Good afternoon. My name is Jomarya, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the salesforcedot com Q3 2013 Earnings Call. Thank you. I will now turn the call over to Mr.
David Hablick, Senior Vice President of Finance. Sir, you may begin.
Thanks, Jamarria. Good afternoon and thank you all for joining us today to discuss salesforce.com's Q3 fiscal year 2013 results. Details of our results can be found in a press release issued about an hour ago or in our Form 8 ks filed with the SEC. We'll also be tweeting the highlights of our call today on Twitter at the handle salesforceir. I'm joined today by Marc Benioff, Chairman and CEO and Graham Smith, our Chief Financial Officer.
Marc Graham will share a few prepared remarks about the quarter and then we'll open things up to your questions. Please note that our commentary today will primarily be in non GAAP terms. Reconciliations between GAAP and non GAAP metrics for both reported results and forward guidance can be found in our earnings press release. In addition, we may offer incremental metrics to provide greater insight into the dynamics of our business or our quarterly results. Please be advised the additional detail may be one time in nature and may or may not be provided in the future.
It's also possible we may reference certain unreleased services or features not yet currently available in our discussion today because we can't guarantee the future timing or availability of these services or features. We recommend customers listening today make their purchase decisions based on services and features that are currently available. Let me give you a quick safe harbor here before we start. Primary purpose of today's call is to provide you with information regarding our fiscal Q3 2013 performance. Some of our discussions and responses to your questions may contain forward looking statements.
These are subject to risks, uncertainties and assumptions. Should any of these or uncertainties materialize or should our assumptions prove to be incorrect, actual company results could differ materially from these forward looking statements. All these risks, uncertainties and assumptions of course as well as other information on potential risk factors that could affect our financial results are included in our form filed with the SEC, including our most recent report on Form 10 Q, particularly under the heading Risk Factors. Access to our Q3 results press release, historical results, SEC filings and a webcast replay of today's call can all be found on our Investor Relations website at salesforce.com/investors. With that, let me turn the call over to Mark.
Hey, thanks very much David and I'm thrilled to kick off our Q3 results and let's begin. First of all, highlights for the quarter. Number 1, congratulations to San Francisco Giants for a spectacular World Series win, really great. Also in the quarter, I'm also pleased to announce we were able to achieve an annual revenue run rate of more than $3,000,000,000 We're one of a small number of software companies to ever achieve this milestone and this financial achievement also demonstrates the massive shift to social and mobile cloud computing and the amazing level of customer success that companies have had with Salesforce, our technology and our ecosystem. Okay, let's get right into the results.
Number 1, revenue for the quarter rose 35% from a year ago to $788,000,000 pretty awesome. And constant currency revenue grew even faster 37%. I mean, that is really spectacular growth and I think one of the very best for an enterprise software company this quarter. No other enterprise software company of our size is growing faster than Salesforce. And what's amazing is we're delivering this growth while pushing through this $3,000,000,000 revenue run rate heading right into $4,000,000,000 Operating cash flow exceeded $100,000,000 for the quarter, our 5th consecutive quarter with operating cash flow in excess of $100,000,000 just a great job on cash flow over last year.
Deferred revenue was roughly $1,300,000,000 which is up more than 40% year over year. And the dollar value of book business on and off the balance sheet now tops $4,300,000,000 Our top line our top line and pipeline of new business coming out of Dreamforce positions us for a strong finish to the year with fiscal year 2013 revenue growth of approximately 34% year over year. No other enterprise software company is achieving this level of growth and we are well placed for even more success next year. I'm thrilled to announce that we expect to deliver fiscal year 2014 revenue in the range of $3,800,000,000 to $3,850,000,000 which puts us on pace to exceed that magical $4,000,000,000 annual revenue run rate just next year. Salesforce has always been a catalyst and evangelist for change in enterprise software and we've pioneered the shift to cloud, we've pioneered the shift to social and we've pioneered the shift to mobile.
Today, we're delivering this next generation of technology. Look, salesforce.com is the customer company. No other enterprise software company in our industry has defined itself before as the customer company. Companies are turning to us to help them create deep connections with their customers, with their partners, with their employees and between their products and their customers. And with our 6 product lines, the Sales Cloud, the Service Cloud, Marketing Cloud, Salesforce Chatter, Work.com and our Salesforce platform, our customers have the tools to build a social front office unlocking greater levels of productivity and growth between themselves and their customers using us, using salesforce.com, the customer company.
Our vision is to open a door for thousands of empower them to revolutionize how they engage with their customers. Nowhere has this momentum been more evident that our Dreamforce conference where registered attendees nearly doubled from last year. In fact, for those of you who were there, remember that incredible energy, excitement, momentum and capability where more than 90,000 people registered to learn how Salesforce can drive their businesses forward and that was just on premise with 1,000 more who came to visit us online. Now more than ever, companies are looking to Salesforce as their platform for growth. In fact, our customers have made Salesforce the undisputed leader in each of our 4 core markets, sales systems, service systems, marketing systems and next generation cloud platforms.
Our flagship sales cloud continues to be the world's number one app for sales. In the quarter, Sierra Magazine named us as the absolute leader in the sales force automation area for the 7th year in a row. The Service Cloud is the world's number one app for customer service and support. The Service Cloud is the recognized leader in Gartner's Magic Quadrant for customer service and support as well as a leader in the latest Forrester Wave for customer service. And the Marketing Cloud is the world's number one app for marketing and the only that seamlessly connects social marketing with sales and service.
CMOs can now unify and create listening systems, publishing systems, engagement systems and advertising systems and manage all of their marketing activities in one place. The Marketing Cloud has closed some of its largest transactions in the quarter including Expedia, Fox and HSBC. The Marketing Cloud has been a tremendous addition to Salesforce product line and we saw great results at both our Dreamforce conference and subsequent Cloudforce events and we're really excited about this incredible new product line going forward. Salesforce Platform is the world's number one enterprise cloud platform and continues to be our fastest growing product line. The platform continues to deliver.
Over and over again, the Salesforce platform makes any app, social and mobile bringing customers the same development tools that are driving the explosion of consumer apps. It's why more than 800,000 developers have quoted more than 345,000 apps on force.com and more than 2,500,000 apps on Heroku and why you saw that incredible developer enthusiasm at our Dreamforce conference, especially as developers move to this next generation of cloud, social and mobile apps. We are the great and most capable company to take them there. The combination of our vision and our clear leadership in each of these 4 core markets is what's driving our success with customers today. A great example from the quarter is consumer goods giant Unilever.
They are on a mission to become the world's number one marketing company. Unilever is reinventing the way it builds brands by connecting more than 7,000 marketers and 3,000 agencies around the world with an app that was built in just under 8 weeks. And with the Salesforce platform, Marketing Cloud and Chatter, the new Unilever app will be the central hub for marketers to manage all of their campaigns, fostering entirely new way of collaborating. Emirates, one of the fastest growing airlines in the world well with the sales cloud and the sales force platform, Emirates will be arming reps with a 3 60 degree view of their customers and drive a whole new level of sales productivity. You already saw how Dreamforce, our incredible work with Virgin America and now you see it with other great airlines including Emirates, Delta and KLM and others.
And finally, British Sky Broadcasting provides satellite broadcasting broadband and telephony services to more than 10,000,000 households in Europe. They plan to deploy Salesforce Chatter across 30,000 employees and put every customer facing employee directly in touch with their SkyGuide experts to resolve cases and respond faster to questions from customers. And by using Salesforce as their social front end to their back office systems, Beast Guide B is making their entire business social. Other new or add on transactions in the quarter include Assante, Glaxo, Honeywell, JBS, JFE, Luminex, Marina, Olympus, Prudential, Regions, RSA, Seagate, Sumitomo, Vodafone and 1,000 more. And in every one of these examples, companies are transferring their business with Salesforce's social mobile and cloud technologies and our ability to deeply integrate our social front office with their traditional back office systems like SAP and Oracle and helping many of these customers to transform at the speed of social.
The pace at which these companies are embracing our social and mobile cloud technologies is amazing and it's driving outstanding levels of usage. I'm thrilled to announce that Salesforce delivered more than 66,000,000,000 transactions in the quarter, far more than any other enterprise cloud company. That's up 65% from a year ago. This is not shelfware. You can see this on trust.
Salesforce.com that this is a service that is live and being used by hundreds of thousands of companies around the world. That's 930,000,000 transactions every business day. And now we expect to deliver that 1,000,000,000 transaction in a single business day any moment. Nothing speaks more to the value of sales force to our customers than the actual usage of our products with the speed, reliability and capability that our platform is known for. Before I close, I want to remind all of you that we're just 2 weeks away from Cloud Force Tokyo where we'll expect more than 10,000 Japanese enterprises to attend this incredible conference.
Japan is a pioneer in social, mobile and cloud computing and we'd like to invite all of you to come to Cloud Force Tokyo and meet many of our special guests including Toyota's CEO, Akio Toyoda and others who will be joining us for this incredible event. And if you want to get a glimpse into why the Japan marketplace has been so incredible for salesforce.com, please come to Cloud Force Tokyo and take a look at this incredible market known as Japan. With that, I'll turn it over to Graham and discuss the financial details of our Q3. Graham, go ahead.
Thanks, Mark. We posted another solid quarter in Q3 delivering strong top line and deferred revenue growth even as we completed the largest acquisition in history and hosted our most successful Green Force event ever. Our new business pipeline is robust, and we're well positioned for a strong finish to fiscal 'thirteen. Let me take you through our 3rd results, starting with revenue. Q3 revenue was $788,000,000 that's up 35% over last year.
Excluding an approximately $14,000,000 foreign exchange headwind, revenue on a constant currency basis was up 37% over Q3 last year. And as a reminder, our results this quarter included approximately $9,000,000 in revenue from Buddy Media. Looking at year over year growth on a regional basis, revenue in the Americas grew 38 percent to $547,000,000 Revenue in Europe grew 41% on a constant currency basis and 29% in dollars to $134,000,000 and revenue in Asia increased 30% in constant currency and 29% in dollars to $107,000,000 Attrition continued its slow but steady decline contributing to 3rd quarter top line revenue growth and remains in the low teens on a percentage basis. Turning to the income statement. Non GAAP operating income was $77,000,000 in the 3rd quarter, that's up 18% over Q3 last year.
Our non GAAP operating margin was approximately 10% in the 3rd quarter, about 135 basis points lower than Q3 last year due principally to the acquisition of Buddy Media, partially offset by continued efficiency gains in G and A. Year to date, non GAAP operating margins are up about 35 basis points over last year, and we continue to target a slight improvement in full year non GAAP margins in FY 'thirteen. Looking ahead, we will continue to focus on driving operating efficiencies while investing in areas that propel our growth. 3rd quarter headcount additions reflected ongoing investment in sales and R and D. In total, we added more than 550 new employees in Q3, including about 250 people from our acquisition of Buddy Media.
This brings our total headcount to more than 9,300. That's up 34% from the Q3 last year. Turning to earnings, our GAAP results this quarter include the impact of a one time non cash charge of $149,000,000 to establish a valuation allowance against our federal and state deferred tax assets. As a result, we posted a 3rd quarter GAAP loss per share of $1.55 While this is a noncash item and excluded from non GAAP results, I just want to provide some context. The per tax assets on the balance sheet represent the value of tax deductions and credits to offset future tax liabilities.
These assets include net operating loss carry forwards, R and D credits and book tax timing differences such as accrued liabilities. U. S. GAAP requires companies to regularly assess the realizability of deferred tax assets by evaluating certain criteria. These criteria include whether the company has a cumulative 3 year historical pre tax GAAP loss as well as the timing and likelihood of near term GAAP profitability.
After performing this analysis in Q3, we determined that a valuation allowance was required as near term realization of these these assets at some point to offset prospective tax liability. The total valuation allowance impact on 3rd quarter GAAP EPS was a loss of $1.16 per share, and the resulting GAAP tax rate was negative 2.51%. Until the valuation allowances reverse, our GAAP tax rate will likely fluctuate from quarter to quarter. On a non GAAP basis, 3rd quarter EPS was 0 point $3 or about $0.01 above the high end of prior guidance. Non GAAP EPS was better than we expected due to higher revenue combined with slightly lower share count and a tax rate that was a bit lower than we projected.
That's a non GAAP tax rate. Turning to cash flow. Operating cash flow in Q3 was 106 $1,000,000 While this result is down 18% over Q3 last year, it was a good result considering the effect of 3 unusual items. 1st, we paid out approximately $15,000,000 extra in accounts payable to catch up on temporary delays caused by a new financial system implementation in the Q2. 2nd, we paid out approximately $10,000,000 to settle the California state Wage and Hour lawsuit we discussed previously.
3rd, the acquisition of Fuddy Media reduced cash flow by about $7,000,000 this quarter, which was slightly higher than previously estimated. For the full year, we expect operating cash flow growth of approximately 20%. CapEx in the Q3 was $51,000,000 or about 6% of revenue. This is consistent with CapEx as a percentage of revenue in Q3 last year. CapEx continues to be driven by new office build outs and other leasehold improvements related to our growing employee base.
Free cash flow, which we define as operating cash flow as CapEx, was $55,000,000 in the 3rd quarter. Turning to balance sheet. Deferred revenue in the 3rd quarter was approximately $1,300,000,000 that's up 41% over Q3 last year.
Last year. Excluding a year over year foreign exchange headwind of
approximately $16,000,000 deferred revenue increased 43% over Q3 last year. On a sequential quarter basis, deferred revenue benefited from approximately $11,000,000 Deferred revenue continues to benefit from the multi year invoice we highlighted in Q4 last year and from the continued shift to annual billing. The increase in the proportion of annual billing, annual invoicing in Q3 was consistent with the changes we've seen over the past three quarters. The dollar benefit to deferred revenue in Q3 from these two factors was approximately $110,000,000 That's down from $120,000,000 in Q2 $145,000,000 in Q1. Excluding this benefit, deferred revenue on a constant currency basis grew 31% year over year, a great result and again in line with the underlying constant currency deferred revenue growth rates we've seen over the past several quarters.
As a reminder, Q4 will be the anniversary of both the multi year invoice and the annual invoicing policy change. And while the shift to annual billing will continue, we expect the incremental benefit to deferred revenue will be lower than it was in Q4 last year. So while we expect our underlying constant
of the anniversary of
those 2 invoicing factors, we expect reported Q4 deferred revenue to be lower than in recent quarters likely in the mid to high 20% range. Off balance sheet backlog or revenue that is contracted but not yet invoiced was more than $3,000,000,000 in Q3. That's an increase of more than 50% of Q3 last year. Deferred revenue plus this off balance sheet backlog now exceeds $4,300,000,000 Turning to our outlook for Q4. We currently anticipate revenue in the range of $825,000,000 to $830,000,000 for year over year growth of approximately 31 percent.
We expect Q4 non GAAP EPS in the range of $0.38 to 0 point 4 2013, we're raising our revenue estimates to a range of $3,041,000,000 to $3,046,000,000 and raising our non GAAP EPS estimates to a range of $1.50 to $1.52 The midpoint of our full fiscal year 2013 revenue guidance implies growth of approximately 34%. As you know, Q4 is our largest new business and renewals quarter. And because of the compounding effects of our subscription model, the influence of the Q4 on our full year revenue becomes more significant each year. So without the benefit of visibility to Q4, our preliminary estimate for fiscal 2014 is for revenue in the range of $3,800,000,000 to $3,850,000,000 The midpoint of this initial guidance implies FY 'fourteen growth of approximately 26%. We believe this initial view of fiscal 2014 is appropriate given continued FX volatility and other macroeconomic factors such as the resolution of the fiscal cliff in the U.
S, we'll obviously have a lot more clarity on FY 'fourteen after our Q4. As a reminder, all of the underlying assumptions for our non GAAP and our GAAP guidance and a complete GAAP to non GAAP reconciliation can be found in our earnings press release we issued earlier. So to conclude, Q3 was another solid quarter of top line and deferred revenue growth, and we're well positioned for a strong finish to the year. We continue to see significant demand for our solutions across customers of all sizes, geographies and verticals and we look forward to updating you on our progress during Q4 and full year results call in February. With that, I'll turn the call over to the operator for questions.
Operator?
And our first question comes from Philip Winslow with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead with your question.
Another great quarter. Mark, just want to get a sense of what you're seeing across the various clouds in terms of demand and any change you're seeing there against the sales market and obviously it being newer also the Service Cloud too? Well, we've of course had some great success with the Sales Cloud, which has become a multibillion dollar product line for us. And right behind that we have had the service cloud which we just have seen some extraordinary results last year and this year. And we are very optimistic in terms of that becoming another $1,000,000,000 product line for Salesforce.
And right behind that, of course, you see the speed and the rapid delivery of platform. And these remain kind of the 3 major horses in the race to become our 3 core $1,000,000,000 businesses. Now we're making of course a major investment as you know through acquisition as well as organic development with our marketing cloud. And in addition to that, we're going to have an incredible success with work. Com.
But at our core, we remain very uniquely focused on sales service and platform right now. Great. Thanks, Mark.
Our next question is from Mark Murphy with Piper Jaffray. Please go ahead with your question.
I'm wondering if you can update us on adoption trends for the forrest.com platform. We seem to be encountering more CIOs of Fortune 1,000 companies who are formulating these multi year three to know, to the extent that you might be seeing that kind of deeper commitment, what do you think is driving it? And also just separately, can you comment on whether Hurricane Sandy had any type of impact on the business?
Well, I think the number one thing that you're seeing with forest.com is absolutely something that we have been pursuing over a very long period of time. Of course, we're the very first company to ever use the term platform as a service and we believe there is no faster way to build and deploy an application than a platform as a service. And the reason why you're seeing an acceleration of that in your surveys and why we're seeing an acceleration of that in our bookings and our revenue and why the Salesforce platform is the world's number one enterprise platform and continues to be our fastest growing product line is because more and more companies are moving to the delivery of next generation apps especially mobile apps. And as they look to mobile apps, they are looking to force.com. And that is becoming a rapid application development deployment vehicle for those mobile applications.
You saw that at Dreamforce. You saw us deliver our own Dreamforce application, which was a touch friendly application that ran on iPads and iPhones, ran on Windows 8 Tablets, ran on Kindles. All of these things were easily used to access our Dreamforce app and that is the use case for our customers. They want to build applications that they can build once and run across all of these things, not just their traditional desktops like their Dell and HP workstations, but also their next generation deployment systems. And we're showing customers how they can build these next generation mobile apps.
And we also released a book at Dreamforce that we had to reprint during the conference because it sold not sold, but we were giving out tens of thousands of copies of how to use our mobile software development kits. That includes our APIs, which let you deep dig in and execute mobile applications. So you can deliver mobile apps using our force.com system. You can deliver mobile apps using our APIs. You can do some incredible things with the platform.
And these are things that honestly not very many other enterprise software companies have had in mind in the last few years and we're getting tremendous traction from that and that's why more than 800,000 developers have quoted the 345,000 apps and at Dreamforce you saw the developer enthusiasm and not that we haven't had huge tip of our hat to our platform group, which has done a great job not just this year or last year, but over the last decade they've been working on this. So it's very exciting. Thank you
very much.
I was just going to follow-up. We didn't see we saw obviously some difficulty closing some of the deals in the quarter because of Sandy, but I wouldn't characterize it as having a significant impact on the close to the quarter.
Our next question is from Brian Schwartz with Oppenheimer. Please go ahead with your question.
And Mark, I know you mentioned that the HR, the work.com solution is not a part of the core, but we have been coming across in our checks some very large companies that are adopting the product. So I was wondering if you could just update us on the traction that you are seeing with that cloud within your customer base and also the size of customers that are adopting it, if in fact you are selling it into these larger enterprises?
Okay. Well, we have a tremendous executive John Wucchi, who many of you know was a leader at Oracle a leader at SAP who has been pioneering since he got to our company now a little more than a year ago this incredible vision that he has around work dotcom. And 1st and foremost, what work.com is for those of you who are not aware of what we're doing is, it's an obviously it's an application in the HR category, but it's not a traditional HR application. It's an application that gives you productivity. And in today's time and today's age, this is something all of our customers need.
And we have deeply integrated work.com as an marketing cloud. That means that when you're using Salesforce Chatter, for example, you're able to now give recognition to other employees. Through that recognition, you're also able to badge other employees and employees start to build a social profile. We've talked about that for over a year, the importance of building that social profile. But when you're going to that social profile, you're seeing all these incredible badges that are coming out through work.com and it's a bit of a gamification into our core enterprise application suite.
Then, as you get to the next level, of course, we can acquire other badges through testing, through quizzing, through other types of mechanisms of certification and you'll see all of your employees get these kind of badges based on maybe a product certification or a marketing certification or an accounting certification which of course happens for every company on a regular basis. But we're building that profile on that employee as part of Catter and as part of work.com and as part of our core clouds right in the system. Then not only will you see it with our employees, but then you're going to go on and see it with our partners. So just as partners can now build communities and deploy our core systems like Chatter and Sales Cloud into partner communities or into service communities, you can now badge those partners. So you can see that partner has taken on this incredible new capability.
And then finally, you're able to even badge users as well and end users. So, this whole concept of productivity, of training, of badging, of gamification, we think is going to drive work.com
work.com very rapidly.
It's integrated very
deeply with the
next gen HR systems like Workday and others. And, I really commend John for his great vision for this. And if you haven't seen this product, I'd be happy to have John sit down with you and you can take a deeper look into work.com. It's live at salesforce and we're getting some great results out of it.
Our next question is from Adam Hope with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead with your question.
Everybody happy Thanksgiving.
My question is about Europe. You saw acceleration in Europe in a period where a lot of people are seeing deceleration in Europe. Could you drill down on what geographies in particular stood out if any products? And really just give us more color on why your business seems to be improving there against what's obviously very difficult backdrop?
Well, happy Thanksgiving to you and everybody on the call and to all of our employees and customers around the world and we certainly have a lot to be grateful here at Salesforce and it's because of our relationships with all of you. So thank you for everything that you do for us every single day and we can't say that enough at Salesforce. I think that when it comes to Europe, of course, Europe has been in a financial crisis this entire year and you've seen us deliver really outstanding performance in Europe. And that is really based on an investment gambit that we have been making now in Europe for more than a decade. When you look at the major enterprise software markets in the world, 3 of those core enterprise software markets are the U.
K, France and Germany. And it has taken us a long time to get these markets online with us building the distribution organizations, investing in the marketing capabilities, readying the products, building the customer testimonials. Just in the U. S. As you know where we have a very dominant position in these markets because of a similar long term investment.
These next generation markets have taken even longer for us to address and it's been very exciting for us to get to this next level of performance. And we have a great leadership team in Europe and you can see that with our Head of Europe and he's done just a spectacular job. So we're all very excited about the delivery of the European business this year.
Our next question is from Steve Ashley with Robert W. Baird. Please ahead with your question.
Just about systems integrators and their ability just to keep pace with your rapid innovation. Clearly, they've aligned themselves with Sales Cloud and Service Cloud. But now you have some new offerings Marketing Cloud, Work.com. Have you seen them start to extend practices into those new And what is the opportunity there for greater support? We've been making major investments in the systems in the greater world for a long time and that includes the major systems integrators like Accenture and Deloitte.
You've seen them at our major conferences and events and also a whole next generation of systems integrators who have built their businesses using our business. And in all cases, those systems integrators are looking for revenue and they see the growth and the opportunity to build these cut next generation customer systems. Next generation customer systems are not limited to sales or service or marketing or platform, but really the combination of all of these things. And our systems integrators that we work with recognize that and are working to build business capabilities in all of those areas. We have a clearly a strong capability to become the customer company and that is the company that our customers turn to provide the systems to integrate with their customers and that means that we have got to deliver quality capabilities in sales service marketing and platform and we need the partnerships with these systems integrators because we have such a minor professional services capability at Salesforce by design that we need them to step up and make those investments and in many cases they have and have seen tremendous results from them.
Our next question is from Heather Bellini with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead with your question.
Thank you very much. Mark, my question was you guys have added so much product depth and breadth over the last few years with marketing and service and platform, as you mentioned. I'm just wondering, these sales seem to be getting much more strategic and kind of going across departments. I'm just wondering from a sales perspective, has your go to market do you see your go to market having to change and your sales process having to change versus maybe when you were just focused on primarily on Sales Cloud?
Well, when you're a one product company, it's very easy to execute. It's see a bear, shoot a bear and that's how it is with Salesforce automation. And when you become a customer company and you're working on sales and service and marketing and platform and building all the capabilities that your customers need to connect with their customers in these incredible new ways, Well, then you're right in that our employees, our sales reps, our systems engineers need to have the expertise on all of those different product categories. But in terms of fundamental changes to how we sell product, we have not seen a need to make those kinds of changes. And the reason I can tell you that is actually based on experience and testing.
We have been testing different go to market models. We've been testing, not just overlay sales organizations to our core organization, but dedicated sales organizations that are line oriented. We've also had partner based sales organizations. And in all cases, we've been able to come back to our core sales force in the anointment and the acceleration of them to be able to sell all of these solutions. We can continue to test in different regions and markets in the world and in different product lines, different sales models, different distribution models.
But I believe that the fundamental model that we have in place will win out. And in many cases, our sales organization has demonstrated its ability to sell these incredible new acquisitions. You may remember it was just a short time ago maybe a couple of years ago that we acquired a company called Jigsaw and that has been a tremendous new revenue line to our sales cloud. And as we look to data.com, which is kind of the rebranding of Jigsaw becoming more than $100,000,000 business with us, we are seeing our core sales organization be able to sell and deliver that revenue and that's been awesome for us. And we started with a direct organization there.
It went to a blended organization and now we can see our core organization being able to sell that. And that's been a great acquisition for us. And I it's a great differentiator. It's part of our core technology. It's something that all of our customers need and it's something that our core sales force can sell.
And that's how we want these acquisitions to turn out. It takes a multi year investment and it also takes a relentless focus on them. But in that case, data.com becoming a great differentiator by the way on the sales cloud and or work.com becoming also another great differentiator on the sales cloud, The platform becoming a great differentiator on the sales cloud in all situations, we're able to see our core sales organization sell those capabilities coupled with appropriate systems engineering resources and overlays. But it really gets back to our core distribution model that we invested so much in and continue to do so that give us the execution capability there.
Our next question is from Brent Thill with UBS. Please go ahead with your question.
Thanks. Graham, just a follow-up on the deferred revenue for Q4. Can you just help us understand some of the assumptions that you're making when you mentioned the growth range bracket in terms of your assumptions just in the macro and large deal flow? I think you've talked about some large deals in the past quarters. We didn't hear that much about it this quarter.
Can you just give us a sense of what that range implies? Thank you.
Well, sure. I mean, we've obviously seen a few quarters now of a consistent trend on the annual bill frequency, which has had an impact on deferred revenue, which we've I think gone to some lengths to explain each quarter. And so we're sort of assuming that we're going to see a little bit of that continue in Q4. The anniversary of that is during the Q4, obviously. So that's we've assumed a few points of improvement, but clearly not the 7 or 8 points of improvement we've been seeing over the last few quarters.
We're assuming that we're not at this point going to have another large multiyear invoice. That's always possible, but certainly my deferred revenue guidance of the mid to high 20% range does not assume another large multiyear invoice drops in the Q4. And then the rest, obviously, of deferred revenue, sort of the underlying trend on deferred revenue, which is related clearly to our revenue guidance. And that's obviously in turn based on our attrition assumptions and our pipeline ratios we look at each quarter.
Our next question is from Kirk Materne with Evercore Partners. Please go ahead with your question.
Mark, the federal fiscal year finished up this quarter. And I was just kind of curious on your view on how you guys are sort of taking advantage of the government's sort of view on going to cloud first. I realize it's a small part of your business now, but I guess how do you feel about sort of the momentum in that business and the ability for that business to maybe start moving the needle in terms of becoming a bigger, bigger part of the overall story for Salesforce? Thanks.
Well, as you said, we have not really focused on the government as a traditional acquirer of our technology just because we've seen so many other ready markets. We did acquire an executive and doubled down our investment in the government markets. That was Vivek Kundra who was the former CIO of the U. S. Federal Government joined our team and we're very excited about having him on board and he is rebuilding our strategy and execution in that area.
But this is just not an area that we have traditionally gone after. I think at some point we will be able to announce some substantial transactions. And the reason why is our main customer in the U. S. Government has been the GSA.
And the GSA as you know is the dominant buying authority for the U. S. Government. They are really the ones who have led the cloud first initiative and execution. They've done tremendous work with us with Chatter, with our sales cloud, the deployment of other cloud based applications such as those from Google and many other government agencies are looking to them like what we've seen in Health and Human Services, Department of Energy and others.
Of course, you have to look for our government business being mostly dominant in Japan where the Japan Post remains one of our largest and most important customers in the world. The Japan Post as you know has 100 of 1000 of employees and serves 100,000,000 Japanese customers as their dominant post office also insurance company and bank and we continue to expand our relationship with the Japan Post. And you saw other recent announcements with us with the U. K. With the G Cloud, but those are not material to our revenue today.
But we are very focused on showing to others what we've done in Japan and with GSA as our true highlights of our government business.
Our next question is from Jason Maynard with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead with your question.
Mark, I
have a question about your small and midsize customer base. And I'm curious, how you would characterize the multiproduct sales into the SMB versus the enterprise because clearly with big deals it's multiple products that are being consumed. What's the trend in the SMB? And how do some of the new products desk.com and some of this fit into the model? And what are you seeing in terms of adoption rates for some of the new offerings?
Thank you. Yes. Thanks so much, Jason. We've had just some great success in the small and medium marketplace where we've seen that customers, our customers, they're able to really standardize on our products and get to a CELA, a social enterprise license agreement much faster than the largest of companies. Over and over again, we see these next generation of companies standardizing on us in that area.
And it's been and continues to be a very strong business for us. And while we saw some weakness, for example, in small businesses earlier this year that cleared up in this quarter and we saw some very solid delivery from what we call our commercial sales organization. This quarter, we have a great leadership team in commercial and they did another very nice job and consistent delivery for us and the customers. And I'm sure you've met many of them at Dreamforce are indeed buying all of those products sometimes as one agreement.
Our next question is from Laura Lederman with William Blair. Please go ahead with your question. Thank you for taking my questions and congratulations on a good quarter. Can you talk a little bit about the marketing suite and whether or not you think that you need to kind of be in the traditional pieces of that, such as campaign management and lead management and email marketing? Or is it really more the newer social pieces that you think are important going forward as you build out a marketing solution?
Well, as you know now just for a little more than a year, we've been very focused on building out our marketing cloud and that started with our acquisition of Radian6, which is a business that will move over to over $100,000,000 in revenue next year and that's been very exciting. And now we've coupled that with Buddy Media which also is a fast grower as well. But we are at the very beginning of our journey with the Marketing Cloud. And while we've made 2 incredible acquisitions with 2 incredible leaders with Michael Lazaro and Marcel Lebron and we've coupled that with our core sales force leadership giving a bread cleaner the position of EVP of our Marketing Cloud and also bringing in Susan St. Leger to run our core sales operations, one of our top performers in sales in to run Marketing Cloud sales.
What we've been excited about with the Marketing Cloud is that it has a huge runway. Now you've mentioned many of the directions that we could move with the Marketing Cloud. None of those directions are as important as just pure play execution of the assets that we have acquired. And one of the ways that we make our acquisitions successful at Salesforce is that we focus on the day to day execution of those assets. And Marketing Cloud has to focus on the success of Radian and Buddy.
And then we when we see those online, we move on to the next one. And that's very much what we did with Radian 6. We saw some great success. We've moved on to Buddy. I'm sure there will be another chapter.
This is an area that we're going to of course innovate organically and inorganically in. And as you know by 2017 Gartner says that CMOs will spend more than CIOs on technology and we want to be prepared for that as the worldwide leader in providing the marketing automation to our customers. There's a lot of exciting opportunities, companies, new technologies, entrepreneurs for us to partner with in doing that. But we have to be cautious in terms of taking on these acquisitions because we have to execute on them and that's been our focus and that's what we will continue to do. And then when we feel like those businesses are going well then we reconsider what the next step is.
Our next question is from Derrick Wood with Susquehanna International Group. Please go ahead with your question.
No, Derek, we're moving on.
All right. And our next question is from Kash Rangan with Merrill Lynch. Please go ahead with your question.
All right. Non sales mix of the cloud, it's been steadily going up very nicely about 45% or so at the Analyst Day. Now as you look at the non sales clouds, they are the faster growing businesses. So at some point, it feels like your business, sorry to say this, might actually reaccelerate, although it's actually very good growth rate. You've got non sales cloud businesses growing rapidly.
They're going to be about 50% of the new business mix. If you staff it up properly, it just feels like this could be a market as big as maybe even larger than ERP. What's the right way to think about your business mix of the different moving parts as you look at your business over the next 4 to 5 years? Thank you.
Well, I think that you went through a lot of it. You know that we have a multi $1,000,000,000 business on our hands with the sales cloud that continues to do well that's highly differentiated with many of the capabilities that we talked about on the call today including the platform, data, work and also including the service systems and marketing systems. You know that we continue to grow Service Cloud which has been rated by Gartner and Forrester as perhaps the absolute leader in the customer service community and that's becoming very rapidly a $1,000,000,000 business for us. And then you also know that we have a barn burner on our with a platform. And those things are changing the mix of our revenue because our sales reps have more to sell than just the sales cloud.
In addition to that, we have future revenue opportunities with product lines like Marketing Cloud and others. But we've moved successfully I would say from being a single product company to a multi product company And we also moved successfully from having a single $1,000,000,000 business to what will clearly be multiple $1,000,000,000 businesses and that is very important for the future success of our company and our shareholders, very hard to do as very few companies in the software industry have ever pulled that off as you know. And we continue to focus on our core execution across those product lines and you articulated our product strategy very well. It's not hidden. We're focused on sales and we're focused on service.
We're focused on marketing as our 3 core application areas. And then we are focused on chatter platform and work as some of our very core differentiation and also future revenue lines. And in all cases, all 6 of those core product lines together positioning us as the customer company, the company our customers are choosing to go with to rapidly deploy these next generation customer systems and get their absolute fastest time to money and the rapid return on investment that they're looking for.
Our next question is from Ross MacMillan with Jefferies and Company. Please go ahead with your question.
Thanks a lot. Mark, service has been such a great growth driver for the company for some time now. Do you think service can ultimately be as big or if not bigger than Sales Cloud? And then secondarily, one for Graeme. You talked about cash flow from operations this year being 20% growth.
I think that was a change from the low 20% growth last quarter. If that is a change, can you just give us the puts and takes on that? Thank you.
Well, it's hard to say at this point, because the sales cloud has been so successful. When will the mark when will Service Cloud pass it? I don't really know. And I'm not able to make that prediction. And if I was able to make that prediction, I would tell you.
But there's no doubt that service and sales are 2 really 2 great foundational assets for the company where we've done well and where our competitors have struggled. And that remains our focus and we've got a great team on that. Graham, would you like to finish up on that?
Sorry. Can you just repeat the question? Could we cut them off? Sorry, what was the question Mark? I had someone talking.
Sorry, Graham. I didn't mean to cut you off.
On the operating cash flow. Yes, I think we've got guidance for full year operating cash flow of around 20%. Obviously, we had a big $40,000,000 boost in Q4 last year from the multiyear invoice, but we're comfortable with the 20% operating cash flow number for the full year.
Okay. We can take one more question.
Okay. And our final question for today will come from Rick Schwerland from Nomura. Please go ahead with your question.
First for Graham. Graham, was there any impact at all from the fiscal cliff we saw from a lot of the on premise companies? We didn't see it from NetSuite, Cornerstone or apparently not from you guys. So if you could offer us any perspective there. And Mark just for you, I don't know if you had an opportunity to respond if you care to Larry Ellison's comments at Oracle OpenWorld recently about multi tenancy in the database.
I wonder if you could just comment whether Oracle or SAP given all their acquisitions you're seeing any more of them in the market?
Yes. So just to take your the first question, I think, clearly, we're mindful of the environment we're operating in. I think in terms of our guidance, we weigh all the different factors that I outlined earlier. And so I think when you when we get through the Q4, we'll I think have a much better sense as to whether there is any impact of a pullback in investment. Certainly, there have been articles in the press over the last few days about that.
But we exceeded our guidance comfortably for this quarter. So I think it's really to me, this is all about what's the Q4 hold for us. Clearly, it's a big new business and renewals quarter. So I think we'll have much better insight to that in February. Mark?
My analysis is that for SAP, they have repositioned themselves as a company that offers analytics through business objects and data warehousing with HANA and that this is their major focus of their work going forward and both of those technologies on premise with a somewhat immaterial percentage of their revenue as in cloud. With Oracle, I think that they reposition themselves as a mainframe company and operating system provider and also deposition themselves in our core space through their conference. And in terms of those 2 companies, it's not that we don't see them. Of course, you see them, you'll see customer flare ups or places where they have especially strong customer relationships, but they have not provided the next generation vision for customer based systems, whether it is how to connect with your customers, your employees, your partners and your products in an entirely new way. I think that you saw Dreamforce.
We have future forward positioning. We're trying to be extremely mindful and project the future for our customers. And it's a very different approach than how they have been marketing their products in the areas where they've been focused on in their bookings. And our focus has been fairly consistent over the last 36 months. It will continue to be very consistent in these areas.
And while they have their positioning in their company whether it's SAP as the kind of the HANA company and Oracle as the Exadata company we want to be the customer company. All right, great.
That wraps up our call for today. Thanks, Mark and Graham. I want to apologize to everybody who we didn't get to. We have lots of you still in the queue. Please feel free to reach out to us.
For those of us who will see in Tokyo, we look forward to that.
Yes. We're absolutely looking forward to seeing everybody in Japan.
Great. And have a fantastic holiday and we look forward to catching up with you soon. Bye bye now.
Happy Thanksgiving everyone.
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your participation in today's Salesforce Dotcom Q3 2013 earnings call. You may now disconnect.