Salesforce Inc. (CRM) just handed Wall Street analysts a reality check. Remember all that hand-wringing about "pilot purgatory" and enterprises getting stuck in endless AI testing cycles? Turns out the data tells a different story.
From Testing to Actually Doing the Thing
The concern was reasonable enough. Recent channel checks suggested customers were taking their sweet time moving AI projects from pilot phase to actual deployment. Analysts warned of gradual uptake and shrinking pipelines heading into Wednesday's Q3 earnings.
But here's what actually happened: Agentforce accounts in production surged 70% quarter-over-quarter. That's not experimentation. That's deployment at scale.
CEO Marc Benioff leaned hard into usage metrics to prove his "Agentic Enterprise" vision is real. The company's AI and Data portfolio reached nearly $1.4 billion in Annual Recurring Revenue, up 114% year-over-year. Salesforce also processed 3.2 trillion tokens through its AI gateway, which Benioff pointed to as evidence of "real enterprise adoption" rather than just flashy demos that go nowhere.
The durability question matters here, and Chief Revenue Officer Miguel Milano had an answer: more than 50% of new Agentforce bookings came from existing customers "refilling the tank." Translation? This isn't one-and-done trial behavior. Customers are coming back for more.
Pipeline Strength Defies the Skeptics
Despite partner concerns about a slowdown, Salesforce reported that Q3 was "one of our biggest pipeline generation quarters ever." The company's current Remaining Performance Obligation (cRPO), which measures backlog, grew 11% against analyst expectations of roughly 9%.
Salesforce is betting big on this momentum continuing. The company expanded sales capacity by 23% year-to-date, a move that signals serious confidence in future demand rather than defensive cost-cutting.
The Numbers and What's Next
Third-quarter revenue came in at $10.26 billion, narrowly missing the $10.27 billion consensus estimate. Not exactly a disaster, and management responded by raising full-year Fiscal 2026 revenue guidance to a range of $41.45 billion to $41.55 billion.
There's also the Informatica acquisition, which is now closing three months ahead of schedule. That deal strengthens the data foundation Salesforce needs to make its AI strategy work at enterprise scale.
Salesforce stock closed 1.71% higher at $238.72 on Wednesday and added another 1.79% in after-hours trading. Despite the positive earnings reaction, the stock has declined 27.80% year-to-date and 35.11% over the past year. The shares maintain a weaker price trend across short, medium, and long-term timeframes, though quality rankings remain strong.