Showing posts with label Releases. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Releases. Show all posts

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Winter’09 – Features to Explore

On Oct 16th, I started this thread on “Getting the Most from the Winter’09 Release”. In that first article (and the Oct 20th Article that followed), I described my “Best Monkey Practices” for deploying a new Salesforce Release:

1.) Start by reviewing the release notes, and carefully read about each feature
2.) Make three lists, and group each feature into one of these lists
--- Features Implemented / Turned Up Right Away
--- Features to Explore
--- Features I won’t Use
3.) Write a Newsletter for your Users, Announcing the Features you’ve implemented right away

That brings us to Release Management Best Practice tip #4 … tackling that list of “Features to Explore”. What do you do with all those features?

Start by reading each feature again. Identify the project or business need in which that feature will be useful. For instance, at the top of my “Features to Explore” list were several items related to Salesforce Mobil. This is a special Salesforce product offering that allows organizations to make their data accessible from mobil devices (iPhone, Blackbery, etc.). This was significant to me, because several users have talked about such a feature with me in various hallway conversations.

I went to the Ideas tab (which is where I send all Users who have really neat ideas of things they want added to our implementation of Salesforce.com) – but there were no ideas related to mobile access of Salesforce.com data. I thought back to all those hallway conversations, and how I had ended every one of them with a request: “That’s a neat idea – can you add it to the Ideas tab?” For some reason, users have all these great ideas in the hallways, but when it comes time to writing them down … they suddenly lack follow-through.

So I added the following Idea:



<SIDEBAR>I've blogged before about the Ideas app, which is free for all Professional, Enterprise, and Unlimited editions. If you're not using Ideas, you should be! The concept is similar to the IdeaExchange, but for your own user community. We use the Idea tab for all internal change requests / customizations. Want a custom field added to an existing tabbed object? Submit an Idea! Want a custom report developed? That's an idea! Want a full-fledged custom app built -- good IDEA! I shorten a lot of hallway conversations by encouraging users to go to the Ideas tab, and submit their change request. </SIDEBAR>

So I posted the “Mobile CRM Project” idea, and then did the same for each bullet item on my “Features to Explore” list. In all, I ended up creating 12 new projects for my CRM Project Team to work on in the coming weeks. Those ideas are now “in the system”, where my CRM project team will have to pay attention to them. Each time we finish a project, we’ll go back to the wishing well (the Ideas tab) and look for the next project to work on. The actual process is a bit more formal, but that’s a topic for another blog.

The important thing is that you want to make sure you don’t forget about these new features. Put them on your own project board – be it the Idea tab, your white board, or a paper napkin. When you’re done with your current “projects”, come back to that list of ideas, and figure out which one you’re going to tackle next.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Announce New SFDC Features to Your Users with a Newsletter



In our last article, we created three lists related to new features in the Winter'09 Release:

- Features to Be Implmented Right Away
- Features to Be Explored (at a later date)
- Features you don't plan to use at all.

Now that you've got your three lists, let's tackle the first one -- features to be implemented right away.

Review the Release Notes carefully; many features must be enabled before you can take advantage of them. Once enabled, they may change the "look and feel" of your application. Avoid the flood of questions from users asking who moved their cheese -- with a quarterly newsletter.

I create all my newsletters using Word, filling them with lots of pictures and text. Salesforce is a graphical interface, and your communications will have much greater impact if you include screenshots about the features you're describing. After the newsletter is done, I use the mass email feature in the Administrator Setup section to distribute it.

Writing a community newsletter isn't difficult. If you're stuck staring at a blank page, check out the free newsletter templates available from Microsoft Online. There are lots of clever ideas here. I downloaded several, but ended up only keeping the banner from one of them. The rest is just a one-column document, with lots of pictures included in the mix.

To include pictures in your Word Newsletter, try this:

(1) Navigate to a view in Salesforce.com that shows the screen or feature you want to talk about.

(2) Click the PRINT SCREEN button on your keyboard, to capture your screen image in memory.

(3) Open an image editing application. I use Paint because it's fast and easy, and we're not doing a lot of image manipulation for this exercise. To launch Paint, click Start --> Programs --> Accessories --> Paint).

(4) Press CTRL-V to paste the captured screenshot into the image editor.

(5) Use the toolbars to crop only the portion of the image that you want to focus your readers. If necessary, highlight the area, by drawing thick red borders around it (as I've done with many images on this blog).

(6) Once you have the image just the way you want it, save it as JPG format. Then import the image into your Word document. Right click on the imported image, and play with the border and text wrap settings, as needed.

I recommend that your quarterly newsletter be timed in conjunction with Salesforce.com releases. Inform your users about all the new features that have been made available to them. Include details about all the customizations (custom fields, objects, tabs, dashboards, reports, VisualForce pages, Apex Triggers, etc.) you've implemented since the last newsletter was published, as well.

The quarterly newsletter keeps users informed about changes and features that have been added to your instance of Salesforce.com. It also reminds your managers and executive stakeholders just how valuable you are to the organization. Save these newsletters in a folder archive -- they're handy to have when it comes time to write your annual self-performance appraisal!

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Getting Everything You Can Out the Winter'09 Release


"Why did the orange popsicle go away," the voice on the other side of the phone asked.

"Huh?" I confess, it takes awhile for my brain to process these types of questions.

"There's a coffee picture there now, or something. Hot Chocolate? In Salesforce --"

I'm surprised when I run into other Salesforce.com Administrators who don’t know about new features in the latest release – aren’t even aware that their system has been upgraded.

“It has?”

“Oh, sure! In fact, you’ve probably had six or more upgrades since you started your Salesforce.com subscription a couple years back.”

“Really? No way!”

Yes way.

It's a testament to the seamless service that SaaS companies offer. When you don’t have to worry about the hardware or software operating under the application, you tend to forget it’s there. You forget that someone out there IS worrying about the technology, and they are constantly improving on it. And yet, if you don’t pay attention to those new releases, you’re not getting as much out of the platform as you could be. I’ve found that many Salesforce.com System Administrators casually glance at the release notes, or don’t review them at all. Consequently, they don't take advantage of the more powerful (and free!) features that Salesforce.com rolls out to it's customers each release cycle.

In the wake of the Winter’09 release, I’m following up with various System Administrators I’ve worked with over the past few years, and asking them to do a Winter’09 Feature Audit. It works like this: I ask them to list all the features in the Winter’09 release (over 50 of them!), and group them into three categories: Features Implemented / Using Now, features that might be helpful to my business (need to explore), features I won’t use.

Do this with every release (including the past releases that you "casually glanced at"), and I promise you’re going to learn a thing or two. This process is going to enforce you to read the release notes carefully. You’ll understand the potential impact of every release feature on your organization, and you’ll soon start to see how you can get more from Salesforce.com than you have in the past.

One week after release, here’s my Winter’09 Feature Audit List:

FEATURES IMPLEMENTED / USING NOW
- Salesforce Idea Enhancements
- Ideas HTML editor
- Case Teams
- Storage Enhancements
- Edit “Case Comments” permissions
- “Transfer Cases” permission
- Notify Case Owner when Case Ownership Changes Setting
- Schedule and Email Reports
- Support for Tagging Dashboards
- Password Strength Checker
- Community Nickname Userfield


FEATURES TO EXPLORE
- Mobile Object Permissions
- Mobile View Criteria Enhancements
- Partner Portal Enhancements
- Email-to-Case Now Supports the CC and BCC Fields of Inbound Email
- Email-to-Case Preserves File Extension on Attachments
- Salesforce Call Center Supports the *, # and + Characters
- Click-and-Create Events
- Email to Salesforce Enhancements
- Account Lookup During Lead Conversion
- Choosing Lead Status Defaults During Lead Conversion
- Opportunity Dependant Fields and Custom Save Logic
- Visualforce Enhancements
- Visualforce Email Templates
- Apex Enhancments
- Force.com Web API Enhancements
- Force.com Development as a Service Enhancements
- Force.com Connect for Outlook: Streamlined Contact Associations
- Support for New Logical Operations
- Support for Self Relationships in Cross-Object Formulas
- Language Support
- Improved Component Management
- User License Enhancements for Developer Edition
- Support for Activities, Workflow, and Approval Processes on Junctor Objects
- Recall Actions for Approval Processes
- Case Comments Workflow
- Default values for Encrypted Custom Fields on User Records


FEATURES I WON’T USE
- Ideas Multi-select Categories Field
- HTML Messages for Customer Portal
- Salesforce Content Support for Google Docs
- Salesforce Mobile for iPhone
- Record Ownership Filter Enhancement for Activities
- Salesforce-to-Salesforce Enhancements
- Campaign Influence
- Budgeting and Planning Fields for Campaign Influence
- Mass Removal of Campaign Members from Campaigns
- Converting Existing Files to Google Docs
- Force.com Connect Offline: Custom Object Tabs
- Force.com Connect for Lotus Notes: Streamlined Contact Associations
- Images Supported in Dashboard Emails for Lotus Notes
- Custom Objects Managed Package Field Changes
- Custom Report Types Managed Package Changes
- Managed Folders and Letterhead Editable and Deleteable in Subscribers Organization
- Removing a Released Component from a Managed Package
- Field Management
- Protected Components
- SAML Start and Logout Pages


But wait, we're not done yet! I’ve got my list, have you made yours? Come back tomorrow with your Winter'09 / Organizational Feature Audit list, and we’ll discuss what to do with them.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Get Ready for Winter'09!

It seems like we just upgraded to the Salesforce.com Summer'08 Release -- I still haven't been able to take advantage of all the features I wanted to turn-up yet. I was hoping to implement the Analytic Snapshots last month, but that got side-tracked as my team started taking a deep dive into Apex and Visualforce. We kicked out some sweet customizations / enhancements for my organizations Case management application, and migrated our old email2case application to Apex.

Don't blink ... the Winter'09 Release will be here sooner than you think (although it should be called the Fall'09 Release, in all deference to Mother Nature)! I got an alert reminder that the server pod on which my organization's Force.com instance is hosted will be updated October 10th. Yikes! That's only a few weeks away!

First thing's first ... here's the maintenance and release schedule for the Winter'09 Release: http://trust.salesforce.com/trust/status/maintenance.html


Want to see what's coming in Winter'09? Check out this list: http://ideas.salesforce.com/popular/coming_in_winter_09

There are a lot of neat things in this one. Topping the list, my personal favorite: Scheduled emailing of reports. At my organization, we already take full advantage of the Scheduled Dashboards feature (which came out in Spring'08). With the Scheduled Dashboards feature, Administrators can configure Dashboards to automatically refresh, and mail an HTML copy of the Dashboard to a user distribution list. I turned this feature up as soon as it became available. Immediately, users asked if I could automate the same feature on some of their custom reports. With Winter'09, we can! This feature will be handy, especially for communicating with Sr. Management!

Other neat stuff that I'm looking forward to in this release:

Plus a whole, lot more!

Release Notes for Winter'09 Release can be found here:
https://na1.salesforce.com/help/doc/en/salesforce_winter09_release_notes.pdf