Skip to content
OnMSFT.com
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Windows
  • Surface
  • Xbox
  • How-To
  • OnPodcast
  • Edge
  • Teams
  • Gaming
Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Windows
  • Surface
  • Xbox
  • How-To
  • OnPodcast
  • Edge
  • Teams
  • Gaming
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Salesforce announces Salesforce Connect, integrates with both OneDrive for Business and SharePoint

Salesforce announces Salesforce Connect, integrates with both OneDrive for Business and SharePoint

Sean Cameron Sean Cameron
August 24, 2019
1 min read

Onedrive

Salesforce, a provider of cloud solutions for enterprise and business, has announced Salesforce Connect, a universal file-sharing solution that enables enterprise customers to browse, search and share files across multiple locations, from one user interface. Both OneDrive for Business and SharePoint are officially to be the first services to integrate with this new software, allowing their users access to all of its benefits.

Chris Jones, corporate vice president with OneDrive and Sharepoint said,

“OneDrive for Business has become increasingly central to how people store, share and collaborate on documents at work, and we’re pleased to extend even more value to our customers by integrating with apps and services like Salesforce so they can be more productive”

This development marks the latest in a series of collaborations between Salesforce and Microsoft which began when the two firms announced the beginning of a strategic partnership back in May 2014.

Will your firm be making use of this new product? Let us know in the comments below.

Further reading: Microsoft, OneDrive for Business, Salesforce, SharePoint

Share this article:
Tags:
Microsoft OneDrive for Business Salesforce SharePoint
Previous Article Norton Internet Security 2013 20.0.0.133 Beta released Next Article Carnegie Mellon University uses Azure, machine learning, and Power BI to save money

Related Articles

State of Decay 3 Returns With Alpha Playtests After Years of Silence

April 4, 2026
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says demand for Blackwell and Rubin AI chips could reach $1 trillion as AI infrastructure spending grows rapidly.

Memory costs surge to 30% of AI spending, NVIDIA holds an advantage

April 4, 2026
PEAK players demand more updates, but Landfall responds clearly, saying the indie hit was never meant to be a live service game.

PEAK Players Want More Updates, But Landfall Says Extra Content Is “a Bonus not a Right”

April 4, 2026

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • State of Decay 3 Returns With Alpha Playtests After Years of Silence
  • Memory costs surge to 30% of AI spending, NVIDIA holds an advantage
  • PEAK Players Want More Updates, But Landfall Says Extra Content Is “a Bonus not a Right”
  • PC shortages push companies to drop budget models and chase premium buyers
  • PlayStation 6 leaks point to handheld console, lower pricing, and early transition plans

Recent Comments

  1. XxRIVTYxX on Intel Says It Tried to Help Before Crimson Desert Dropped Arc Support
  2. Gaurav Kumar on Chrome Prepares Nudge to ‘Move Tabs to the Side’ as Vertical Tabs Near Release
OnMSFT.com

The Tech News Site

Categories

  • Windows
  • Surface
  • Xbox
  • How-To
  • OnPodcast
  • Gaming
  • Edge
  • Teams

Recent Posts

  • State of Decay 3 Returns With Alpha Playtests After Years of Silence
  • Memory costs surge to 30% of AI spending, NVIDIA holds an advantage
  • PEAK Players Want More Updates, But Landfall Says Extra Content Is “a Bonus not a Right”
  • PC shortages push companies to drop budget models and chase premium buyers
  • PlayStation 6 leaks point to handheld console, lower pricing, and early transition plans

Quick Links

  • About OnMSFT.com
  • Contact OnMSFT
  • Join Our Team
  • Privacy Policy
© 2010–2026 OnMSFT.com LLC. All rights reserved.
About OnMSFT.comContact OnMSFTPrivacy Policy