Salesforce publishes impressive success statistics. But practitioners who work in the field know a different reality. Implementation failure rates in CRM projects broadly, and Salesforce specifically, remain stubbornly high. Depending on which research you reference, somewhere between 30 and 70 percent of CRM implementations fail to deliver their intended business outcomes.
Why the gap between promise and reality is so wide
At Teraways we've inherited enough rescue projects to see the same pattern repeat: ambitious scope, light discovery, and a tool configured by people who never sat with the sales team for a day. The platform isn't the problem. The path to the platform is.
The five quiet killers
1. Treating it as an IT project, not a sales transformation. Salesforce only works when the people who use it every day are part of the design. The moment it becomes "a thing IT is rolling out," adoption collapses.
2. Customising before you've measured. Every custom object, every workflow rule, every bespoke Lightning component is a tax you'll pay forever. Most teams customise first and measure later. Reverse it.
3. Data debt on day one. Importing a dirty CRM into a clean Salesforce just moves the mess. Cleanup is unglamorous and non-negotiable.
4. No owner after go-live. Salesforce is a living system. Without a named admin and a release cadence, it ossifies within a year.
5. Skipping the user. The leadership team approves the demo; the sales rep never opens the tool. Adoption is a UX problem, not a training problem.
How Teraways gets it right the first time
Discovery before configuration. A measurable adoption goal before a single field is created. Phased rollout with one process live and loved before the next one ships. And an operating model that lives past go-live — because the day you stop investing in Salesforce is the day it starts decaying.