Untitled Document
 Register Now & Save!
Untitled Document
2009 Gold Sponsor
Untitled Document
2009 Silver Sponsor
Untitled Document
2009 Panel Sponsor
Untitled Document
2009 Exhibitors
Untitled Document
2009 Media Sponsors
Latest News
On Tuesday, Clustrix announced the availability of...
EMC moved to make Hadoop safe for the Joe Blow big...
Amazon has reined in the price of its S3 storage a...
The focus of Java EE 7 is on the cloud, and specif...
AMD Thursday told financial analysts it’s gonna tr...
2011 was a year of rapid adoption for public and p...
SYS-CON Events announced today that ScaleOut Softw...
Acer has sued its former CEO Gianfranco Lanci in M...
Virtualization and private cloud are good for serv...
Regulation of consumer and corporate data is incre...
Can't Miss RSS Feed
Subscribe to the RSS Feed & Get All The Conference News As It Happens!
Why Didn’t I Start Salesforce.com?
"Our job is to sell chemicals, not software"

Between 1991 and 1994 I worked for the French company Rhône-Poulenc in its U.S. headquarters in Cranbury, New Jersey. Rhône-Poulenc is the biggest French company in the world and is owned by the French government.

During those three years I designed, coded and delivered a state-of-the-art salesforce automation system for the company, with a support team of five. We spent roughly $2 million on hardware but the company saved an estimated $11 million in outside consulting fees. The best bid for the job would take roughly five years to complete and would have been inferior to what we developed. And it probably would never have made it out in five years anyway. With a five-year project, requirements change, and if the requirements remain the same then the people change. So a consulting company awarded such a contract gets paid but doesn't necessarily need to deliver the goods. The basic rule of a consulting business is to get the contract, you think about delivery later on. If you don't get the contract, you don't have a project to think about. My view of consultants is that most of them are like castrated bulls, all they can do is advice.

Our salesforce automation system was so popular with Rhône-Poulenc's U.S. sales teams that word spread to other countries, and to headquarters in Paris. One day Rhône-Poulenc's U.S. president John Wistrich stopped by my office and told me that a half-dozen French IT folks had just showed up unannounced and were waiting in the conference room for me to demo my salesforce automation system for a possible worldwide roll-out.

SFAS, as we called it, came with an integrated e-mail system, live written orders, inventory, delivery and accounting information at the users' fingertips on their Compaq laptops. They loved it. Don't forget, in 1991 there was no Internet or web the way we know it. E-mail was mostly unheard of among corporate users.

I worked long hours. I was in the office every Saturday and Sunday, and often worked until midnight on weekdays. One Saturday morning right after our mass U.S. roll-out I ran into Bernie Kranz, our IT director. I said, "Bernie where is everybody? Where is my team? We have a lot of work to do."

Bernie and I had a long chat by the water cooler. He said, "Fuat you don't belong here, or in the corporate world. You're an entrepreneur. You created such a mess for John and me, every country wants your salesforce automation system. All day long Wistrich is getting phone calls from one country or another that wants the system. Our job is to sell chemicals, not software. Look around here, people here are happy that they have a job and are waiting to retire. You should look into starting your own business. I'm sure you will be very successful. Good luck to you."

So I went home and thought about Bernie's advice.

By the next weekend I had announced PowerBuilder Developer's Journal, the hottest thing in IT, the ultimate client/server platform of ‘90s, hotter than Java, Linux, the biggest hype de jour ever. I had started our SYS-CON journey. My part-time moonlighting company SYS-CON Systems Consultants became SYS-CON Publications. Why didn't I start Saleforce.com? The domain name and a huge business opportunity were certainly there. Actually there were no domain names, or the World Wide Web. I went with my passion and I'm glad I did.

About Fuat Kircaali
Fuat Kircaali is the founder and chairman of SYS-CON Media, Cloud Expo, Inc. and Ulitzer, Inc.

Kircaali came to the United States from Zurich University, Switzerland in 1984 while studying for his PhD, to design computer systems for SH-2G submarine hunter helicopters for the U.S. Navy. He later worked at IBM's IS&CG Headquarters as a market research analyst under Mike Armstrong's leadership, an IBM executive who later ran IBM Europe and AT&T; and Fuat was the Director of Information Systems for UWCC, reporting to CEO Steve Silk (later Hebrew National CEO), one of the top marketing geniuses of the past two decades.

Kircaali founded SYS-CON Media in 1994, a privately held tech media company with sales exceeding $100 million. SYS-CON Media was listed twice by Inc 500 and Deloitte and Touche as one of the fastest-growing companies in North America. Kircaali launched Ulitzer, Inc., a revolutionary "new media" start-up in mid 2009.

Fuat completed Bogazici University Business Administration program in 1982 with a Bachelor's Degree. He was one of 50 students accepted to the program out of over 1 million high school graduates that year.

http://twitter.com/fuatkircaali

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Register | Sign-in

Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1

Untitled Document

Call 201 802-3021 or Click Here to Save $400!

Save $400

 Sponsorship Opportunities

SYS-CON's International Cloud Computing Conference & Expo, held each year in California, New York and Prague is the leading event covering the fast-emerging Cloud Computing market for Enterprise IT professionals. Co-located with the International Virtualization Conference & Expo, the combined event will surely deliver the #1 i-Technology educational and networking opportunity of the year for those seeking to establish a market lead anywhere in the multiple layers of the Cloud Computing ecosystem.





Who Should Attend?

Senior Technologists including CIOs, CTOs, VPs of technology, IT directors and managers, network and storage managers, network engineers, enterprise architects, communications and networking specialists, directors of infrastructure Business Executives including CEOs, CMOs, CIOs, presidents, VPs, directors, business development; product and purchasing managers.


Video Coverage of Cloud Computing Expo

Brian Stevens: The Opening of Virtualization
Jon Wallace: User Environment Management – The Third Layer of the Desktop
Brian Duckering & Ken Berryman: Managing Hybrid Endpoint Environments
Preeti Somal: Game-Changing Technology for Enterprise Cloud and Applications

 Conference Media Sponsor: Cloud Computing Journal

Cloud Computing Journal aims to help open the eyes of Enterprise IT professionals to the economics and strategies that utility/cloud computing provides. Cloud computing - the provision of scalable IT resources as a service, using Internet technologies - potentially impacts every aspect of how IT deploys and operates software.

Government IT Conference & Expo 2009
Allstar Conference Faculty Lineup Will Include...


CHEVALIER

Novell Canada

DICARLO

Sun Micosystems

FOXWELL

Sun Microsystems Federal

GABHART

Web Age Solutions

GREENBERG

Integralis

HAHN

Tranxition

WILLIAMS

Maxworks

JACKSON

Dataline, LLC

KHOSLA

IBM

KRZYSKO

US Departement of Defense

LIBERMAN

Lieberman Software

MARKS

AgilePath

MORGENTHAL

QinetiQ North America

RYAN

Asankya

TRAJMAN

Vertica

WHITE

BDNA


SYS-CON EVENTS


Past Events Archive

Cloud Computing Conference & Expo
2009 East

cloudcomputingexpo
2009east.sys-con.com/
Virtualization Conference & Expo
2009 East

virtualizationconference
2009east.sys-con.com/
Cloud Computing Conference & Expo
2008 West

cloudcomputingexpo
2008west.sys-con.com/
SOAWorld Conference & Expo 2008 West
soaworld2008.com/
Virtualization Conference & Expo 2008 West
virtualizationconference
2008west.sys-con.com
AJAXWorld Conference & Expo 2008 West
ajaxoct08.sys-con.com
SOAWorld Conference & Expo 2008 East
soa2008east.sys-con.com
Virtualization Conference & Expo 2008 East
virt2008east.sys-con.com
AJAXWorld 2008 Conference & Expo East
ajaxmar08.sys-con.com
SOAWorld Conference & Expo 2007 West
www.soaworld2007.com
Virtualization Conference & Expo 2007 West
virt2007west.sys-con.com
AJAXWorld 2007 Conference & Expo West
ajaxoct07.sys-con.com

Cloud Computing Expo Alumni Delegates Represents...

• AccuRev
• Adea Solutions
• Adobe Systems, Inc [3 delegates]
• ADP
• Aeropostale, Inc
• Aetna
• Akbank Training Center
• American Family Insurance
• American International College
• American Modern Insurance
• Amphion Innovations
• Amplify LLC, Clipmarks [2 delegates]
• Anderson Consulting
• Arrow Electronics [3 delegates]
• Ashcroft Inc
• Athabasca University
• ATS
• Audatex
• Avanade, Inc.
• Avaya Inc. [5 delegates]
• Azul [2 delegates]
• Backbase [2 delegates]
• Bank of America
• Bank of NY
• Barnes and Noble
• Barnex Investment International Limited
• BEA
• Bear Stearns [2 delegates]
• Bendel Newspaper Company Limited
• BizInnovative
• Bloomberg [2 delegates]
• BlueBrick Inc.
• BMC Software
• Boeing
• Bottomline Technologies [2 delegates]
• BP
• Broadcom

   read more...
Cloud Computing Blogs
In other words, VMware’s server density is higher. Boles suggests this means that customers should be “assessing virtualisation on a ‘cost per application’ basis. VM density has a sign
Traditionally, the way people have implemented high availability is by using a high-availability management package like Linux-HA[1], then configure it in detail for each application, file system moun