By Jessica DiNapoli and Stephen Nellis
(Reuters) – Salesforce.com Inc is grooming its chief operating officer Bret Taylor for a chief executive position to support the U.S. business software conglomerate’s co-founder Marc Benioff, people familiar with the matter said on Tuesday.
The sources said Taylor’s potential promotion is not imminent and could happen in the coming months.
Salesforce’s previous co-chief executive, Keith Block, stepped down last year, leaving Benioff without a formal co-pilot at a time when the San Francisco-based company is battling Microsoft Corp and Oracle Corp in the booming business software market.
Competition intensified after work-from-home arrangements surged during the COVID-19 pandemic, driving corporate demand for technology tools to collaborate and process data.
While Benioff accepted a co-CEO arrangement with Block, he may relinquish his CEO title for an executive chairman role when Taylor is promoted, the sources said. There is apprehension about opting for co-CEOs again given the challenges of delineating responsibilities for these roles, one of the sources added.
A co-creator of Alphabet Inc’s Google Maps, Taylor is a Stanford University-trained engineer credited with devising Facebook Inc’s “like” button as the social media giant’s chief technology officer.
No decision has been made, the sources said. The preparations are a recognition of Taylor’s contributions to the company, they added.
Colleagues described Taylor as an unassuming executive focused on developing new products. He was a key driving force behind Salesforce’s biggest acquisition, its $27.7 billion takeover of workspace messaging platform Slack Technologies Inc, as well as deals for software companies Tableau and Mulesoft, one of the sources said.
The sources requested anonymity because the matter is confidential. Salesforce declined to comment. Taylor did not immediately respond to request for comment.
Since joining Salesforce five years ago after the company acquired his start-up Quip for $750 million, Taylor has helped tackle thorny technical and product issues, integrating its various sales, marketing, e-commerce and customer service tools that run on different back-end databases.
For example, Taylor spearheaded a system dubbed “Customer 360” with various software tools that allow clients to track their own customers.
“He’s Parker 2.0,” said one of the sources, referring to co-founder and director Parker Harris, who led Salesforce’s early technology and product development and is still involved in strategic planning.
Taylor served as Salesforce’s product chief before becoming chief operating officer in 2019. One of his biggest challenges will be to weave Slack into Salesforce’s other cloud applications to compete with Microsoft’s messaging service Teams, the sources said.
Block became Salesforce’s first and only co-CEO to date in 2018. He stepped down 18 months later but remained an advisor to Benioff. A former Oracle sales executive, Block helped Salesforce land several $100-million-plus contracts.
Benioff, whose net worth is pegged by Forbes at $8.5 billion, has expanded his reach beyond Salesforce in recent years, acquiring Time Magazine and supporting philanthropic efforts aimed at improving the San Francisco Bay Area.
During the pandemic he has also spent more time working from Hawaii, where he has maintained a home for decades, the sources said.
(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli in New York and Stephen Nellis in San Francicsco; Editing by Greg Roumeliotis and David Gregorio)