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Even as Elon Musk calls philanthropy ‘very hard,’ everyday Americans gave a record $617 billion—despite feeling the squeeze over the cost of living

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Even as Elon Musk calls philanthropy ‘very hard,’ everyday Americans gave a record $617 billion—despite feeling the squeeze over the cost of living

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Egg companies made $1.22 billion in profit off a $6 carton — now they’re buying their way out of a price-fixing case with 53 million donated eggs

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Data Sheet

Data Sheet—Tuesday, December 16, 2014

By
Heather Clancy
Heather Clancy
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By
Heather Clancy
Heather Clancy
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December 16, 2014, 8:28 AM ET
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Good morning, Data Sheet readers. Networking company Riverbed is responding to activist shareholder pressure by going private. Dutch payments player Adyen just raised a massive round. Plus, is it better to call your sales prospect on a rainy or sunny day? Read about the predictive analytics software company helping ADP, Dell, Fidelity, Groupon, and Microsoft eliminate cold calls.

Forward this business technology newsletter to colleagues and business partners, and tell them to sign up! Did you miss one? Here’s an archive of past editions.

TRENDING

Let's go Dutch. Electronic payments company Adyen raised $250 million in a round led by General Altantic, putting its valuation around $1.5 billion. It's an early adopter of Apple Pay. What's more, the company's platform is used by more then 3,500 merchants, including Airbnb, Burberry, Facebook, and Vodafone. Fortune

Riverbed Technology spurns activist investor, goes private in $3.6 billion deal. The buyers are the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan and equity fund Thoma Bravo. The latter previously bought out software company Compuware and security vendor Blue Coat Systems. The one thing all three have in common: unwanted strategic guidance from big shareholder Elliott Management, which is still agitating for changes at Juniper Networks and EMC. Reuters

Google: To your health! The Internet giant devoted almost one-third of its venture investments this year to healthcare and life sciences companies. That compares with just 9% of the total during the previous two years. New York Times

Friends of Microsoft. The software giant's fight to keep the U.S. government from seizing data housed in an Irish data center is supported by more than 75 high-tech companies, privacy groups, and computer scientists. So far. Among those signing amicus briefs field about the case: Amazon, Apple, Cisco, eBay, Hewlett-Packard, Info, and Salesforce. Wired

Any more questions? SurveyMonkey's latest $250 million in equity financing boosts the online feedback and surveying software company close to a $2 billion. The funds are earmarked for potential acquisitions and to pay out some earlier investors, among other things. Fortune

News flash from Western Digital. The company’s HGST unit (which used to be Hitachi Global Storage Technologies) paid an undisclosed sum to buy solid state storage technology Skyera. The startup makes equipment for data centers and competes with the likes of Pure Storage and Violin Memory. ZDNet

CAN PREDICTIVE ANALYTICS SOFTWARE KILL THE COLD CALL?

InsideSales.com's hire of a long-time Salesforce executive this week signals a critical turning point for the fast-growing purveyor of sales acceleration software.

For each of the past four years, the Provo, Utah-based company increased revenue and bookings at least 100%—it is on pace to pull off the same feat for 2014. InsideSales.com also is staffing quickly, with more than 600 people anticipated on the payroll by year-end, double its staff at the end of 2013.

Jim Steele's appointment as president of worldwide sales and chief customer officer (effective Jan. 8) is the third significant hire this year. Last spring, the 10-year-old company added a chief marketing officer (former Citrix executive Mick Hollison) and a chief financial officer (Kevin Samuelson, who previously held the same title at cloud business software company Infor). Its head of human resources (hired in June 2013) is Todd Riesterer, with a resume that includes VMware and McAfee. All were picked for their experience at multi-billion-dollar business software companies.

"Right now, we are in the mode of really trying to scale our business," said InsideSales.com CEO and founder Dave Elkington, a former venture capitalist with a philosophy degree who happens to be an expert in lead-generation processes. "What we sell to companies is not software. We're not selling a solution, we actually selling revenue, metaphorically. Our client will see anywhere from a 10[%] to upwards of a 50% uplift in revenue within 90 days once they deploy our system. We can sell as fast as fast we can responsibly deploy and implement and train our clients. The challenge I have is purely one of scale."

InsideSales.com’s predictive analytics software complements customer relationship management software (CRM) technologies like Salesforce and Microsoft Dynamics. It uses aggregated data to motivate teams and personalize outreach. Is it better to reach out to somewhere in the morning or afternoon? Does the prospective buyer prefer email, text or a phone call? Did his or her favorite sports team win or lose last weekend? InsideSales.com's platform offers insight.

Steele began researching the software after many of his big Salesforce accounts began mentioning the technology. "I don't have to reach too far to find customers that I know are using it," he said.

The Salesforce venture arm was actually among more than a half-dozen investors participating in a $100 million Series C round in late April led by Polaris Partners and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. "The world of selling enterprise 'things' is moving to an inside sales model," said Kleiner Perkins general partner Matt Murphy, part of the search team that hired Steele. "Many people are learning it for the first time, and asking, 'What are the best practices?' "

While Elkington won't disclose current revenue, he draws parallels between his company and Salesforce 12 years ago before the latter aggressively targeted large corporate accounts. Right now, InsideSales.com signs up between 1,000 and 5,000 individual sales reps and managers every month.

Elkington is looking for experienced talent and operational processes that can help his idea scale. There's every reason to believe InsideSales.com will post another 100% revenue increase next year, he said. "What we want to build here is not a small company, we want to build something that is very large and very impactful."

I caught up with Elkington during the tail end of a trip to Europe and Israel, where he was interviewing potential managers.

Describe what your technology does for non-techie audience.

On the surface, we are a sales acceleration technology. This category sits right between marketing automation and CRM, and helps automate and accelerate the sales process. We're building a platform that delivers that. But really, the meat and the secret under the hood is our artificial intelligence (AI) learning platform. It is ubiquitous platform, meaning the learning can be applied really universally, but we're applying it to that sales acceleration space I just mentioned.

In short, it's an AI or predictive analytics platform. It is a massive crowdsourcing engine. We have roughly 35,000 sales users on our platform. Those are people who work everywhere: ADP, Microsoft, Sprint, Dell, Level 3, Gannett, Groupon. As they use our technology, we learn what works and what doesn't work. As it happens, our pipeline gets smarter in aggregate. None of our clients, in aggregate, ever make the same mistake twice.

Who is the ideal customer?

One that uses technology to enable the sales process. That could be a three sales-rep company all the way up to a 3,000-sales-rep company. The thing that really makes a difference is that they are data-driven and they use science and numbers to be able to really optimize the sales process versus just relying on intuition. A lot of old-school sales is truly intuition-based. There is a paradigm shift in the sales world that has silently occurred over the past 10 or 15 years: it's the transition from the intuition approach to sales to one of a really mathematical or data approach.

Many of your early corporate reference accounts are tech companies. What's the plan to increase penetration in other sectors?

We actually have a very strong position in the financial services base. We have companies like Fidelity on our platform. Several others. The professional services industry is also very strong. The healthcare industry is an emerging segment, particularly the insurance category. It's more diverse than you would expect, we even have a lot of non-profits and government organizations using our technology. A lot of our clients actually request that we not disclose they are a client, because many of them consider this a competitive advantage. …

There is a phenomenon that we've noticed. As we sell to a client in a community, region or a given region, there will be a distribution of employees over time and they will bring us into their next company. There is a viral distribution in the way that our technology is adopted.

Can we expect you to seek more outside backing in the next 12 months?

There's an opportunity in the market, categorically, to supply a broader, more robust platform. We really have six main categories in the sales acceleration space. We've got tools around gamification that motivates people. We've got tools around training. We've also got tools around communications, prioritization, around data management. This is a very fragmented space.

If you compare the sales acceleration space to the marketing automation space back in 2003 to 2004, it was likewise very fragmented. There were hundreds if not thousands of point solutions. Out of that, maybe six platforms emerged: Omniture, Eloqua, ExactTarget, Marketo, HubSpot and maybe Responsys. Right now, I believe something similar is happening in the sales acceleration space. We're in six of the categories fairly strongly.

Over the next 12 months, you're going to see us move into international markets, as I alluded. You'll also see us build onto other ecosystems, like Salesforce.com. Lastly, you'll see us build and/or buy other categories of the sales acceleration space to try and drive more value for our clients. As such, it may make sense to raise additional capital, and that capital may come in one of many ways. To answer your question, there's no definitive answer but there is a high likelihood.

Are you creating an ecosystem around your platform, around sales acceleration? Do you see this as a focus for the future?

As I mentioned, there's a massive crowdsourcing effort going on in all of my customers. What that means is that every time one of our customers sells to somebody, we anonymize all of that information and then aggregate and profile it. We have roughly 100 million to 120 million unique North American, anonymous profiles in our database. That's roughly 70% of the buyers in the United States. What's more, there are about 11 billion maybe 12 billion sales interactions—purchases, emails, conversations, web site responses, all those kinds of interactions.

We're adding quickly. In a given month, we're adding 1 billion more sale interactions. Associated with that are contextual data points. Those are things that are happening around the person that might influence that person. We're looking at weather. If it's sunny in Phoenix and rainy in Los Angeles, contact rates are higher where it's rainy, so maybe you should be interacting in regions where it's raining. However, if we know the Phoenix Suns just won a game, there's a euphoria effect. Therefore, you should also sell to regions where there have been regional successful sporting events.

We know that regional gas prices can increase people's budgets. The stock market also increases the propensity to buy. There are hundreds of external data points that can affect how people make purchase decisions. When those interactions happen, there's anywhere from 300 to 1,000 contextual data points associated with those 1 billion sales interactions. We're adding easily upwards of 1 billion sales context data points in a given month. We're not just integrating technology, we're consuming different data points, different types of data to help our customers be more successful.

Connected is an interview series with leaders of innovative organizations. Conversations are condensed and edited. 

MY FORTUNE.COM BOOKMARKS

The next frontier in workplace diversity: brain differences By Katherine Reynolds Lewis

What do The Walking Dead, The Superbowl and the Oscars have in common? Tweets By Benjamin Snyder

Hillary Clinton spurs 'gender data revolution' By Caroline Fairchild

Apple aced its e-book antitrust appeal By Philip Elmer-DeWitt

Will Indiegogo's new personal-cause site help it stand out in the crowd? By Daniel Roberts

Exposed: Why we know tech startup valuations By Dan Primack

FOR YOUR INNER TECHNOPHILE

Paul Allen seeks smarter approach to artificial intelligence. One philosophy behind the Microsoft co-founder's Seattle new-ish research institute is pragmatism. The other is ensuring the technology is applied for "the common good." NYT

 

ONE MORE THING

Ford appoints big data chief. Paul Ballew, who reports to the automaker's chief financial officer, is tasked with coordinating the company's analytics projects—including what it is gathering from connected cars. He held similar positions at Dun & Bradstreet, and Nationwide Insurance. WSJ

MARK YOUR CALENDAR

IBM Interconnect 2015: Cloud and mobile strategy. (Feb. 22 – 26, 2015; Las Vegas)

Gartner CIO Leadership Forum: Digital business strategy. (March 1 – 3, 2015; Phoenix)

Microsoft Convergence 2015: Dynamics solutions. (March 16 – 19, 2015; Atlanta)

Gartner Business Intelligence & Analytics Summit: Crossing the divide. (March 30 – April 1, 2015; Las Vegas)

Knowledge15: Automate enterprise IT services. (April 19 – 24, 2015; Las Vegas)

RSA Conference 2015: The world talks security. (April 20 – 24, 2015; San Francisco)

MicrosoftIgnite: Enterprise tech extravaganza. (May 4 – 8, 2015; Chicago)

NetSuite SuiteWorld: Cloud ERP strategy. (May 4 – 7, 2015; San Jose, Calif.)

SAPPHIRE NOW: The SAP universe. (May 5 – 7, 2015; Orlando, Fla.)

Gartner Digital Marketing Conference 2015: Reach your destination faster. (May 5 – 7; San Diego)

About the Author
By Heather Clancy
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