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The Beginners Guide to Salesforce
The Beginners Guide to Salesforce
Understanding Leads, Contacts, Accounts, and Opportunities
In Salesforce, managing potential customers and business relationships involves different data categories: Leads, Contacts, Accounts, and Opportunities. Each serves a distinct purpose in organizing and progressing through the sales process. Let's break down what each term means and how they work together.
Note
Not every business does things this way, what follows is Saleseforce's default workflow.
Leads
A Lead represents someone who might be interested in doing business with you but hasn't yet been vetted or qualified. Leads can come from various sources, like trade shows, email inquiries, or third-party data purchases. However, leads are inherently untested; they may or may not match your ideal customer profile or be ready to buy. The primary purpose of the 'leads' category is to serve as an initial catch-all for potential clients. They haven't yet demonstrated a commitment or suitability, so they aren't ready to enter your main directory of valuable contacts. Once you've vetted a lead—ensuring they meet the criteria for your business (such as industry relevance, budget, and buying intent)—they can be converted into a Contact.
Contacts
Once a lead is qualified, they move to the Contact stage. Contacts represent verified, worthwhile individuals who have expressed genuine interest and meet your standards. This qualification process keeps your contacts list high-quality, ensuring that you can reach out confidently to anyone on it.
By reserving the Contacts list for vetted leads, Salesforce enables you to focus only on potential clients who are valuable and prepared for targeted engagement. This way, your main contacts directory remains a useful tool for ongoing relationship management without clutter from unqualified leads.
Accounts
An Account in Salesforce represents the company or organization associated with your contacts. For example, if you meet someone from Maplewood Senior Living at a trade show, Maplewood Senior Living becomes the Account, while the individual you met (e.g., Daniel Collins) is the Contact.
This separation is crucial for maintaining accuracy. Even if your main contact at Maplewood Senior Living, Daniel Collins, changes jobs or roles, the account with Maplewood remains intact, as your business relationship is ultimately with the organization rather than any single individual. Multiple contacts and leads can be associated with a single account, which can help maintain continuity and consistency when working with various representatives from the same company.
Opportunities
An Opportunity refers to a potential sale or deal involving a specific product or service, complete with a projected dollar amount. While an account or contact represents the business or individual, an opportunity specifies the value and details of the sale itself.
Opportunities are typically only created once a sale is on the table, with enough information to estimate revenue. If you're not ready to attach a dollar value or product details to a lead or contact, it's not yet time to create an opportunity. Opportunities help forecast sales revenue and track the progress of each deal, making them vital for managing the sales pipeline effectively.
Using this structure keeps your data organized and enables efficient, targeted outreach and relationship management.
Next, we'll dive deeper into how to work with these records in Salesforce to maximize efficiency and make informed decisions.
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