Salesforce Is a Dark Horse in the AI Race

In the frothy business of selling artificial intelligence service, Salesforce Inc. has been punching above its own weight. “Salesforce?” I hear you wonder. The folks in the dull business of selling customer relationship management software?

Yes, and they’re getting aggressive about AI too.

The company has just become the first major tech firm to launch a new breed of generative AI tools known as “agents,” which others on the cutting edge of the field have long talked about without delivering anything. And unlike its peers, Salesforce is explicit about how its novel tools will displace jobs. The approach is bold but could be what’s needed to push the firm ahead in the AI race as younger companies like OpenAI and Anthropic encroach on its territory.

You can attribute this feistiness to Marc Benioff, the larger-than-life chief executive officer of Salesforce whose maverick strategies helped him spearhead the software-as-a-service (SaaS) revolution, and grabbed him a client base that includes 90% of Fortune 500 companies, including Walt Disney Co. and Ford Motor Co. Salesforce makes money by selling subscriptions to applications like Sales Cloud and Service Cloud, which companies use to keep track of their sales and customer service processes. Salesforce’s big pitch at Dreamforce this week — its lavish conference that all but takes over downtown San Francisco each year — was Agentforce, a new service that lets customers deploy autonomous AI-powered agents.

According to Salesforce, bots are out and agents are in. The former are the chatbots, powered by technology from firms like OpenAI, Google and Anthropic, that sit in the corner of a website and can answer a customer’s questions. Now, instead of just dispensing information, agents can take action. They can file a complaint, book an appointment or change a shipping address on file.

“Taking action” might sound like a huge risk for businesses to make with AI, given that generative models are known to hallucinate, and chatbots have occasionally given erroneous information to customers. Imagine an AI model mishandling a booking.