Analyst Insights
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InvisibleCRM suite pays back annual investment after the first five hours according to Nucleus Research
InvisibleCRM, a technology provider of applications designed to increase user adoption and ROI of enterprise systems, pays back annual investment of its flagship solution SalesDesktop, the Salesforce Outlook integration, after the first five hours of time saved according to Nucleus Research.
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InvisibleCRM Named 'Cool Vendor' by Gartner
Vendors selected for the Cool Vendor report are innovative, impactful and intriguing.
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Gartner Says Business Application Vendors Face Challenge to Move to ‘The Process of Me’
As organisations seek to leverage their skilled people, reduce training time and support end-to-end workflow across all aspects of the business, applications software now needs to be designed for the individual.
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Will InvisibleCRM`s take on embedded CRM allow it to see profits?
by Martin Schneider
InvisibleCRM continues to draw close attention from industry analysts and visionaries with the latest publication from The 451 Group. In this report, they position InvisibleCRM as one of clear leaders in the emerging embedded CRM market.
(registration required)
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Your Business On Demand
According to an IDC report, the on-demand application services market is projected to grow from $665 million in 2003 to $3.6 billion by 2008
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Microsoft CRM Skips a Generation
The long wait is finally over. Microsoft, which has been hinting at its next generation Customer Relationship Management (CRM) product, is finally delivering the goods with Microsoft Dynamics CRM 3.0. No, you didn’t miss a release; the company combined new features and native integration to Office and Outlook, skipping right from release 1.2 to 3.0. However, companies waiting for a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) hosted delivery model will need to wait a bit longer.
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Microsoft Vista and Office 2007 Meet Enterprise Resistance
Despite the hype and hoopla about everything from the Xbox 360 and Origami to MSN and the Dynamics enterprise applications, Microsoft’s current power derives from the desktop in Microsoft Office and the Windows operating system. In fact, the company’s surge into new enterprise territory has its foothold and foundation on the desktop, so it’s got a great deal to lose if its dominant status on that surface is shaken.