:57
problem set me from the product side,
16:59
him from an operational standpoint at the beginning
17:02
and then our roles kind of flipped.
17:04
But really kind of the idea of a revenue operations
17:10
problem space, right?
17:11
And what we mean by that is how do you put together
17:15
a go-to-market plan and how do you execute it?
17:19
And how do you keep these two worlds kind of tied
17:21
to each other and communicating with each other?
17:24
Because one of the big shifts that we've seen
17:28
in the industry of course is the SaaS business model
17:31
has essentially changed what used to be sales
17:35
where you made a deal and you're done,
17:37
collected your commission and you moved on.
17:39
Now the idea of a sale is the right to make money, right?
17:44
And so now you have to make sure that your marketing team,
17:47
your customer success team and the entire sort of revenue
17:50
pipeline is able to work in a common strategy
17:55
and actually deliver on the revenue goals that you have.
17:59
And that's really created a need for a revenue platform
18:03
and that's really the problem space that we're addressing.
18:07
And so a lot of it really comes from learning
18:11
in the trenches at Salesforce, you know,
18:13
from all the way from G4G and our Go for Growth
18:16
and our fast start planning processes.
18:18
What does it take to get 400 people involved
18:21
in a planning process?
18:23
What does it take to deal with bad data?
18:25
What does it take to deal with sort of effective
18:28
data commissioning and who gets the right credit
18:30
at the end of the day?
18:32
Your coverage models, roles overlays,
18:35
like all of that kind of problem
18:37
is really what fullcast is about.
18:40
And that's what we support our customers with today.
18:45
- Yeah, you know, it's interesting.
18:46
I mean, I love hearing that story around the rise
18:50
of a revenue platform and operations.
18:53
I mean, you know, clearly that's a qualified,
18:56
that's what we think about all day.
18:57
And I work with a lot of marketers.
18:59
And with the silos, you get into like,
19:01
oh, well, this is a marketing qualified lead.
19:03
And this is a sales qualified lead.
19:05
And really at the end of the day,
19:07
what we're trying to, what any company's trying to do
19:09
is just trying to help solve a problem
19:11
and bring revenue in the door.
19:13
So yeah, this revenue layer is really an interesting,
19:16
you know, concept that has evolved.
19:19
And I love seeing that.
19:20
And it's great to hear, you know, companies such as fullcast
19:24
really coming through and helping solve those problems.
19:26
'Cause it does, you know, go across everything
19:31
from to your point, the top of the funnel,
19:34
to the bottom of the funnel,
19:35
and then to the success funnel, if you will,
19:39
you know, that continues on because obviously, you know,
19:42
in my role as the head of customer success,
19:45
it's, you know, revenue is still extremely important
19:48
and keeping that base in place is really important.
19:51
So, but you know, what challenges are you seeing now
19:54
and how are you applying what you've learned
19:56
at Salesforce to those challenges?
19:59
- The biggest learning for me was when we were looking
20:04
at the problem at Salesforce, right?
20:06
It was heavily handled with what I call spreadsheets
20:11
in Elbow, Greece, right?
20:12
You got a bunch of analysts together,
20:14
you gave them a bunch of spreadsheets and say,
20:15
good at times.
20:16
And they would, you know, crank out numbers.
20:18
The spreadsheets would fail, but, you know,
20:20
they'll break it apart into small chunks and email it
20:23
to like 400 people, get it all back, put it all together.
20:26
This was kind of the model that was used to handle it.
20:29
And clearly, you know, there's a better way to do it.
20:32
And, but people weren't really sure
20:35
whether you could automate it, right?
20:37
There was so much variability in the ways
20:41
that you carve territories.
20:42
There's so much variability in the ways
20:44
that you sort of built comp plans and so on.
20:49
The question was, you know, could you build a platform
20:51
to do that?
20:52
And do that in a way that the platform
20:55
can actually support that variability.
20:58
And the learning for me at Salesforce was yes.
21:01
It can be done.
21:02
And we did it at Salesforce and we scaled
21:05
all of those processes.
21:07
And that was kind of the premise of taking that
21:09
and then enhancing that with what we're doing at,
21:13
at Vocast.
21:14
The problems are the same, right?
21:18
Whether you're a five person sales organization
21:20
or we have 5,000 person sales organization,
21:22
it's just at some point it becomes painful enough
21:25
that you need automation to kind of, you know,
21:28
you can't just keep throwing bodies at it.
21:31
So that was for me, I think the biggest learning
21:33
and the proving point that you can apply automation,
21:36
you can apply AI, you can apply technology
21:40
to kind of address that space
21:42
and give teams the agility, right?
21:44
I mean, that's really what we're after is,
21:47
market changes are continuous.
21:50
We will go to markets of volatile, right?
21:52
No longer is it that you build a plan
21:54
and you hold it out for the whole year
21:56
and you don't make any changes that that world is gone.
21:59
Now you're continually tweaking and changing
22:01
and adapting to the market.
22:03
And as you do that, you have to be able to deploy that
22:06
and get that working in your transactional environments.
22:09
And that problem was where things were getting stuck
22:14
and that was what my team used to do at Salesforce.
22:17
So really kind of automating that is the premise
22:21
that I've taken from what we did at Salesforce
22:24
to what we're doing here at
22:51
I mean, you saw all the announcements that Salesforce did
22:54
with General DVI.
22:55
But for us from a planning and on operations perspective,
22:59
what does that mean, right?
23:00
Could we provide the sales managers and the ops teams
23:04
with a similar experience from a planning perspective,
23:07
from a management perspective, right?
23:10
Could we drive that kind of a interface?
23:13
So I think that's why everybody in this space
23:14
is really looking at what's happening there
23:17
and the changes that Salesforce is making as well
23:20
to really understand.
23:23
I think it's a transformative model.
23:25
It's sort of the iPhone kind of moment for us
23:30
with General DVI.
23:32
And so everything is likely to change.
23:34
And all the models that we're used to,
23:37
our dashboards even real anymore.
23:39
Those are the kind of fundamental questions
23:43
we're gonna be asking ourselves.
23:44
And I think from a transactional perspective,
23:48
Salesforce has taken the lead and driving that.
23:52
And for us, could we do the same,
23:54
from a planning perspective,
23:55
could we do the same from an administration
23:58
or an ops perspective?
23:59
Like how does this change our landscape?
24:01
Is really the problem space that we're working on.
24:04
So that part is exciting.
24:07
That's a whole new world, essentially.
24:10
- I mean, extremely exciting.
24:11
And it's funny, I was thinking,
24:14
oh, I should have an AI question for you
24:16
because I know that's hot,
24:17
but I'm glad that you actually left us there already.
24:19
'Cause everyone's always asking,
24:21
especially around the generative AI.
24:23
And I do look at this as,
24:25
you're right, transformational
24:28
in the entire SaaS market, just like mobile was, right?
24:32
Like how do we think,
24:34
everyone was like, how do you think mobile first?
24:35
Now it's like, well, how do we think AI first?
24:38
And how do we adapt our world to that?
24:43
And what does that mean for our platform?
24:45
And it's not just a feature that people release.
24:48
It's actually something that is just part
24:51
of the actual makeup.
24:53
- It's much more fundamental, right?
24:55
And it's gonna change the user interaction
24:57
with software as we know it, enterprise software
25:00
as we know it.
25:02
And I think, as Salesforce is smartly catching onto that
25:05
and saying, okay, we've gotta have a model
25:07
for the transactional pipeline and how we handle that.
25:12
So I think that's very exciting.
25:15
I think it's gonna change the ecosystem
25:18
pretty considerably.
25:20
All of the apps in the broader ecosystem
25:23
is going to have to think about that,
25:24
going out to think about how to interact with Salesforce
25:27
in that way, Einstein in that way,
25:29
and feed into that.
25:32
So I think it's a whole sort of uplift
25:35
for everybody in the ecosystem.
25:37
- Let's get into our final segment, the future forecast.
25:40
So, Bala, what do you envision
25:41
as the future of the Salesforce ecosystem?
25:44
- So I've always kind of looked at the acquisition of Slack,
25:49
with the idea that when Salesforce made that announcement,
25:55
and they also bought MuleSoft as well,
25:57
which was for the two different models.
26:00
But for me, the old enterprise integration model is dead, right?
26:05
And really this conversational model
26:09
is really what's gonna drive
26:10
the business processes and workflows and things like that.
26:14
So I think there is a really powerful way
26:17
in which you were talking about data in silos
26:20
and how they integrate with each other.
26:23
And I really think that that layer
26:25
is how it's gonna change, right?
26:26
And essentially it's gonna be that conversational layer
26:30
that's gonna drive business processes.
26:32
It's not just for collaboration, but it's actually,
26:35
can I tell my systems in the background
26:39
like go do this, run this, work the phone,
26:41
get this results done, move this person
26:44
from this role to this role.
26:46
And as a sales manager, can I just do that on Slack?
26:48
Why can't I do that, right?
26:50
And I think that is an interesting sort of arc
26:55
to look at, especially with generative AI,
27:00
because that just changes the model
27:01
into what Slack already does really well,
27:04
which is bring people together
27:06
and allow for these kind of business processes
27:10
to be built on top of it, right?
27:12
10, 15 years ago, we would build that on top of an
27:14
AI enterprise integration layer.
27:17
Well, I think that's gone.
27:19
I think what we're gonna do is really build it
27:21
on top of this conversational layer,
27:23
which I am excited about.
27:25
- I mean, that is the vision
27:27
of what Salesforce wants to do.
27:29
So that's pretty, I mean, yeah, I agree with where
27:32
that's going.
27:33
Obviously there's a long road ahead
27:34
of driving that type of collaboration,
27:37
and business processes at the collaboration layer,
27:42
but we're gonna get there.
27:43
- And that's the fun thing as a startup,
27:46
is that that's where the ideas are spurred,
27:48
and you have a platform now to sort of start building
27:51
great new ideas on top, similar to what
27:54
the app exchange did for us, right?
27:58
And so I'm excited to see where startups
28:01
are gonna take that on top of the Salesforce ecosystem.
28:04
Is that what you see full cast also integrating
28:07
a lot more in that regard?
28:08
- Absolutely, absolutely.
28:11
You know, Slack as well as even supporting
28:14
those kinds of conversations.
28:16
So today, for instance, Salesmanagers would do
28:19
a bunch of operational tasks,
28:20
and they would go look at a dashboard,
28:22
they'll go click through some wizards
28:24
to get something done.
28:26
Well, we want that model to change,
28:29
and if that changes, then you know,
28:31
learning curve and all of this,
28:33
second, our enablement problems,
28:35
a lot of those things get solved right away,
28:37
because people are very comfortable
28:39
with the conversational model.
28:41
And if we can do that,
28:42
and I think that changes the game.
28:44
- Can you give us a prediction
28:45
of what Salesforce looks like in the future?
28:47
- So the couple of interesting ideas that,
28:52
you know, the startup world have been throwing around
28:53
is what does a post CRM world look like?
28:56
Like, do we still need a database
28:59
in the old sense, right, of customer information
29:02
and things like that?
29:03
In that sort of collaborative world,
29:05
what does CRM even mean anymore?
29:09
And I think that's an interesting arc
29:13
that Salesforce is sort of looking at.
29:16
I don't know how far along they are in that sort of product arc.
29:19
But I think I sort of see a world
29:22
where this old idea of building a database,
29:26
a contact database, an account database,
29:29
and all of that, I think that's gonna slowly go away,
29:31
because most of that information is repeated
29:34
in every single CRM.
29:36
There's no reason for it to be.
29:38
And so I think there is an interesting angle there
29:42
from a Salesforce perspective in terms of what does that mean?
29:45
What does the post CRM look like?
29:47
Does it just become this collaborative layer
29:50
on top of like data sources that may exist
29:52
or may not exist in the future?
29:55
- I mean, that's a really, I mean, you know,
29:58
a hundred thousand foot view,
29:59
an awesome way to look at it too.
30:01
So what advice do you have
30:03
for any aspiring entrepreneurs out there?
30:06
- You know, entrepreneurship is not for everybody.
30:10
As we tell that to everybody that we hire in the company,
30:14
we say it's not a job, it's a lifestyle.
30:16
And that is, you know,
30:19
because you live and breathe this thing 24 hours a day.
30:22
And as entrepreneurs, it's very exciting.
30:26
The Salesforce ecosystem is a very exciting place to be.
30:29
But it's definitely a lifestyle as opposed to a job.
30:34
You can approach this like a job.
30:36
- Well, I mean, that's definitely,
30:38
I mean, going from Salesforce to, you know,
30:40
where I'm at now, that's a 150% true.
30:44
So that's, and I enjoy every single moment of it
30:47
'cause it is one of those things you live and breathe,
30:49
but it's, and it keeps you alive.
30:52
You know, you feel really alive.
30:54
And you feel a sense of ownership of the problem.
30:57
And you also see the impact of the things that you do,
31:02
the decisions that you make right away, right?
31:04
You're not waiting and you're gonna have two years
31:06
to see how things turn out, like things are,
31:08
it's sort of an interesting high, but you live it.
31:13
- Yeah, you definitely live it.
31:15
Now, before letting you go,
31:16
let's have fun with a little quick lightning round.
31:18
You ready?
31:19
- Awesome, go for it.
31:20
- Okay.
31:21
- Secret skill that's not on the resume.
31:24
- I am a wildlife photographer.
31:26
So I travel to places to take pictures of endangered species
31:31
and that's something that I enjoy a lot.
31:34
- That's incredible.
31:35
Do you, how long do you sit in blinds for?
31:39
You know, I'm like-- - Oh, days, days.
31:41
Like, I did a trip to the Canadian Arctic
31:45
to go take pictures of now walls, you know, the,
31:48
the corn whales. - Yeah.
31:50
- And we were there for four days
31:52
or kept out on sea ice and we saw them once.
31:56
- Wow, that is, that's an awesome story.
32:00
I love it. - Yeah, yeah.
32:01
- Best way to spend an evening after work.
32:04
- Take my camera out and go take pictures.
32:07
And that's sort of my sort of piece,
32:11
is be able to capture wildlife.
32:13
And you know, nothing about that is under your control.
32:17
The birds are not posing for you or whatever.
32:19
It's just, you just surrender and just deal with it.
32:22
(laughs)
32:23
- I love it.
32:24
Favorite brand of anything?
32:26
- Of anything, I'm a sports nut.
32:30
I grew up in Toronto, so the Toronto Maple Leafs
32:33
is my team and my jam.
32:35
So, you know, I dressed up my daughter
32:39
the second day she was born in Leafs uniform, so.
32:42
- That's great, I love it.
32:44
- I love it, love it, love it.
32:46
I mean, well, the Maple Leafs is definitely
32:47
very Canadian, you know.
32:48
- It is. - So, it's good.
32:50
You just won front row seat tickets
32:52
to your dream event, what is it?
32:53
- It's the Toronto Maple Leafs
32:55
in the Stanley Cup Finals game.
32:57
- There you go, love it.
32:59
- Front seat.
33:00
- Yeah, let's see, let's see what happens.
33:03
Balla, this has been so much fun.
33:04
Before I let you go, let the listeners know
33:06
where they can find you.
33:07
And if there's anything else you'd like to share
33:09
or plug with us today, please do that.
33:12
- Sure, yeah, I mean, I think Focast.io
33:15
is where I am right now.
33:17
And Balla at Focast.io is if you want to reach me.
33:21
And, you know, check us out.
33:23
And if you have a revenue operations problem,
33:27
then we probably can help you.
33:29
So, check us out and do reach out if you have any questions.
33:32
- Well, Balla, thank you so much for today
33:34
and great conversation, love having it.
33:36
Great to see you. - I appreciate it, Dad.
33:37
Thank you so much.
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