Manufacturers Push to Build Salesforce the Right Way
Industrial firms are increasingly treating Salesforce not just as a basic CRM platform, but as a strategic operations hub. Yet many manufacturers still struggle with fragmented deployments, duplicated data and low user adoption. Industry experts say the difference between failure and value lies in a disciplined, manufacturing-specific approach to how Salesforce is designed and rolled out.
Design Around Manufacturing Processes, Not Just Sales
Specialists advise manufacturers to start with a clear map of their end-to-end processes. That means aligning Salesforce with complex quote-to-cash cycles, distributor networks, and long-term service agreements.
High-performing manufacturers typically:
- Model accounts to reflect plants, distributors, and OEM relationships.
- Standardise product configuration, pricing and approvals in a single system of record.
- Integrate ERP and MES data so sales teams see inventory, lead times and order status in real time.
Build a Clean, Connected Data Foundation
Experts emphasise that manufacturers must treat data as a first-class asset. That includes rigorous data governance, common naming conventions and a clear ownership model for each object and field.
Best practices include:
- Using master data management to avoid duplicate customers and products.
- Defining a single source of truth for pricing, discounts and contracts.
- Implementing role-based access so sensitive commercial data is protected.
Prioritise Adoption, Not Just Configuration
Manufacturers that succeed with Salesforce invest as heavily in people as in technology. They involve sales, service and operations teams in design workshops, then roll out targeted training tied to daily tasks.
Common tactics include:
- Creating simple, role-specific dashboards for sales reps, key account managers and service engineers.
- Automating routine steps with workflows and approval processes to reduce manual entry.
- Measuring adoption with clear KPIs, such as opportunity hygiene and forecast accuracy.
Think Platform, Not Project
Analysts note that leading manufacturers treat Salesforce as a long-term platform. A product owner and a cross-functional governance board manage a roadmap, ensuring that new capabilities in analytics, field service and AI-driven forecasting are added in controlled, value-focused releases.
For manufacturers under pressure from volatile demand and tight margins, a well-architected Salesforce environment is becoming a competitive differentiator rather than a back-office tool.

