The average Salesforce customer reports an increase in lead conversion and sales by 30%, sales productivity and customer satisfaction by 35%, faster decision making by 38%, and revenue generation by 25%. These are game-changing figures for any organization. However, they’re not guaranteed to every company that invests in Salesforce CRM. To actually achieve these metrics you need to do one simple thing: get your employees to adopt the software in their daily workflows.
It’s not uncommon for a company to roll out a new solution, only to see reps quietly drift back to spreadsheets because of a failed adoption plan. In fact, less than 40% of organizations using CRM achieve user adoption rates exceeding 90%. And while it’s easy to blame those resisting the change, in reality, that is a natural response to disruptions in ongoing processes. It’s leadership’s role to guide their workforce through the learning curve and prevent overwhelm.
Adoption isn’t a single training session; it’s a system. The most successful programs blend role-based enablement, in-app guidance, change management, and relentless measurement—so users learn in the flow of work, not just in a workshop.
Below are 12 research-backed ways to raise and sustain Salesforce adoption, paired with concrete examples of how our experts help teams put them into practice.
Define what “good” looks like (for example: 90% opportunity hygiene by Friday EOD; 100% of new contacts with email + role; managers use one pipeline dashboard in 1:1s). Track early indicators like login rates, record creation, and updates, then graduate to business outcomes (win rate lift, cycle time reduction). For example, before training, try running an adoption baseline to identify the 3–5 behaviors that matter most (e.g., next steps on every opp). Then, your internal resources or external implementation partner can configure the instrument dashboards around those behaviors and align all training to them.
Sales reps juggle lots of tools; switching contexts kills momentum and adoption. This is where the quality of your overall system integration and configuration comes into play. For example, rather than forcing users to switch to an entirely different app in order to navigate their new portal, you can design enablement to appear inside Salesforce at the moment of need.
Users will get immediate answers to their questions and subsequently get up to speed much more quickly.
Salesforce In-App Guidance delivers contextual prompts and step-by-step walkthroughs; ideal for onboarding, process changes, and nudging correct usage (like filling mandatory fields before stage advance). By leveraging these features, you can target audiences, pages, events, and track usage to see what’s working.
Your team or your implementation partners can facilitate in-app guidance by, for instance, setting up role-targeted prompts for SDRs vs. AEs. This way, AEs see a nudge to add Mutual Close Plans at Stage 2; SDRs see a one-time prompt on Lead conversion. From there, you can monitor prompt user engagement and iterate monthly.
Adoption dashboards should combine behavior (logins, report runs), data completeness, and pipeline hygiene. Done right, leaders can coach behaviors and make data-driven decisions based on user engagement rather than focusing on login metrics.
Start with this example, “Three-Layer” Salesforce dashboard:
Training alone rarely sticks; your Salesforce adoption strategies should incorporate ongoing support. Prosci’s ADKAR model (Awareness, Desire, Knowledge, Ability, Reinforcement) is the gold standard for moving individuals through change. Layer ADKAR into every enablement plan, especially reinforcement, which can look like manager scorecards tied to pipeline hygiene or quarterly recognition for top hygiene improvements.
Let’s take a look at a theoretical ADKAR framework. In this scenario, a sales manager is leading a team through a new Salesforce pipeline process. Here are the stages they would go through:
Dirty data is the fastest way to kill your Salesforce adoption; users won’t trust a tool with bad data. In fact, one study found that 51% of CRM customers cited data synchronization as a major issue. However, you can avoid this problem entirely by taking the right steps.
Implement targeted Salesforce adoption strategies such as running time-boxed hygiene sprints, showing “clean record” leaderboards, and rewarding completion rates for key fields. If you are working with Salesforce implementation or managed services experts, they will ensure the data is integrated, clean, and accurate. However, if you don’t have a contract with a partner, and your internal experts don’t have in-depth expertise in Salesforce specifically, you may want to consider partnering with experts to perform a Salesforce Health Check.
During this brief partnership, solution-specific experts will comb through your system and diagnose any existing challenges within your system. At the end of the Health Check, they will hand you an extensive and in-depth report identifying the potential fixes your system needs.
Training should be relevant to specific roles. Otherwise, you’re not only wasting your employee’s learning bandwidth on useless information, but you are also wasting company time. Break content into persona-specific learning paths (SDR, AE, CS, Manager) with short lessons sequenced to the sales process. Tie each lesson to a measurable behavior (e.g., “Create a next step on every opp”).
Your new AEs should complete a four-lesson path the first week (Accounts, Opps, Activities, Reports) delivered as in-app nudges and 5-minute videos—no LMS hunting required.
Research indicates that 77% of companies are currently using or actively exploring the use of AI. While AI is often overhyped as a hands-off solution, the reality is that it works best as an efficiency enhancer in the hands of skilled workers. Sales teams using AI report stronger revenue growth and better data quality/productivity, which directly improves Salesforce adoption by reducing grunt work and giving reps value for entering data. So, keep AI visible in daily workflows (summaries, call prep, auto-logging).
Behavior change sticks when it’s recognized. Use small in-app celebrations, team callouts, and Slack kudos when people follow the process (e.g., using one standard pipeline dashboard in 1:1s). Gamification can help—albeit sparingly. If you push too hard, gamification can become a burden for your workers; but when done right, games can be a fun and engaging way to train your team.
Here’s an example gamification strategy to increase Salesforce adoption:
Run a 4-week contest where reps earn points every time they complete a core activity inside Salesforce (e.g., logging calls, updating opportunity stages, adding next steps). Points show up on a live leaderboard in Slack or on a shared dashboard.
Many “adoption” problems are actually process design problems. You can ease the way for your employees by documenting your current flow, removing clicks, standardizing stages/fields, and automating handoffs. This is another area where your software implementation partner can be vital. Leverage the expert’s knowledge on solution best practices to ensure all processes are optimal. Only then should you begin to train your workers.
If managers coach from slides or spreadsheets, reps will follow. It’s best to lead by example. So, move pipeline reviews, forecast calls, and QBRs into Salesforce reports and dashboards—every time. This way, reps will naturally begin to integrate Salesforce into their daily processes and consequently initiate their own transition to the platform.
Treat adoption as a product. Each release cycle, add or retire prompts, target a new behavior, and measure impact. Salesforce continues to expand the Guidance Center and prompt targeting, making iteration easier. Instead of taking your employees through a standardized adoption training course, move your learning sessions at the pace of your students. Address their problems as they come up, and start with the processes that are most relevant to their role.
Once your employees begin to see that Salesforce makes their workday easier, they will be eager to learn.
Showing your successful Salesforce adoption to leadership is vital. They want to see the fruits of their investment in the solution and measure their future returns. So, here are the metrics you should start tracking:
Our experts don’t treat Salesforce adoption as a training event; we approach it as an ongoing behavior shift that requires alignment between people, business processes, and technology. The core of our success comes from the combination of the rigor of enterprise-scale methodology with the agility and personal attention of a smaller, specialized team. That means every user adoption program is built around your specific workflows, KPIs, and user culture—with no generic playbooks or “check-the-box” rollouts.
The foundation of our training program is built on a bespoke adoption baseline, generated using a mix of Salesforce analytics, data quality and hygiene audits, user engagement, and stakeholder interviews. This helps us pinpoint the few critical behaviors that will drive the biggest business outcomes, whether it’s improving opportunity hygiene, increasing report usage, or reducing time-to-close. By focusing on these high-leverage actions, we ensure our Salesforce training has a direct, measurable business impact.
We design adoption strategies to meet users in the flow of work. Our Salesforce-certified experts can configure In-App Guidance, Guidance Center, and role-based learning paths so users get the right help at the right moment. Sales reps see context-aware prompts that guide them through critical processes like logging activities or qualifying leads, while managers receive targeted nudges on pipeline review best practices.
Beyond overseeing the technical side of implementation and user adoption processes, our team deliberately addresses the human side of this change. We build awareness by communicating the “why” behind the change, foster desire by connecting improvements to personal and team goals, transfer knowledge through bite-sized, accessible content, enable ability with in-app coaching, and reinforce adoption with ongoing recognition and leadership rituals. The result is sustainable behavior change, not a post-launch drop-off.
Bad data kills user adoption. Fast. That’s why we focus so intensely on data hygiene and proper integration throughout the implementation process, combining validation rule refinement and automation to keep records clean. When users trust the data in Salesforce, they use it as their source of truth rather than working around it.
We don’t just train end users, we equip managers to make Salesforce the centerpiece of their team’s daily rhythm. That means standardizing dashboards for pipeline reviews, aligning forecast calls to Salesforce data, and ensuring that leadership metrics come from the same reports reps are using. When leadership runs the business from Salesforce, adoption becomes a cultural norm.
Every Salesforce org has its own set of custom objects, automation, and UI tweaks, and training on these is essential for true adoption. When Canidium is both your implementation and adoption partner, we incorporate hands-on lessons tied directly to the features we configure for you. If we’ve built a custom quoting process, your sales team gets scenario-based exercises on generating quotes end-to-end. If we’ve implemented AI-powered lead scoring, reps learn not just how to see their scores, but how to interpret and act on them in real deals. This ensures that user adoption isn’t just about Salesforce in theory—it’s about mastering your Salesforce.
Adoption rises when Salesforce becomes the easiest way to do the job, not just the required one. So, tie training to outcomes, deliver guidance in the app, manage change deliberately, and measure what matters.
Our clients work directly with senior consultants who have both deep technical expertise and sales process user experience. We can pivot quickly, customize heavily, and measure relentlessly—giving you both the personal attention and the proven framework you need for a successful, lasting Salesforce adoption. If you are experiencing Salesforce adoption challenges or planning ahead for your solution implementation, set up a free consultation with our expert team; no commitment necessary. We’re happy to lend our experience and Salesforce expertise, even if you aren’t looking for a partner.