By Shira Ovide 

Salesforce.com Inc. showed it could continue to post heady growth even as it graduated from Internet upstart to old-guard stalwart. The San Francisco company said revenue rose 23% year-over-year in its fiscal first quarter ended April 30, a pace somewhat faster than Wall Street had expected.

Salesforce provides software tools, mostly for managing sales efforts, that run over the Internet. The company helped pioneer the shift toward cloud computing, charging a subscription fee and managing updates and other maintenance, and away from traditional software that customers buy outright and install on computers on their own premises.

The company's earnings report gave some fuel to doubters in Salesforce's business model, but also gave supporters a reason to smile. The company's revenue growth, while robust, continued to slow from prior years. Investors were thrilled a company of Salesforce's size could keep growing as fast as it has. Shares rose about 6.5% in after-hours trading Wednesday, to $74.93, following the disclosure of the quarterly earnings report.

Marc Benioff, Salesforce's CEO and chief cheerleader for the cloud-computing business model, has said he wanted his company to reach $10 billion in annual sales faster than any business-software company in history. To reach his target, Mr. Benioff has pushed into international markets, acquired companies to branch into new business lines such as software for marketing departments, and sought to land bigger corporate clients.

It is too early to know whether many of Salesforce's more recent business initiatives will pay off. However, the company's revenue-growth rates have made many investors optimistic about its prospects. Salesforce said revenue rose 29% from a year ago in its marketing-automation business line--a fiercely competitive category with rivals like Adobe Systems Inc. and SAP SE.

Salesforce also reported surprise progress toward profitability. The company typically has posted losses, in part because of heavy spending on employee stock options and related expenses. In the three months ended in April, Salesforce posted net income of $4.09 million, or one cent a share.

The company's profit was helped by a one-time gain of nearly $37 million due to ending a lease on a San Francisco office complex.

Salesforce also followed through on a pledge to boost its operating income margin, the share of revenue left over each quarter after allocating for costs related to research and development, paying employees and other expenses. That measure rose to 11.7%, excluding some costs, from 9.7% a year earlier.

Recent reports that the company may entertain sale overtures sent shares up about 4.9% from the last week of April to Wednesday's market close. Analysts have said the share price was likely to trade in reaction to takeover speculation in addition to the company's finances and future prospects.

Mr. Benioff at an event last week declined to comment on "M&A rumors." His top lieutenant echoed that response in an interview Wednesday.

"This is all about business as usual," said Keith Block, Salesforce's president and vice chairman of its board. "We're really, really excited about our performance and very optimistic about where things are going."

Mr. Benioff said on a conference call with analysts Wednesday that he planned to spend the summer in Europe, as he did last year, to work on the company's expansion plans there.

Overall in the quarter, Salesforce's revenue rose to $1.51 billion from $1.23 billion a year earlier. The company said its deferred revenue, a closely watch metric of future revenue for subscription-software companies, rose 31% from a year earlier.

The company raised slightly its forecast of revenue for the fiscal year ending in January 2016. Salesforce said it expected yearly revenue to be $6.52 billion to $6.55 billion, up from the company's prior forecast of $6.475 billion to $6.52 billion in revenue. That would be an increase of 21% to 22%-slower than the company's 32% and 33.5% revenue growth in the prior two fiscal years. That estimate included the impact of foreign exchange, which was expected to exert a drag of $175 million to $200 million.

Write to Shira Ovide at shira.ovide@wsj.com

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