- Salesforce CRM racked up a $2.17 billion gain on investments in 2020, mostly from its stakes in Snowflake and nCino, which both went public.
- With Okta’s $6.5 billion acquisition of Auth0, announced on Wednesday, Salesforce more than tripled its money on that investment in eight months.
- Some companies like nCino build on Salesforce from the beginning, while others like Zoom forge a partnership right before going public.
Last week, Salesforce reported a $2.17 billion annual gain from its investments in other tech companies. A few days later, the company’s venture arm extended its winning streak with another big exit.
In a boom time for large tech IPOs and software consolidation, Salesforce’s name is showing up everywhere. CEO Marc Benioff has proven that he’s not only a mega-dealmaker when it comes to buying high-priced cloud companies like Slack and Tableau, but has also turned Salesforce, with its hefty balance sheet, into a major force in Silicon Valley venture capital.
In 2020, two of Salesforce’s portfolio companies — nCino and Snowflake — soared after going public. They produced a combined $1.7 billion in investment gains, accounting for 78% of Salesforce’s total increase for the fiscal year that ended in January, according to the company’s fourth-quarter report on Feb. 25.
Salesforce CRM also sold all of its 2.8 million Zoom shares last year, after more than tripling its money from investing $100 million in the video chat company’s 2019 IPO.
Those gains are providing a big boost to Salesforce’s bottom line. Of the company’s $4.38 in earnings per share for fiscal 2021, $1.75 came from mark-ups on strategic investments. Salesforce also reported on its balance sheet that its investments were valued at $3.91 billion as of January, up about 100% from a year earlier.
Benioff and Bret Taylor generate many investment ideas
Corporate venture capital used to come with a stigma. Big companies, in the eyes of many investors, had their own agenda, whether it was gaining market insight or product ideas from potential disruptors. Traditional venture firms often preferred to avoid investing alongside them.
John Somorjai, who runs Salesforce Ventures and leads corporate development companywide, said his group’s pitch has to be increasingly compelling because competition for deals has never been greater.
“There is just so much money available, so much dry powder, more than has ever been in the industry,” Somorjai said in an interview this week. “How we’re able to get into the best deals is really leveraging the strength of Salesforce CRM and the tools we have.”
He said he’s roughly doubled the size of his investment team in the past two years to 15 people to keep up with the growing number of start-ups across the globe.
Salesforce Ventures doesn’t take board seats, keeping Somorjai and the team mostly on the sidelines when it comes to questions around a potential acquisition or asset sale. On occasion, Salesforce does buy a Salesforce Ventures company, like its purchase in 2016 of productivity software start-up Quip.
“They never block a sale or create issues and only help,” said Jason Lemkin, founder of SaaStr, which hosts events on cloud software and invests in start-ups. “The fact they help a lot of top SaaS VCs mean they are often happy to have them in a hot deal.”
Somorjai, who joined Salesforce over 15 years ago, said many of his best investment ideas come from Benioff and Bret Taylor, the company’s operating chief (and Quip founder), who are both constantly out talking to customers.
About Benioff, Somorjai said, “Customers come to him and say, ‘Have you looked at this company? They’re doing really interesting things and helping us in this way.’ He feeds that data to me.”
‘Stage agnostic’
Salesforce Ventures is all over the map when it comes to check-size. Or in Somorjai’s words, “We stage agnostic.”
In 2020, it participated in the $7.5 million Series A round for education-tech start-up AdmitHub and the $13.5 million Series B for Angaza, whose sales management platform targets emerging markets. It also invested $100 million in security vendor Tanium at a $9 billion valuation, and just last month backed data analytics company Databricks at a $28 billion valuation.
In recent years, late-stage growth investments have proven to be the fastest way to generate a hefty profit. Salesforce’s $250 million investment in Snowflake’s IPO was worth $529 million after one day of trading. Its $100 million purchase of Zoom shares almost doubled in three days in 2019.
That avenue to a quick buck may be closing. Companies now have many ways to go public, including through a direct listing or special purpose acquisition company (SPAC), neither of which involves selling IPO shares at what amounts to a huge discount.
In a direct listing, a new rule allows companies to raise capital while still unlocking the ability for existing investors to sell at market price. In a SPAC, companies raise money through a PIPE or private investment in public equity. PIPE investors then end up with stock in the underlying company when it starts trading.
While Salesforce could look to PIPEs as another route for late-stage investing, Somorjai said he’s not currently pursuing that path.
“It’s a little bit early to see how that whole PIPE to SPAC trend evolves and how successful some of these SPACs are,” Somorjai said. “It is a very interesting new way for a private company to get liquidity quickly and probably much easier way for them to do it and potentially allows them to have less dilution.”
Investing and competing
Manny Medina, CEO of sales engagement software company Outreach, said Salesforce connected with him about investing in the early days of the Covid-19 crisis, at a time when “it was easier not to invest than to invest.”
“The world was going into a quagmire and you didn’t know which end was up,” said Medina, whose Seattle-based company develops software to help salespeople land deals and stay connected with customers. At the same time, “people are hoarding toilet paper and Purell,” he said.
Still, Salesforce wanted to be a part of Outreach’s $50 million financings round, which valued the company at $1.33 billion. Medina acknowledged that there was tension involved in allowing Salesforce CRM onto his cap table because the companies have competing products and Salesforce CRM is the industry goliath.
Medina said that in conversations with Matt Garratt, Salesforce Ventures’ managing partner, he got comfortable with the team’s promise to protect his company’s intellectual property and have his back, while also getting him in front of the right people at Salesforce CRM or with customers.
Ultimately, it was worth it for Outreach to do the deal because Salesforce has established a reputation for being a very smart investor, he said.
“At the end of the day, we’ll compete with them anyway, like it or not,” Medina said. “Either we get the relationship and get the signaling of someone who’s known for picking winners or we just compete with them without the money and the signaling.”
Outreach integrates with Salesforce but it doesn’t count on the company for distribution or use its AppExchange, which is Salesforce’s marketplace for third-party apps. According to Medina, “the only benefit we get from Salesforce is that they’re evangelizing the cloud.”
That makes Outreach a very different type of investment than Auth0 or nCino.
In November, shortly after its investment in Auth0, Salesforce chose the company’s identity management technology to power its consumer identity offering. Somorjai said it was a service that customers were requesting and Auth0 was a name that people trusted in the space.
For nCino, the partnership started even earlier. The company sells cloud software to help banks digitize and automate operations related to lending and portfolio management. From the beginning, nCino built its platform on top of Salesforce. In nCino’s IPO prospectus, the company mentioned Salesforce 99 times.
Salesforce first invested in nCino in 2014 and continued doing so over the next five years, amassing a 12% stake as of the company’s IPO last year. Those shares were worth almost $800 million at the end of 2020.
“They decided to build their entire business on the Salesforce platform, so it made a lot of sense to invest in that team and what they were doing,” Somorjai said. “I would still say the vast majority of our investments do start in the early stage.”
Via How Salesforce became Silicon Valley’s Best Late-Stage Tech, Investor