Salesforce & HubSpot All-In on AI Agents 
View in browser

Live by the cloud, die by the cloud. 

 

Salesforce entered the year on a high, with a rising stock and heaps of positive sentiment about what was around the corner. But Q2 brought a rough earnings call, which led to the stock plummeting 20% and whispers about the beginning of the end. 

 

A pioneer of the cloud era that became one of its biggest winners, Salesforce is now grappling with the beginning of a new era – the era of AI – and questions about its ability to maintain its dominant perch. How does a company growing just 8% YoY – akin to running backward in tech – compete with the radical startups promising a whole different future?

 

Salesforce was already dealing with all that as execs prepared for this week’s Dreamforce. And then came the Klarna bombshell: the Swedish fintech let the world know it no longer needed Salesforce; instead, it was going the DIY AI route. 

 

It felt like an “Emperor’s New Clothes” moment: how many firms would follow suit, and reconsider what was considered a sacrosanct part of the tech stack?

Enter Agentforce

Salesforce needed its leader to do something big, and Marc Benioff answered the call. He announced that the company was doing a “hard pivot” and betting the farm on Agentforce, its suite of autonomous AI agents. HubSpot did the same at their Inbound conference this week. The two largest GTM tech companies in the world are betting on AI Agents. 

 

They are encouraged by the fact that we now have larger multi-modal AI models with PHD level reasoning, allowing us to create AI agents - pieces of software that can achieve complex, multi-step goals requiring various tools. The types of things that humans have traditionally outperformed machines in.

 

Both companies have broad platforms that their customers use to enable and track multiple customer touchpoints, and this gives them valuable context with which to equip these AI agents. This also minimizes the hallucinations that currently make AI adoption difficult for the enterprise. 

 

The demos were definitely interesting, but it’s time to dream a bit. Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s leather-jacketed luminary, claims that AI is moving at “Moore’s law squared.” So what could this mean for AI Agents in 12-24 months? 

 

“Hi, my name is…”

Until recently, I assumed all my future colleagues would be human. Now, I’m pretty confident that the most successful companies in the future will be a blend of humans and AI Agents. Daunting, yet exciting. 

 

The top expense for a tech company is human capital. It’s also one of its chief limiting factors, as attracting, hiring, and retaining elite talent is a hard problem that gets harder at scale. 

 

Every founder I know is always deciding which projects to prioritize and which tradeoffs to live with, and the limiting factor is generally the stable of elite individuals available to them. AI Agents will mean far fewer tradeoffs. 

 

They will still have to make tradeoffs but of a different sort. Maybe the CAC a company can tolerate is very different when the technical support department is run by AI Agents. Or when a company can provide personalized customer success to every single customer, even those paying only $100 a month. 

 

Now, it’s not certain that Salesforce and HubSpot will be winners here. They have the advantage of being broad platforms, with data across various customer touch points. They also have the advantage of having a large customer base and expertise in distribution.

However, our ecosystem is built on the back of companies we don’t know today, who are going to shape the future. A platform shift is a great birthing ground for these startups.  They have the advantage of baggage-free first-principles thinking. They don’t have the customers or their data today, but they will have AI Agents to help bridge any gap.

It actually doesn’t matter who wins the AI arms race - Salesforce, HubSpot, or a company we’ve never heard of. What matters is for us to understand how to use AI Agents to do more and figure out how best to deploy capital in this new world. All while holding on to the humanity in our organizations.

Asad Zaman - Building a GTM Leadership Team

Asad Zaman
CEO, Sales Talent Agency

Co-host of Topline podcast and Editor of Topline newsletter

 

PS: Was this email forwarded to you? Subscribe here.

Chart of the Week

Screenshot 2024-09-19 at 11.53.42 AM

Source: Compass by ICONIQ
All I can think of this week is what ARR per FTE would look like in 12-24 months, as organizations start implementing AI Agents at scale. That said, Compass is a wonderful tool built by ICONIQ, and worth bookmarking as it is updated every quarter. 

This Made Us Think

  1. How to Succeed in MrBeast Production - MrBeast: This 36-page employee onboarding document is a must read for anyone who wants to understand how someone at the top of their craft thinks and operates.

  2. Amazon’s Jassy vows to fight bureaucracy - The Information: While most publications latched onto Amazon mandating employees to be in office 5 days a week, The Information saw the deeper message, which has to do with fighting the bureaucracy that has been established at Amazon.

  3. The Mark Zuckerberg Interview - Acquired Podcast: Listeners of Topline know that Acquired is my favorite podcast because of the intense research that goes into every episode. Their interview with Zuck was another win for the Acquired team, and a must listen for everyone in tech.

Overheard in the Topline Slack Community

“Spirited debate on revops [in Topline E75]! I'm squarely in the 'revops is critical but let's not make it a C level position or get weird about it' crowd. It's less about automation science projects. In enterprise B2B you need to understand the I/O of the sales factory if you want to make testable hypotheses on how to improve it. Revops can provide the instrumentation to track that well, business intelligence to analyze the data, and (ideally) suggested changes to inputs and alterations to the sales process to produce a higher yield...”

Hungry for more Topline? Join Topline Slack in Slack where 380+ Founders & Operators speak freely and try to separate the signal from the noise in B2B tech.

Movers and Shakers

  • Mike Head joined PartnerStack as CRO
  • Setpoint closed a $31M Series B fundraising round led by 645 Ventures
  • Mastercard has agreed to acquire Recorded Future, a threat intelligence provider, from Insight Partners for $2.65 billion
  • Amrita Mathur joined Zapier as VP Marketing
  • Russ Mikowski has joined SurePeople as CEO

Unlock the Secrets to Driving Growth

Pavilion and Crossbeam are surveying leading GTM professionals for part two of The Future of Revenue report, aiming to uncover the key strategies driving growth in 2024. 

Want to be part of Part II? Contribute to the research.

As a thank you, you'll get early access to the report before its official release at GTM2024 in Austin, TX.

Countdown to GTM2024 begins!

Join us October 14-16 in Austin for GTM2024, the only B2B tech conference exclusively for GTM executives. 

 

Expect one-of-a-kind sessions, interactive workshops, and unique networking opportunities.

 

Beyond the keynotes and workshops, we’re also hosting the Pavilion Pickleball Tournament of Champions and morning yoga and runs around downtown Austin to help you stay energized throughout the event. Buy your ticket today.

 

(Psst... for being a reader, you get 15% off your GTM2024 ticket with the code TOPLINE.)

View the full calendar of industry events.

All content in this newsletter was written and edited by Asad Zaman, Kathleen Booth, and Cullen Denny - not AI 🤖.

Have feedback? Let us know

 

For Brand Partnerships, contact Aaron Leeder.

Sent with ♥️ by Pavilion, 302A West 12th Street, #254, New York, NY 10014, USA

Unsubscribe Manage preferences