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Salesforce.com buys into Google AdWords

Company acquires tiny start-up that built an add-on for purchasing and managing Google-driven Web ad campaigns.

Martin LaMonica Former Staff writer, CNET News
Martin LaMonica is a senior writer covering green tech and cutting-edge technologies. He joined CNET in 2002 to cover enterprise IT and Web development and was previously executive editor of IT publication InfoWorld.
Martin LaMonica
2 min read
BOSTON--Salesforce.com has acquired a tiny company that created an add-on to its hosted services for purchasing and managing Google-driven Web advertising campaigns.

The acquisition brings the operations of Kieden, a four-person operation with 45 customers, to Salesforce.com. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff and Kieden co-founder Kraig Swensrud detailed the purchase at a press and customer event in Boston on Monday.

Swensrud said that the service, called Salesforce for Google AdWords, lets people launch a Google AdWords advertising campaign from a Salesforce.com application. It will cost $300 per company per month.

The service allows marketing and advertising managers to analyze ongoing campaigns by viewing which people who click on Google AdWords keywords become sales leads. It compiles information, such the amount of sales resulting from Google AdWord clicks and presents it in charts and a dashboard-like interface.

"The problem...is trying to get information from Google AdWords to knowing who the customer is can be kind of a difficult thing," Benioff said. "You tend to lose the link between CRM (customer relationship management) and Google ads."

Former Kieden employees built the integration between Salesforce.com applications and Google's ad-serving system using AppExchange, the development environment of Salesforce.com.

San Francisco-based Kieden started up in January, had a prototype system running within a few weeks and launched a public beta of the application by May, Swensrud said. They weighed the alternative of downloading Java-based tooling, but found it was slower, he said.

Benioff said that the acquisition validates Salesforce.com's AppExchange strategy of providing open application programming interfaces (APIs) and hosting services to third-party developers. By creating a network of add-on applications, Salesforce.com makes its services more useful to customers--and potentially Salesforce.com itself, he said.

"The strategy of AppExhange is to let 1,000 flowers bloom and look for innovation," Benioff said. "This is an idea we didn't have."