Salesforce paid $110M for BeyondCore, made $4B+ in acquisitions in 6 months

Salesforce may have missed out on buying LinkedIn, but it has had a whopper of an acquisitions spree so far this year anyway. The enterprise cloud and CRM services company put down over $4 billion to buy eight startups in areas like workplace productivity, machine learning and e-commerce solutions, according to the company’s 10-Q filed with the SEC today.

The majority of that $4 billion went into the acquisition of e-commerce business Demandware (acquired for $2.8 billion in June), and $750 million for cloud-based word processing app Quip, but the filing also revealed some other prices that were not previously reported. Chief among them, Salesforce disclosed that it paid at least $110 million to buy BeyondCore, an enterprise analytics business, last month.

Salesforce also disclosed in the 10-Q that in the first half of the year, in total it paid $58.4 million in cash, net of cash acquired, for three other companies. These could include data center analytics startup Coolan, data-entry automation company Implisit Insights and PredictionIO, three companies whose individual acquisition prices were not disclosed at the time their deals were announced this year; but it could also include Your SL, a digital consultancy based in Berlin, which was quietly acquired in February to build out Salesforce Deutschland’s own sales and enterprise integration business.

The pace of Salesforce’s acquisitions, and the total value paid, are significant for a couple of reasons.

It underscores the consolidation trend that we are seeing in the market today, where the large proliferation of startups that have emerged over the last several years is now thinning out; and some of the most promising, rather than growing on their own (either because funding is getting harder to come by, or because they can see more opportunity in combining with bigger entities), are getting snapped up by bigger fish.

The bigger fish, meanwhile, are picking up key technologies, products and talent (and in some cases, customers) to scale without having to build from the ground up, which gets harder to do in many cases as the tech world continues to mature.

A further undisclosed sum will be paid for BeyondCore in an earn-out “based on continued employment of certain recipients following closing of the acquisition.” It’s not clear how much that second tranche of money may be but it could be sizeable. For some context, Salesforce only disclosed paying $410 million for Quip in its Q-10, although we have had multiple sources confirm to us that the price including earn-outs was $340 million more than that.

BeyondCore’s tech, after the acquisition closes (expected end of October, Salesforce says), will be folded into Wave, Salesforce’s analytics product, which just today was updated with features targeting specific verticals. The company as a startup had disclosed only $9 million in funding, from Menlo Ventures, whose partner John Jarve invested in the company, coincidentally today noted that the deal with Salesforce had closed.

The list of acquisitions for the first half of this year was rounded out with MetaMind, which was acquired for $32.8 million (a figure that Salesforce disclosed in Q1) to expand Salesforce’s capabilities in natural language processing; and “quote to cash” startup SteelBrick for $360 million, to add in a tool for salespeople to offer quick quotes to customers.

Salesforce said the three deals totalling $58.4 million are still being worked through to some extent via earn outs and other processes; and Salesforce said it expects to finalise the valuations “as soon as practicable, but not later than one year from the acquisition dates.”