Salesforce, Inc. (NYSE:CRM) is one of the The 10 Best AI Stocks to Buy Over the Next 10 Years. On March 16, Salesforce, Inc. (NYSE:CRM) announced a partnership with NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) to use its Agentforce platform and NVIDIA’s Nemotron models to incorporate AI agents into enterprise workflows.
This partnership connects Salesforce, Inc.’s (NYSE:CRM) Agentforce platform with NVIDIA’s Agent Toolkit, enabling AI agents to be used in both regulated and on-premises environments. This will give employees access to AI agents through Slack, while maintaining strong data governance and compliance standards.
According to the report, NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Nano has been added to Agentforce. This model features a 1 million token context window, allowing agents to process long customer histories and complex workflows. Nemotron 3 Nano uses an expert combination design, which helps reduce computing costs in multi-step agent operations.
The system uses Slack as a coordination layer. Slackbot receives user requests, triggers Agentforce workflows, and manages agent actions in enterprise systems. Users will be able to simply submit requests in Slack, which would trigger Agentforce workflows. Data will be processed through Nemotron models and actions will be completed in connected business systems.
Salesforce, Inc. (NYSE:CRM) is a leading American cloud-based artificial intelligence software company specializing in customer relationship management (CRM) solutions. The company offers software, tools, services and applications for sales, customer service, marketing, e-commerce and analytics.
While we recognize the potential of CRM as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater growth potential and carry less downside risk. If you’re looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that’s also benefiting significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the offshoring trend, check out our free report on best short-term AI stock.
READ NEXT: 11 Best Tech Stocks Under $50 to Buy Now and The 10 Best Stocks Under $20 to Buy According to Hedge Funds.
Disclosure: None. Follow Insider Monkey on Google News.