Six months after the company lost its co-CEO and announced it was laying off 10% of its global workforce, Salesforce’s top team is undergoing a major personnel change. Credit: Salesforce Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff has made a number of changes to the company’s management team, six months after the company’s co-CEO Bret Taylor announced he was leaving the organization. The roles of chief revenue officer, chief marketing officer, chief operating officer, and chief of staff are among the jobs that are undergoing a personnel or responsibility change, all of which have been confirmed by Benioff on Twitter. Miguel Milano, chief revenue officer and co-owner of execution-management software company Celonis, is set to take over the position of chief revenue officer at Salesforce. Before joining Celonis in 2020, Milano held the role of president of Salesforce in Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA). Ariel Kelman, who most recently was chief marketing officer at Fireblocks, and has also been CMO at at Amazon Web Services and Oracle, will be the new CMO of Salesforce, while Okta and AppDymanics alumnus Kendall Collins took over the role of chief business officer and chief of staff in April. Like Milano, Collins and Kelman were also Salesforce employees in the past. Brian Millham, who was appointed as Salesforce’s COO in August 2022, will be assuming a number of new duties. This will include taking on responsibilities for marketing, employee success, and business technology. The shakeup comes five months after the cloud-based CRM software provider announced it would be cutting around 950 jobs, about 10% of its global workforce. In a letter sent by Benioff to employees at the time of the layoffs, he said: “the environment remains challenging, and our customers are taking a more measured approach to their purchasing decisions. With this in mind, we’ve made the very difficult decision to reduce our workforce by about 10 percent, mostly over the coming weeks.” He added that as Salesforce’s revenue accelerated through the pandemic, the company over-hired and could no longer sustain its current workforce size due to the ongoing economic downturn. Last week, Salesforce reported an 11% increase in revenue for the first quarter of its 2024 fiscal year. However, capital expenditures were 36% higher than anticipated, causing the company’s stock to drop as much as 7%. Meanwhile, the company has also attempted to lure employees back to the office in recent months, after Benioff doubled down on a debate he sparked late last year when he questioned why the company’s new hires were seemingly less productive than their predecessors. In March 2022, he told podcast host Kara Swisher that new hires perform better “if they’re in the office, meeting people, being onboarded, being trained.” This week, news outlet Fortune reported that between June 12-23, for each day an employee comes into the office, Salesforce will donate $10 to a local charity. Donations made via the scheme, dubbed Connect for Good, will be capped at $2.5 million according to an internal document viewed by Fortune. Salesforce did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Related content news AWS invests $100 million in new Generative AI Innovation Center The new center, which will offer free workshops and training, is expected to help enterprises accelerate the development of generative AI-based applications while promoting AWS technology. By Anirban Ghoshal 22 Jun 2023 2 mins Generative AI Artificial Intelligence Enterprise Applications brandpost Converged endpoint management: reduce cost, complexity, and risk By moving away from point solutions, organizations can bring together siloed IT teams and deliver prevention-first security. By Carol Venezia 22 Jun 2023 5 mins Digital Transformation brandpost From details to big picture: how to improve security effectiveness Empower your teams to prioritise the most severe vulnerabilities with a risk-based approach. By Ishpreet Singh, CIO, Qualys 22 Jun 2023 3 mins Security Software feature The 10 highest-paying industries for IT talent The tech industry isn’t the only hot spot for IT jobs, as there’s a growing demand for IT pros across every industry. These 10 non-tech verticals pay the most for IT roles, according to data from Dice. By Sarah K. White 22 Jun 2023 7 mins Salaries IT Jobs Careers Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe