红颜什么意思| pes是什么材质| 支气管舒张试验阳性说明什么| 虾头部黄黄的是什么| MC是什么牌子的车| 血糖高能喝什么茶| 小孩早上起床咳嗽是什么原因| 智商130算什么水平| 古着店是什么意思| 肝功能2项是指什么| 女生掉头发严重是什么原因| 筋皮是什么肉| pick是什么意思| 林子祥属什么生肖| 商业保险报销需要什么材料| 奥美拉唑治什么胃病| 放电是什么意思| 什么不导电| 抑郁症有什么表现| cbg是什么意思| 大宝是什么意思| 蜂窝数据什么意思| 社会保险费是什么| 吃黄豆有什么好处| 心脏早搏什么意思| 黄褐斑是什么样的图片| 曹操是什么帝| 结石挂什么科| 梦见家里死人了代表什么预兆| 条条框框是什么意思| 洋葱不能和什么一起吃| 跳空缺口是什么意思| 什么东西最伤肾| 拉缸是什么意思| u是什么元素| 岍是什么意思| 胃不舒服吃什么药| 圆脸适合什么眉形| 63年的兔是什么命| 天天喝豆浆有什么好处和坏处| 立是什么生肖| 荭是什么意思| 你是什么意思| 潦倒是什么意思| 南瓜吃了有什么好处| 快递什么时候停运| 为什么一直拉肚子| 颈椎病是什么症状| 什么是粳米| 疏肝理气喝什么茶| 什么本本| 血压高吃什么药好| 膝盖酸痛什么原因| 增加性功能吃什么药| 手脚麻木是什么原因引起的| 风湿因子高是什么原因引起的| 记忆是什么| 咳嗽白痰是什么原因| 乙木代表什么| 经心的近义词是什么| 独在异乡为异客的异是什么意思| sunglasses什么意思| 714什么星座| 胎盘能吃吗有什么作用与功效| 王火火念什么| 糯米粉是什么粉| 去火吃什么水果| 白虎什么意思| 神戳戳是什么意思| 月经时间过长是什么原因引起的| a和ab型生的孩子是什么血型| 女性尿血挂什么科| 宝宝大便发白是什么原因| 腿酸是什么原因引起的| 丹参泡水喝有什么功效| 梦见很多小孩是什么意思| 打完除皱针注意事项有什么| 七月二十四是什么星座| 头油是什么原因引起的| 腺样体肥大挂什么科| 细菌感染引起的发烧吃什么药| 什么海翻江| 全员加速中什么时候播| 土字旁的字与什么有关| 多多益善什么意思| 什么时间立秋| 一什么金光| 为什么不建议吃三代头孢| 排卵期是什么| 牛拉稀用什么药最快| 炖鸡块放什么调料| 为什么受伤总是我| 真知灼见什么意思| 十一月一日是什么星座| 激素吃多了对身体有什么副作用| 三级医院是什么意思| 为什么男人喜欢吃槟榔| 红参和高丽参有什么区别| 烟花三月下扬州什么意思| 梦到抓了好多鱼是什么意思| 超体2什么时候上映| 暴露是什么意思| 最大的狗是什么品种| 786是什么意思| 三十六计第一计是什么| 彩虹为什么有七种颜色| 农历今天什么日子| 内膜厚吃什么掉内膜| 老虎油是什么意思| 夏天流鼻血是什么原因| special是什么意思| 黑鱼又叫什么鱼| 牛肚是牛的什么部位| 尿路感染去医院挂什么科| 云南白药的保险子是起什么作用的| 喝酒前吃什么保护胃| 肾积水有什么危害| 睾丸潮湿吃什么药| 四季常青财运旺是什么生肖| 切除阑尾对身体有什么影响| 美国的国花是什么花| 谢字五行属什么| fasola是什么品牌| 绿豆汤不能和什么一起吃| 喀秋莎什么意思| 四大名著是什么| 为什么会得心脏病| 慈禧和溥仪是什么关系| 音节是指什么| 七喜是什么饮料| aa是什么| 元老是什么意思| 什么书没有字| 大自然是什么意思| landrover是什么车| 麻烦别人说什么礼貌用语| 什么是基础医学| 什么是双| 开小灶是什么意思| 胃溃疡吃什么中成药| 戌时是什么时候| 蜂窝数据什么意思| 梦见自己吐了是什么意思| 乳腺结节吃什么药好| 考教师资格证需要什么条件| 混剪是什么意思| 欲钱知吃月饼是什么生肖| 什么牌子的氨基酸洗面奶好| 忻字五行属什么| 骨灰盒什么材质的好| 手口足吃什么药| 容易静电的人说明什么| 梦见蝴蝶是什么意思| 70年出生属什么生肖| dq是什么意思| 板栗什么时候成熟| 什么的跳舞| 梦见买床是什么意思| 白细胞偏低是什么原因| 血清铁低是什么原因| 红茶色是什么颜色| 柔是什么意思| 什么星座最聪明| ctp是什么| 胸部ct平扫能检查出什么| 右肩膀痛是什么原因| 做什么梦暗示你怀孕了| 黑茶是什么茶| 硒是什么东西| 做面条用什么面粉| ts是什么| 肛塞有什么作用| 生态棉是什么面料| 血沉低是什么意思| 梦见发洪水是什么征兆| 喝姜粉有什么好处| 美如天仙是什么生肖| 什么东西| 血氨高会导致什么后果| 宝宝肋骨外翻是什么原因| 口红用什么能洗掉| 扁桃体发炎吃什么食物| 年纪是什么意思| 斜视是什么意思| 什么牌子手机好| 漫展是干什么的| 深蹲有什么好处| 淋巴结看什么科| 青青子衿什么意思| 2月什么星座| 血余炭是什么制成的| 寡情是什么意思| 如期而至是什么意思| 脚掌麻木是什么原因| 三千年前是什么朝代| 频发室性早搏吃什么药| 狍子是什么动物| 首鼠两端什么意思| 鸡咳嗽吃什么药| 明知故犯的故是什么意思| 盈字五行属什么| 乳腺纤维瘤是什么原因引起的| 维生素b2吃多了有什么副作用| supreme是什么牌子| 强龙不压地头蛇是什么生肖| 老叹气是什么原因| 岁月蹉跎什么意思| 囫囵吞枣是什么意思| 感冒为什么会鼻塞| 晚上尿多什么原因| 梅长苏结局是什么| 早饭吃什么| 绮字五行属什么| 套话是什么意思| 过敏性紫癜是什么病| 背部疼痛是什么原因引起的| 数据是什么意思| 吃什么对甲状腺有好处| 男人蛋皮痒用什么药| 低压高是什么原因引起的| 鹅蛋什么人不能吃| 这个是什么表情| 初一的月亮是什么形状| 1月17号什么星座| 七月二十六是什么星座| 急性痛风吃什么药| 碘伏和络合碘有什么区别| 生态皮是什么材质| 上火牙疼吃什么药| 516是什么意思| 热疹症状该用什么药膏| 肠粉是什么做的| 动则气喘是什么原因| 甲沟炎用什么药好| 家庭长期饮用什么水最好| 晦气是什么意思| 一动就大汗淋漓是什么原因| 乳腺结节不能吃什么| 女性下面流水什么原因| rf医学上是什么意思| 乳腺结节3类什么意思| 肤色不均匀是什么原因| 肠镜什么情况下取活检| 开塞露用多了有什么副作用| 放屁很臭是什么原因| 11月20号什么星座| 心理卫生科看什么病的| 198什么意思| 肚子胀恶心想吐是什么原因| 酒精过敏有什么症状| 待客是什么意思| biubiubiu是什么意思| 老人家脚肿是什么原因引起的| 马甲线是什么意思| 犯罪心理学属于什么专业| 子宫内膜炎用什么药效果好| 宽宏大度是什么生肖| 什么叫八字| 什么是假性近视眼| 宝宝便秘吃什么好| 左上腹是什么器官| 腿血栓什么症状| 十月初是什么星座| 比重是什么意思| 百度
Andrew Russo on a Salesforce Admins Podcast discusses how small teams can leverage Salesforce Foundations and Generative AI.
百度 现在骑士虽然没有此前几个赛季那样的统治力,但瘦死的骆驼比马大,只要有詹姆斯,东部还是姓詹。

Today on the Salesforce Admins Podcast, we talk to Andrew Russo, Salesforce Architect at BACA Systems. Join us as we chat about Salesforce Foundations and why it’s a game changer for solo admins and small orgs.

You should subscribe for the full episode, but here are a few takeaways from our conversation with Andrew Russo.

The solo admin guide to Dreamforce

Andrew calls himself a Salesforce Archi-admin-eloper. At BACA Systems he’s a team of one, managing a complex org with all sorts of flows and customizations. Despite his busy schedule, he also manages to get himself out there to all sorts of Salesforce events, so I wanted to chat with him about what caught his eye at Dreamforce as a solo admin.

Like everyone else, Andrew is psyched about the possibilities for generative AI and Agentforce. He knows that data health and cleanliness are crucial in order to take advantage of these new features, and he’s already started a project to implement Salesforce Knowledge in his org. But what he’s really psyched about is Salesforce Foundations.

What’s so exciting about Salesforce Foundations?

Like many smaller companies, Andrew can’t easily do a pilot to test out larger features. “Having access to try things before you actually fully configure them is really helpful for us to look at where we can grow and move to with the platform,” he says.

Salesforce Foundations gives you access to all of the little features you wish you had from each cloud. For Andrew, they can swap over from using an external email marketing tool to doing everything in Salesforce. They’re also looking at implementing Salesforce Payments instead of doing it over the phone. While they may not be the shiniest tools in the toolbox, the time saved with these little features adds up in a small organization like Andrew’s.

Manage requests with a Salesforce roadmap

One thing that can get tricky as a solo admin is handling requests while keeping the org on track. Andrew keeps a Lucidchart roadmap for where they’d like to be with things like data cleanup and their Salesforce Knowledge project, which helps him balance short-term needs with long-term goals. “We’re not trying to implement features just because we have them,” he says, “it has to align with ‘our company goals.”

Andrew has more to share about tips for solo admins, why you should get started going to Salesforce events, and the best cold pizza, so be sure to listen to the full episode. And don’t forget to subscribe to the Salesforce Admins Podcast to catch us every Thursday.

Podcast swag

Admin Trailblazers Group

Social

Full show transcript

Mike Gerholdt:

Hey there, Salesforce Admins. So, buckle up because today we got Andrew Russo on board, who’s not just managing the Salesforce org, but is essentially the captain of a one-man cruise ship. That’s the analogy that we made. So, you like that? I said on board. No, but seriously, this guy is juggling a lot of flows, customizations, and data, much like we all are, and he’s steering the ship solo, so single Salesforce admin.

Now, in today’s chat, we’re talking about everything from taming data gremlins to rolling out Salesforce Knowledge, but big is what he found impactful at Dreamforce this year, which was Salesforce Foundations. And we’re also getting some insight into how Andrew’s planning on keeping his org ready for the next wave of AI. And of course, we reminisce a little bit about Dreamforce, and it wouldn’t be a Salesforce Admins podcast without food. This time we’re talking pizza. No surprise.

So, before we get Andrew on though, make sure you’re following the Salesforce Admins Podcast on your favorite podcast app or wherever you listen to podcasts. That way, as soon as a new episode becomes available, it will download. So, that being said, let’s get Andrew on the podcast. So, Andrew, welcome to the podcast.

Andrew Russo:

Thank you for having me.

Mike Gerholdt:

Absolutely. Well, it’s been a little bit since you’ve been on, so let’s refresh everybody’s memory. What have you been up to and what do you do in the Salesforce ecosystem?

Andrew Russo:

So, right now, my role is as the Salesforce architect, admin, developer. I mean, we’re a small company at BACA Systems, so I’m the solo Salesforce resource. So, I kind of play a lot of hats and I manage our entire org. So, that’s the main thing that I do here. We have a lot of flows, of customization. So, I’ve been trying to learn a lot about that and how to manage our complex org.

Mike Gerholdt:

Yeah. Captain of the ship, which is what most admins play.

Andrew Russo:

Yeah. It’s a big ship though. It’s challenging.

Mike Gerholdt:

I know. Yep. Well, the whole goal is to grow the ship and then maybe you get a fleet of people to help you.

Andrew Russo:

It started as a rowboat. Currently, it’s like a cruise ship with one person in charge of it, and cruise ships are hard to drive with one person.

Mike Gerholdt:

They could be, yes, but you need to have resident comedian, house band, buffet. I’m sure those are all fun analogies to things.

Before we go down the cruise ship line, that’s for another podcast, let’s talk about, you were at Dreamforce and I think a few Salesforce Admins were at Dreamforce. If not, they definitely saw some of the content that’s online. I’d love to know when you get back from, was it three days of Dreamforce now? And the content that you’re a part of and the notes that you’ve taken, what are some of the things that you do to think about what’s next or to put into action some of the things that you learned?

Andrew Russo:

Yeah. I think when I’m there, really the big thing is I like to take high-level notes when I’m there. I think if you get too in the details trying to take notes, it’s hard for me at least to go and actually take actual things. So, generally what I’ve learned to do is I take some of the high-level notes of key areas and then I go back to them. So, when I’m there, I’m able to just focus on the content and the learning and connecting with other people in the community, and then I go back to the content that I thought was really helpful and I look at it.

But for me, right now, if I think about some of the big takeaways, one of them was data quality and really getting everything in shape is probably the most critical thing that you can do for an existing org like us. Trying to fix those type of things that are just foundational to support all of our future things we’re trying to do.

Mike Gerholdt:

Yeah. I mean, I know anecdotally from seeing some of the session data, all of the sessions that were about data and cleanliness were really well attended, and it makes sense, right? Because good data in, good data out, and now good data for AI to consume.

Andrew Russo:

Exactly. I think that’s probably one of the biggest drivers is looking forward of the AI, and it’s also thinking about what can we do to position ourselves to be ready for generative AI and how that will play a role. Thinking about on our service side, one of the big projects that became probably one of our top projects we’re going to be rolling out, Salesforce Knowledge, I think was probably one of the biggest takeaways or actionable things that I now am … That’s my big project for this fall is to get our Knowledge base for service up and going to help our customers.

Mike Gerholdt:

Yeah, that’s no small feat. I feel like that’s building your own library.

Andrew Russo:

It is building a library, an organization system and structure for a library, and then getting everyone who hasn’t gone to the library in years to want to go to this library, and authors.

Mike Gerholdt:

Free library cards for everybody. Exactly. Yeah, I know authoring, ah, fun times.

Andrew Russo:

That’s probably the hardest part is getting the content created.

Mike Gerholdt:

Mm-hmm. You mentioned you’re an admin of one, and I want to get into some of the stuff that was announced at Dreamforce because that’s why I had you on. But one other thing that crossed my mind, for admins of companies that are smaller and everybody defines their own size, how do you see AI and some of the new Agentforce features rolling into orgs like that?

Andrew Russo:

I think, for me, I was actually lucky enough to be able be part of some of the pilot stuff that happened. And one of the biggest ones, which it sounds crazy, but the formula one, that’s to help you with formula fields. So, you could do it when you’re making a formula field for a row level summary for reporting as well as on the admin side to just explain a formula. It sounds so simple, but the amount of effort that that has saved me from finding those pesky, you’re missing the parentheses, or you had a curly comma or the curly single quote instead of it being a straight single quote. So, it doesn’t work. Those kind of things, having it where it just fixes it, it’s like the quality of life features for an admin that are amazing.

Mike Gerholdt:

Yeah, I never thought about it that way. That’s a good perspective.

Andrew Russo:

Especially if you think about copying and pasting. That’s where it’s challenging.

Mike Gerholdt:

Well, that’s 90% of how I wrote all my formulas was copy and paste. “Somebody else, please write the formula. Okay, there’s about 90% of the formula that I need. Let me just plug in the fields that it makes sense to.”

A lot of this stuff … I mean, obviously Agentforce was the big headliner at Dreamforce this year, but you pointed out you really see also the not off Broadway show that Salesforce talked about, which was Foundations. So, tell me from your perspective why as a Salesforce admin, Foundations was so big at Dreamforce this year for you?

Andrew Russo:

Yeah. I think Foundations, I mean, when I was watching the keynote, it was almost, I think kind of the last … I think it was soft announced just right before Dreamforce, but then during the keynote it was also kind of re-announced it. I think that what was announced of what’s included with it, having some of the different parts, like we’re a small company, I don’t really have the opportunity to just go try out some of the big, more expensive or larger features. I don’t have the ability to just, “Oh, well let me go try and do some pilot…” It’s kind of challenging. So, having access to a try before you actually go fully configure is really helpful for us to be able to look at where can we grow and move to with the platform?

Mike Gerholdt:

I mean, are you looking at data integrations across marketing or commerce or service? I mean, I know you mentioned Knowledge.

Andrew Russo:

Yeah. So, having Knowledge now is definitely a big thing. So, some of the little parts like sales and service cloud that were really heavily overlap, but just a little couple things, now that it’s kind of more unified to be one thing, it makes it a lot easier. So, now we have access to Knowledge for all of our search [inaudible 00:08:41]. So, it kind of enabled that project, which we need to support generative AI as we go into the future too.

Mike Gerholdt:

I suppose we jumped maybe a little bit of the cart in front of the horse. For you, if you had to describe Foundations to another Salesforce admin, maybe they didn’t hear about that, how would you describe it?

Andrew Russo:

All of the features that you wish you had five months ago that you now have. Just the little bits of the features, I think, that’s how I look at it, as like, they’re the features that you wish you had, but you would’ve had to go buy multiple cloud to just get the small, little piece that you wish you had.

Mike Gerholdt:

Gotcha. Well, that sounds awesome. So, it can be, like I remember sitting in Dreamforce keynotes and hearing sometimes about features that we were using, sometimes about features that we weren’t using. With multiple features being announced as part of Foundations, for you, how did you prioritize your one admin, your one org? Obviously, you just can’t go and it’s like a gym locker and turn all the light switches on. How are you kind of prioritizing what features to use and how to roll them out?

Andrew Russo:

Yeah. So, for us, it’s really about looking at where do we want to be strategically. So, I actually have a lucid chart, which I took one of the … I think on the architect website, they have a roadmap one, so I kind of just copied that and then I just changed it a little bit and did a lot of copy paste and modified it. So, it’s just a really high-level view of what we’re doing as a company with Salesforce, just so that I can also show from a strategic point of view when people have these requests of like, “Oh, well, I want this.” “Okay, but here’s kind of what we have. We don’t have an unlimited bandwidth here, so is that more important than all of these?” And then, that helps to keep requests that don’t really make sense or align with the company goals.

So, that kind of became still the guiding light to it, and I think that even after Dreamforce, that didn’t change a lot because it’s still what are the company priorities? We’re not just trying to go implement features because now we have them. It has to align with what our company goals are.

Mike Gerholdt:

That makes sense. That definitely also helps you prioritize, right?

Andrew Russo:

It helps me prioritize and also it helps me keep focused on what’s the important thing that we need to do to keep our business growing overall?

Mike Gerholdt:

So, I realized this when I was sitting down, what are we going to talk about? A lot of the times we talk about the benefit to the admin, because that’s the person listening, right? “What’s it matter to me?” But so often, everything that we implement, everything that we do is on behalf of a user because we know sitting in their chair what their pain points are. How for you, is the admin looking to communicate some of the benefits of Foundations to your users?

Andrew Russo:

Yeah. I think it’s looking at where the challenges are. An example for us that’s why I’m also really excited for it is today we use an external marketing email sending tool that we just take exports of emails, put them in, send email list. So, on the sales side, we use sales engagement to send the sales cadences, right?

Mike Gerholdt:

Sure.

Andrew Russo:

Just a very small tree one just for trying to drip information about a specific product, but we’re not doing full-scale marketing across the board, but for that use case today, right now, we’re sending it out like that, but with Foundations now, we can use the marketing emails that get sent and it’s essentially can do exactly what that is, but just from Salesforce. So, we can skip the whole having to send it out, then the emails will log in Salesforce, so our sales team can see when they were sent. Right now, the ones that are sent as bulk mail don’t show up in Salesforce.

So, just that little quality of life thing and it’s just easier overall. That’s kind of a big thing, but we don’t have a strong use case to go get a giant marketing automation system because honestly, we don’t have the people to go generate all the content for that. Right?

Mike Gerholdt:

Yeah. Well, I mean, I think it’s always, you never have to apologize for the size that you are. I think that’s, “Oh, we’re not a big organization.” That’s okay. You’re the size that you are and you’re also proportionate. You always need a couple more admins, right? But you’re proportionate to the size that you can support. You don’t need to apologize for, “Well, we’re not this massive $10 billion email monster.”

Andrew Russo:

It would be nice, but also I feel like if I got a bunch of emails from us every day, I would be a little … Just thinking from the customer point of view, who I get emails from vendors and stuff like that all the time. I’m like, “Lululemon, how do you get me an email every day, 5:00 to 6:00 PM?” But I look at them like, “I should unsubscribe.” But I also am like, “Okay. Well, I haven’t yet, but I get them every day 5:00 to 6:00 PM.”

Mike Gerholdt:

No. Sure.

Andrew Russo:

So, somehow it’s enough that … So, it’s like, how do we become the company that can give information that’s valuable enough that people don’t want to unsubscribe because they find value in the content, but also be able to manage doing that?

Mike Gerholdt:

I know. I’ve got a whole folder of emails that’s like that, that I don’t want to unsubscribe because that one time that I need to get something, chances are they probably will have emailed me maybe a 20% off code. I’m just cheap enough that I want to keep those emails going to get that 20% off.

You mentioned marketing and email and stuff like that, that makes you think of the app exchange and the upgrade includes access to third-party extensions through the app exchange. Are you looking at ways or maybe things you could do now with that?

Andrew Russo:

Yeah. I think for us, a couple of the areas that we’re excited also to extend out is one of those is on collecting payments and stuff. Right? We’ve got sales cloud, we’ve got service, which means we’ve got revenue, but we need to collect payments.

Mike Gerholdt:

It’s very important. Right?

Andrew Russo:

It is very important. Today, right now, when they want to take … They just log into this separate system. They type in a card number, right? The customer calls over the phone, they type it in, they process the payment, they download the PDF receipt, they send it to the customer. Right? So, it’s not a good experience. It also takes time. But if we could send a link-

Mike Gerholdt:

Sure.

Andrew Russo:

… that then the customer could put their stuff into themselves. And maybe we include that link on the invoice ahead of time so the customer could self enter it in and we don’t even have to have that phone conversation because it’s just not a good experience. That’s kind of big, and we could do that now.

Mike Gerholdt:

Yeah. And I mean, you think of that person’s time, rarely are they hired to just do that. There’s also other things they need to do, but they’ve … It just so happens, I imagine maybe over the lunch hour they get busy because that’s when everybody calls in to make their payments really quick because they have to talk to a person.

Andrew Russo:

Exactly. The exact problem of like … Or, they’re busy working on sending out invoices to some of the other customers and now they’re, “Oh, well, a phone call came in.” You can’t hold off on a phone call because you don’t want to put a customer on hold or have it just ring continuously. So, you have to pick up that. Trying to prioritize ways to not have to do that type of thing.

Also, from a customer point of view, if I got a link that I could pay with Apple Pay or that I could put a card into myself, and when I’ve got an iPhone, it auto-fills my card that I have saved, that’s a lot better of an experience.

Mike Gerholdt:

Yeah. I had no idea, not that I want to turn this into an Apple Pay podcast, about a year and a half ago, finally the Luddite in me got to using Apple Pay, and since then, the frictionless payment method of Apple Pay has caused me to buy a lot more things than I probably should have.

Andrew Russo:

I think, honestly, for me, if I think about as a customer experience, everyone hates paying utility bills, right? Became a homeowner, I have utility bills that come in. The easiest one I have to pay, that’s not an auto-pay one, because auto-pay is kind of scary to an extent. You don’t realize how much money goes out. It’s nice. But the one that I have is the water bill. It literally has a QR on it. It comes quarterly. The QR code, you scan it with your phone, it opens. You can click Apple Pay. You put in the amount, which you just type the amount that’s on it. You click pay and it’s done. It’s the easiest thing I’ve ever had.

Mike Gerholdt:

That’s nice.

Andrew Russo:

That’s the kind of experience we want to deliver as a company.

Mike Gerholdt:

Yeah. Well, congrats on being a homeowner. That’s a big step.

Andrew Russo:

It is a big step. Midwest homeowner life.

Mike Gerholdt:

Well, did you just become a homeowner over the summer?

Andrew Russo:

No, it’s a year now.

Mike Gerholdt:

Okay. So, you’ve been through a winter, so you already know.

Andrew Russo:

Oh, yeah, we had an ice storm last winter.

Mike Gerholdt:

The water bill isn’t the scariest thing that’ll come in.

Andrew Russo:

No, the water bill is not. The when you get sod bill after that with the water bill is. Also, when you have woods around you and I have corn fields that are relatively close, that’s really fun when there’s a big ice storm.

Mike Gerholdt:

Yes.

Andrew Russo:

And you go to Harbor Freight to get a generator, so the next move that I did during that.

Mike Gerholdt:

Yeah. Those battery generators, I will tell you, I stumbled across one of those over the summer to go for a lot of the shows that I do. And man, I really like that, having that in my house. I got one that’s just big enough that’ll run a refrigerator for a day. I hope I never have to use it, but knowing I have it, it’s peace of mind.

Andrew Russo:

It’s peace of mind. Exactly. Going back into the Salesforce world for off of our Midwest problems and woes.

Mike Gerholdt:

I mean, every now and then, you got to … It’s like a commercial break. You got to have a commercial break.

Andrew Russo:

Well, if we want commercial, I know that you don’t unsubscribe to the Casey’s Pizza email coupon.

Mike Gerholdt:

No, I don’t. And they use Salesforce too.

Andrew Russo:

You got to be careful when those come through.

Mike Gerholdt:

Yeah. Well, speaking of which, they have a jalapeno popper pizza, and if you listen to this podcast and you get Casey’s Pizza and you get the jalapeno popper pizza, which say that five times fast, let me tell you how amazingly good it is when you put it in your fridge right away and eat it the next day. Don’t eat it hot. It’s okay hot. It is amazing as cold pizza because then the cream cheese sets up. Aces.

Andrew Russo:

Honestly, cold pizza, for me, I’m a big fan.

Mike Gerholdt:

Well, yeah. I mean, I’ll always eat cold pizza, but this pizza in particular, Andrew, I’m telling you it is life-changing because it tastes like a jalapeno popper, but when you get it and it’s fresh and it’s warm, it just doesn’t work for me. I don’t know. Also, I want them to bring back their bacon cheeseburger pizza because that was the best pizza they ever had.

Andrew Russo:

That does sound good.

Mike Gerholdt:

It’s amazing. It’s amazing. And they put some sort of brisket thing. They keep dancing around, not bringing back the best pizza they ever made, which people would argue is the taco, and their taco is good.

Andrew Russo:

They might be listening and it might come soon.

Mike Gerholdt:

I hope, man.

Andrew Russo:

It’d be a wish.

Mike Gerholdt:

Oh, God. Anyway, we should talk Foundations. Back to the show. Ladies and gentlemen, now resuming progress. Already in progress, whatever. I mentioned a lot about Foundations. What haven’t I mentioned that stands out to you is like admins should know about this?

Andrew Russo:

I think one of the biggest areas that admins haven’t all been able to fully touch, like I think if I step back and look at what was the most impactful thing at Dreamforce? I had another admin who was talking to me. They did the Agentforce launchpad and they have said that experience, just sitting down and you’re just talking with your voice and it generated an agent for you, a proof of concept of it, they said that alone was worth going to Dreamforce.

Mike Gerholdt:

Wow.

Andrew Russo:

So, that type of thing, Agentforce, as much as it’s like, “Okay. Well, is it just hype?” I think it has a lot of utility. Even yesterday, I was having a conversation with someone and they were asking, and I didn’t know exactly the context. They had asked, “Is there any way to chat with your Knowledge-based [inaudible 00:22:18]?” I was like, I think I just said, “What do you mean?” And then it was, “Elaborate…” Like, what do they mean? And they were like, “Well, if you wanted to just have a conversation with it and ask question about how to set stuff up.” And I’m like, “Um, that’s called Agentforce.”

Mike Gerholdt:

Yeah.

Andrew Russo:

It can do that. That’s kind of the whole point of it. It’s like, think about the customer experience of it. You’re like, “Well, I don’t have a thing.” Say that you’re selling software. Your customer installs the software, like a trial version, wants to get up and running. They want help setting it up. Do you want them to have to call and wait on hold possibly and then not buy the software? Because they’re like, “Hey, I’m going to go to this other company who’s got it that you don’t have to wait on hold talking to somebody.” That type of experience, it starts to make a lot of sense.

Mike Gerholdt:

Absolutely. It’s a good example. As we wrap up, you go to a lot of Salesforce events. As a Salesforce admin, if you had advice for other admins out there looking at the breadth of what is available for them to go to, because there’s user groups, there’s world tours, there’s TrailblazerDX, there’s obviously Dreamforce. How do you kind of plan out … I know you go to a lot, but strategically, if you had to give admins advice on what events should they go to, how should they plan their year so that they stay up to date, they stay knowledgeable, they stay connected?

Andrew Russo:

If I was going to pick, I’m going to say one Salesforce official event that Salesforce hosted, if I had to choose one, I would probably say TrailblazerDX. Honestly, if you’re an admin, that’s the one to be at. Dreamforce has a lot of announcements and stuff, but it was a lot more technical, I will say, this year than ever in the past. But TrailblazerDX, it’s a smaller event. It’s a lot more manageable to go to. You’re seeing a lot more. It’s admin focused. The admin is the heart of TrailblazerDX.

But the other thing is, go to a local community event that’s there, or even just Trailblazer Community groups are a great resource to go to. And for me, when I go to the events, like I said at the beginning, it’s like full circle. When I go, I focus on high level and then I come back to the content after. I’ll take the notes and I’ll try and go back to it. But I really like just connecting with people. I think the friendships that you build in person are the most valuable thing out of going to different events.

Mike Gerholdt:

Yeah. No, I couldn’t agree more. Andrew, thanks so much for coming on the podcast and opening my eyes to Foundations because I know I was knee-deep into Agentforce at Dreamforce, so I appreciate that.

Andrew Russo:

Yeah, no problem. It was a really great time. And also, pizza. I think I might get pizza or Culver’s.

Mike Gerholdt:

I’m telling you, if you’re a regular listener to the podcast, the food diversion is going to happen at some point in every episode. I’ve had people call out the fact that I’ve talked about Casey’s Pizza before. And if you don’t live in the Midwest, it’s literally mind-boggling for people to be like, “That’s gas station pizza.” Yeah, it’s gas station pizza at another level. Also, their breakfast pizza, in my opinion, now that they got rid of the bacon cheeseburger, their breakfast pizza might be the single best pizza on the planet.

Andrew Russo:

I just realized something, and we might talk, there might be food diversions, but the caramel apple spice or pumpkin spice, or what is it? Do you remember? I’m thinking back, it’s October though. It’s like the exact month.

Mike Gerholdt:

Yeah. I mean, it’s pumpkin spice season right now. My mom’s huge into pumpkin spice. I think growing up I had too much pumpkin pie as a kid. I can’t do pumpkin pie.

Andrew Russo:

Well, is a PSL pumpkin spice latte or permission set license?

Mike Gerholdt:

No. I can do that. I know, right? Both. And that’s the one exception that I make to the ick of pumpkin spice is I do like at least one pumpkin spice latte, which sounds weird.

Andrew Russo:

I can say I haven’t had one in probably three-plus years.

Mike Gerholdt:

Well, when you have one-

Andrew Russo:

I don’t know-

Mike Gerholdt:

… you’re going to realize the mistake you’ve made by not having one.

Andrew Russo:

I know. I might get one tomorrow.

Mike Gerholdt:

You should, along with some Casey’s breakfast pizza, because that sounds amazing. Literally, all the time. Andrew, thanks so much for being on the podcast.

Andrew Russo:

Thank you for having me.

Mike Gerholdt:

So, that was a fun conversation with Andrew. I hope you enjoyed the episode. He really seems to have his head wrapped around a lot of different things and is really paying attention to both keeping in sync with features that Salesforce is rolling out, along with the needs and direction that his organization is looking for him to go to.

And of course, I warned you, if you’re hungry, and probably not hungry no more, you’re going to order pizza tonight. But if you’re looking for some tips, not necessarily pizza tips, although there are a few podcasts with recipes in them, you can find all of that over at admin.salesforce.com for everything that you’ll need, including a full transcript of the episode. And if you’d like to get more information, follow along, connect with other Salesforce Admins, be sure to join the Admin Trailblazer group in the Trailblazer Community. Of course, all those links will be in the show notes for the episode.

So, with that, I think we’ve covered a lot. We’ve laid a good foundation, as you would say. Until next week, we’ll see you in the cloud.

Love our podcasts?

Subscribe today on iTunes, Google Play, Sound Cloud and Spotify!

Curiosity Is the Key to Learning Agentforce

Today on the Salesforce Admins Podcast, we talk to Amit Malik, the Content Portfolio Lead for AI within Product Education at Salesforce. Join us as we chat about how admins should approach learning Agentforce and bringing AI to their organizations. You should subscribe for the full episode, but here are a few takeaways from our […]

READ MORE
白油是什么油 琋字五行属什么 眩晕症是什么原因 中国最大的岛屿是什么 三点水的字和什么有关
下眼袋发青是什么原因 疝气是什么意思 吃什么水果 抗氧化性是什么意思 island什么意思
为什么玉镯不能戴左手 什么三什么四 舌头麻木是什么原因引起 目前是什么意思 吃什么药死的快
3岁小孩不会说话是什么原因 体癣用什么药膏好得快 低脂牛奶适合什么人喝 什么减肥最快不反弹 aj和nike什么关系
拖累是什么意思bjcbxg.com 长期喝山楂水有什么好处和坏处hcv8jop9ns1r.cn 布病挂什么科hcv8jop0ns2r.cn 导乐是什么意思hcv7jop7ns4r.cn 奥美拉唑什么时候吃hcv9jop7ns0r.cn
1990年什么生肖xinjiangjialails.com 处女座上升星座是什么hcv9jop1ns2r.cn 棉是什么面料hcv8jop4ns7r.cn 凌晨一点多是什么时辰hcv8jop9ns2r.cn 鸟字旁的字大多和什么有关hcv7jop5ns4r.cn
眼皮重是什么原因hcv8jop1ns7r.cn 落枕是什么原因hcv8jop1ns7r.cn 伏是什么意思hcv8jop5ns3r.cn 腱鞘炎看什么科hcv8jop7ns3r.cn 口腔溃疡买什么药xscnpatent.com
为什么低血压hcv8jop2ns6r.cn 龋病是什么意思hcv9jop0ns9r.cn eland是什么牌子hcv7jop9ns6r.cn 什么馅的馄饨好吃hcv9jop5ns8r.cn 为什么耳朵后面会臭hcv8jop8ns2r.cn
百度