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The History of Salesforce

Here's the Salesforce History over the years, including newsworthy highlights and a timeline of milestones since 1999.

Editor’s Note: This page was last updated in June 2024. For media inquiries about the history of Salesforce, please contact PR@salesforce.com.

25 Years of Salesforce News Highlights

The below timeline captures the history of Salesforce, including some key milestones along the way, illustrating our record of doing well while doing good.

Salesforce is the global leader in CRM, helping companies connect with customers in a whole new way. Founded in 1999, Salesforce enables companies of every size and industry to digitally transform around their customers by harnessing the power of automation, artificial intelligence, and real-time data to make every customer experience more personal, valuable and memorable. With a global community driven by shared core values, Salesforce is more than a business – it’s a platform for change.

1999

  • In February, the Salesforce journey begins with a clear vision to be “A World-Class Internet Company for Sales Force Automation.”
  • On March 8, Salesforce incorporates and Marc Benioff, Parker Harris, Frank Dominguez, and Dave Moellenhoff begin working on the first version of Salesforce’s CRM. Their base is a rented one-bedroom apartment at 1449 Montgomery Street, on San Francisco’s Telegraph Hill.
  • As the four develop their prototype, they also build a distinctive startup culture. They only work on what they believe is important and necessary, to do it “fast, simple, and right the first time.” “No fluff” is their mantra. They wear Hawaiian print shirts, brunch at Mama’s, appoint Marc’s dog Koa as Chief Love Officer, and constantly ask for feedback.
  • The company also writes its first V2MOM (Vision, Values, Methods, Obstacles, and Measures) strategic plan, aiming to provide employees with a clear vision and align the organization around common goals. In true startup fashion, the original draft is written on the back of an envelope. V2MOM remains at the core of how Salesforce runs its business, and continues to guide every decision the company makes.
  • By the end of its first year, the company has expanded to 40 employees and an 8,000-square-foot office at the Rincon Center.
Parker Harris personal video of the apartment where salesforce.com started

2000

  • Like many other tech companies, Salesforce endured challenges brought on by the dot-com bubble bursting, and 20% of the company’s workforce was laid off.
  • On February 7, salesforce.com officially launches at an event themed around “The End of Software” at San Francisco’s Regency Theater with 1,500 attendees and a concert with The B-52s.
  • In March, Salesforce gets a boost from its first piece of major press coverage, in The Wall Street Journal, when it hires actors to stage a mock protest outside a Siebel Systems conference. The “protestors” carry signs with anti-software messages to drive home Salesforce’s “The End of Software” marketing tagline.
  • Salesforce.org launches the 1-1-1 model, leveraging its technology, people, and resources to improve communities around the world.
  • In November, the growing business moves from the Rincon Center to a larger base at One Market Street.
  • Revenue hits $5.4 million for fiscal year ending January 31, 2001.
An early Salesforce office circa 2000

2001

  • In April, Salesforce announces its expansion into the worldwide marketplace with headquarters in Dublin and Tokyo.
  • Salesforce surpasses 3,000 customers, making it the fastest-growing CRM company. 
  • In November, Benioff is named Chief Executive Officer and Chairman.
  • Salesforce delivers $22.4 million in revenue for the fiscal year, ending January 31, 2002.

2002

  • By end of the year, the company has 5,740 customers, 70,000 users in 107 countries accessing the service in multiple currencies and eight languages. 
  • Salesforce delivers $51 million in revenue for the fiscal year, ending January 31, 2003.
  • Marc Benioff makes a prediction about the future of Salesforce, CRM, and business: “There were the leaders, but Oracle displaced them. The same thing is going to happen again. It’s the beginning of a brand new technology and business world.”

2003

  • The first Dreamforce event is held at the Westin St. Francis hotel in downtown San Francisco. Just over 1,000 registered attendees take part in the event, which has 52 presentations.
  • sForce 2.0 — the industry’s first on-demand application service — is launched at the event.
  • The company’s employees number more than 400.
  • It establishes a global presence, opening offices in Australia, France, Germany, Ireland, Japan, Spain, and the U.K.
  • Salesforce reaches almost $100 million in revenue by year end, files to go public in December.
Dreamforce badges from the inaugural Salesforce conference in 2003

2004

  • On June 23, Salesforce successfully completes its initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange, raising $110 million at $11 per share.
  • Salesforce earns $176 million in revenue over the fiscal year ending January 31, 2005.
  • The company has 767 employees.
  • The customer base has grown to 13,900.
  • Some 8,000 developers and 150 independent software vendors are using Salesforce technologies to create apps.
  • Salesforce has 12 offices around the world.

2005

  • In September, Salesforce introduces its AppExchange service, offering third-party developers a place to work on their own applications and open them up to Salesforce customers.
  • By the end of the year, the company’s customer base stands at 20,500 worldwide, with nearly 400,000 unique users. 
  • The company surpasses 1,300 employees by end of fiscal year.
  • It has earned $309.98 million in revenue for fiscal year ending January 31, 2006.

2006

  • Salesforce’s mobile journey starts with the acquisition of wireless technology startup Sendia, and the original Salesforce mobile app, AppExchange Mobile. 
  • The AppExchange ecosystem grows into a vibrant marketplace with 575 apps from 250 independent software vendors.
  • In a defining moment, Benioff shares his view that business is the greatest platform for change, publishing The Business of Changing the World with essays by 20 other thought leaders.
  • The Power of Us partner program launches, engaging Salesforce’s partners with the 1-1-1 philanthropy model.
  • Salesforce has 29,800 customers worldwide.
  • Revenue tops $497 million for the fiscal year ending January 31, 2007.
The Salesforce AppExchange circa 2006

2007

  • IdeaExchange (now Trailblazer Community) launches, inviting customers to contribute new feature ideas for future releases.
  • At Dreamforce, plans for the Force.com technology platform are announced, which will allow developers to build applications on the Salesforce platform and create any user interface on demand.
  • Salesforce reports revenue of $748.7 million for the fiscal year ending January 31, 2008.
  • Users exceed 1.1 million, from 41,000 customers across the globe.
  • The AppExchange community has 450 independent software vendor partners.
  • Salesforce employees log 70,000 volunteer hours.

2008

  • Salesforce has revenue of just over $1 billion for the fiscal year ending January 31 2009, making it the first cloud computing company to breach the billion-dollar mark in annual revenue.
  • Forbes names Salesforce among the fastest-growing technology companies in the world.
  • Number of customers grows to 55,400.
  • Dreamforce in San Francisco reaches a new milestone, with 10,000 registered attendees.
  • Force.com is released, making it easier for customers to build and install apps on Salesforce’s architecture.

2009

  • Salesforce launches Service Cloud, bringing customer service and support automation features to the market.
  • Revenues rise by more than 20% to $1.3 billion for the fiscal year, ending January 31, 2010.
  • Salesforce’s global customer base grows to 72,000 customers.
  • The first application built on Force.com for the iPhone launches, and it’s the first enterprise partner on Apple’s App Store.
  • Salesforce.org gives $14 million in grants to support nonprofits.
  • Chairman and CEO Marc Benioff publishes Behind the Cloud, a memoir of Salesforce’s early days and growth to a company with $1 billion in annual revenues.
An original Salesforce mascot called “SaaSy”

2010

  • Salesforce agrees to acquire Heroku, an application platform-as-a-service, to support for the next generation of app developers. Editor’s Note: Read more about Salesforce acquisitions.
  • Company finishes the fiscal year with more than 92,000 customers and 5,000 employees.
  • Annual revenue rises to almost $1.66 billion for the fiscal year, ending January 31, 2011.
  • Over the last ten years, Salesforce gave $23 million in grants, employees volunteered 255,000 hours, and 11,000 nonprofits had access to Salesforce products for free.
  • Fortune magazine ranks Salesforce fourth on its list of the world’s fastest-growing companies.
  • Salesforce is also named by the Ethisphere Institute as one of the world’s most ethical companies for the fourth consecutive year.

2011

  • Salesforce launches Chatter as a social collaboration service for the enterprise; more than 80,000 customers adopt Chatter in the first year.  
  • Salesforce extends its social enterprise capabilities to include marketing with the acquisition of social media monitoring company, Radian6.
  • Annual revenue rises 37% over the fiscal year to almost $2.27 billion, for the fiscal year ending January 31, 2012.
  • By the end of the fiscal year, Salesforce employs 7,785 people around the globe.
  • Forbes names Salesforce one of “The 50 Companies of Tomorrow,” taking notice of the innovation the company has achieved.
Marc Benioff takes the number one spot on Fortune’s “The 50 Companies of Tomorrow” list

2012

  • Salesforce has more than $3 billion in annual revenue for the fiscal year ending January 31, 2013.
  • The company has 9,800 employees in 22 offices around the world.
  • The company also crosses a threshold with more than 100,000 customers.
  • Salesforce leases space in the yet-to-be-built tower at 350 Mission Street as the plan for an urban campus takes shape.  
  • Dreamforce 2012 notches up 90,000 registered attendees. Salesforce Marketing Cloud is unveiled during the keynote address.
  • Forbes selects Salesforce as the world’s most innovative company for the second consecutive year.
  • Gartner ranks Salesforce #1 in CRM.

2013

  • Salesforce completes its largest acquisition to date with ExactTarget, allowing it to supercharge the power of Marketing Cloud. 
  • The Salesforce1 Platform launches, empowering customers to run their business from their phone.  
  • Dreamforce has more than 143,000 registered attendees. A benefit concert during the event features the bands Blondie and Green Day.
  • The AppExchange hosts more than 2,000 apps, and records over 2 million installs.
  • Annual revenue over the fiscal year exceeds $4 billion for the fiscal year ending January 31, 2014.
  • Salesforce has more than 13,300 employees worldwide.

2014

  • Salesforce launches Trailhead, empowering anyone — regardless of education level — to develop the skills needed for top tech jobs.
  • The company now has 1.5 million registered developers.
  • Salesforce reaches the $5 billion in annual revenue milestone faster than any other enterprise software company.
  • The company has more than 150,000 customers and 16,000 employees.
  • Since its inception, the Salesforce Foundation has donated $80 million and employees volunteered more than 840,000 hours.
  • Salesforce Tower London opens.
Salesforce Tower London

2015

  • Salesforce enters the Fortune 500.
  • Fortune also recognizes Salesforce as one of the Top 10 Best Companies to Work For and one of the World’s Most Admired Software Companies.
  • At Dreamforce, Salesforce announces new Lightning Experience, a completely new CRM experience.
  • Salesforce unveils IoT Cloud, connecting billions of events from devices, sensors, apps and more from the Internet of Things to Salesforce.
  • When San Francisco runs short of hotel rooms for Dreamforce attendees, Salesforce docks the ‘Dreamboat’ cruise ship to provide 1,000  extra accommodations.
  • The company generates more than $6.66 billion in revenue for the fiscal year ending January 31, 2016.
  • Salesforce has more than 150,000 customers worldwide and more than 20,000 employees.

2016

  • Salesforce conducts its first equal pay assessment, resulting in $3 million in salary adjustments.
  • Salesforce Tower opens in New York.
  • The company acquires ecommerce platform Demandware to extend its Customer Success Platform to the retail industry, and introduces Commerce Cloud.
  • Year-over-year revenue increases 26% to more than $8.4 billion for the fiscal year ending January 31, 2017.
  • Salesforce has more than 25,000 employees across 25 countries.
  • Forbes recognizes CEO Marc Benioff as “the decade’s top innovator.”
  • The company acquires productivity software company Quip.
  • Salesforce is named the #1 “Workplace for Giving Back” by Fortune.
  • Salesforce.org has given $160 million in grants, logged 2 million employee volunteer hours, and more than 31,000 nonprofits and NGOs use the software for free or at a discount.
  • Salesforce launches Einstein, the first comprehensive artificial intelligence (AI) technology for CRM, making AI accessible to every company and business user.

2017

  • The company achieves net-zero greenhouse gas emissions and begins delivering a carbon-neutral cloud.
  • mySalesforce is unveiled, allowing everyone from admins to business users to build and deploy modern, highly customized mobile apps with point-and-click tools.
  • Revenue grows to $10.548 billion for the fiscal year ending January 31, 2018, up 25% on the previous year.
  • Salesforce has 29,000 employees around the world and more than 150,000 customers.
  • Ninety-five of the Fortune 100 run at least one app from the AppExchange.
Salesforce launches Einstein, the first comprehensive artificial intelligence (AI) technology for CRM

2018

  • The Salesforce Tower in San Francisco has its grand opening.
  • The company introduces Salesforce Customer 360 (now Einstein 1), a new platform service that seamlessly manages customer data across clouds via a click-based user interface. 
  • Einstein Voice is introduced, empowering any user to talk to Salesforce.
  • The company acquires MuleSoft to help power Salesforce’s integration capabilities. Fortune names Salesforce #1 on the 100 Best Companies to Work For list.
  • The company has more than 36,000 employees.
  • Revenue reaches $13.3 billion for the fiscal year ending January 31, 2019.

2019

  • Salesforce acquires Tableau, bringing the world’s #1 CRM and #1 analytics platform together to supercharge customers’ digital transformations.
  • Benioff’s book Trailblazer hits the shelves.
  • More than 1.8 million learners are changing their lives on Trailhead.
  • Dreamforce gathers Trailblazers from 120 countries and 50 U.S. states, with more than 171,000 registered attendees and 16 million online viewers.
  • Annual revenue grew 29%, surpassing $17 billion for the fiscal year ending January 31, 2020.
  • Fortune ranked Salesforce as one of its 100 Best Companies to Work for the 12th year in a row, one of the top 10 Most Admired Companies in the World and one of the Best Workplaces for Giving Back.
  • Over the last two decades, Salesforce has given $330 million in grants to worthy causes, employees volunteered 4.9 million hours, and 46,000 nonprofits and NGO use the software for free or at a discount.
Marc Benioff demos Einstein Voice capabilities at Dreamforce 2019

2020

  • IDC ranks Salesforce #1 in CRM for the 7th year in a row, gaining more share of market than the next nine competitors combined.
  • Salesforce launches a number of products and resources to help companies navigate the pandemic including:
    • Salesforce Care, a set of free rapid response solutions, companies can stay connected to employees, customers, and partners during the pandemic. 
    • Work.com, a suite of expert advice, content, data, and new products to help companies around the globe reopen their businesses and communities, then get back to growth. 
    • Vaccine Cloud to help public health authorities, healthcare providers, and nonprofits quickly scale vaccine operations, from recipient registration and scheduling to inventory management and public health outreach.
  • Salesforce is added to the Dow Jones Industrial Average, effective August 31, 2020.
  • Salesforce acquires Vlocity, and signs definitive agreement to acquire Slack.
  • Salesforce hosts a virtual Dreamforce, attracting more than 140 million views, and its first ever Dreamforce To You, bringing a version of Dreamforce tailored to individual customers around the world.
Salesforce Chair & CEO, Marc Benioff, delivers the Dreamforce To You 2020 Keynote from Salesforce Park.

2021

  • Salesforce completes acquisition of Slack, shares vision for Slack-driven Digital HQ.
  • According to data from a new study from IDC, Salesforce and its ecosystem of partners will create 9.3 million new jobs and $1.6 trillion in new business revenues worldwide by 2026. 
  • Salesforce+ is introduced, an all-new streaming service with compelling live and on-demand content for every role, industry and line of business.
  • Salesforce was ranked #1 in CRM for the 8th consecutive year.
  • Salesforce announced that it is a Net Zero company across its full value chain and has achieved 100% renewable energy for its global operations by procuring renewable energy equivalent to our electric energy usage.
  • Salesforce commits to new Equality initiatives following widespread racial injustice incidents, pushes for police reform.

2022

  • At the 20th annual Dreamforce, Salesforce announced Customer Data Cloud, a hyperscale real-time data platform that now powers the Einstein 1 Platform.
  • Salesforce announced Safety Cloud to help people get together safely. Building on Salesforce’s own event and workplace experience.
  • Salesforce officially announced sustainability as a core company value.
  • Salesforce was ranked #1 in CRM for the 9th consecutive year.
  • Salesforce announced NFT Cloud a trusted, sustainable, connected, NFT commerce solution.
  • Salesforce received multiple notable recognitions including Most Sustainable Company, World’s Best Workplace and World’s Most Admired.
  • Following the 1-1-1 model, Salesforce gave more than $614 million in grants, 7.8 million hours of community service, and provided product donations for more than 51,000 nonprofits and educational institutions.

2023

  • Einstein, launched at Dreamforce in 2016, generates more than 1 trillion AI-powered predictions per week for customers.
  • Salesforce introduces the next generation of Einstein AI, Einstein GPT, the world’s first generative AI for CRM.
  • At Dreamforce, Salesforce unveiled the Einstein 1 Platform — helping facilitate faster development of generative apps and automation. 
  • Salesforce announced Einstein Copilot, bringing a conversational AI assistant, safely grounded in business and customer data, to every CRM application and customer experience. 
  • Salesforce Ventures, the company’s global investment arm, launched a $500 million generative AI fund to bolster the AI startup ecosystem.
  • Following the 1-1-1 model, Salesforce has given more than $704 million in grants, 8.7 million hours of community service, and provided product donations for more than 56,000 nonprofits and educational institutions.

2024

  • Einstein Copilot, the conversational AI assistant for CRM, becomes available to customers.
  • Salesforce celebrates a quarter-century of innovation on its 25th anniversary.
  • Slack AI becomes available to all paid Slack customers. 
  • Salesforce was ranked #1 CRM provider for the 11th consecutive year.
  • Salesforce announces the Zero Copy Partner Network, a global ecosystem of tech solution providers committed to bidirectional zero copy integrations with Salesforce Data Cloud so that data can be actioned across the Salesforce Einstein 1 Platform.
  • Salesforce chooses London for its first AI Center – a physical space to bring together industry experts, partners, and customers to advance AI innovation while providing critical upskilling opportunities.
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