You know the moment. Someone walks over to your desk, or pings you on Slack, and says, “Can you just add a quick button here?” In their head, it’s a five-minute job. In your head, you’re already counting the automations it might trigger, the flow that will clash with it, and the deployment window you’ll need to test it properly.
That gap, between what people think Salesforce can do instantly and what actually happens behind the scenes, is where most of our daily friction lives. And here’s the uncomfortable truth: knowing the platform inside out won’t save you if you can’t manage the people who pay for it, request things on it, and decide its future.
This isn’t a generic communication article. It’s a practical guide to the influence skills that Salesforce admins, developers, architects, and consultants actually need when working with people who have never heard the words “governor limit” and never want to.
Table of Contents
Why Stakeholder Management Is a Core Salesforce Skill
There’s a quiet belief among technical folks that if you’re good enough with the platform, the rest sorts itself out, but it doesn’t. Plenty of Salesforce folks stay stuck because they can build anything except trust with the people around them.
Look at why Salesforce projects actually go sideways. It’s rarely a code problem. It’s bloated orgs full of fields nobody uses, features that got launched and then abandoned, and scope that crept until the timeline collapsed. Almost all of that traces back to conversations that didn’t happen, or happened badly.
And the stakeholder problem changes depending on where you sit. Admins deal with “can you just” requests. Business analysts get caught translating in both directions. Developers fight to defend architecture decisions. Architects have to sell long-term thinking to people focused on this quarter. Consultants walk into rooms full of strangers and have to earn credibility fast. Same platform, different flavors of the same challenge.
Know Your Stakeholders Before You Try to Manage Them
You can’t influence people you haven’t bothered to understand. Before you walk into any conversation, it helps to know who you’re actually dealing with.
The Five Stakeholder Types You’ll Actually Meet
- The Executive Sponsor cares about outcomes and money. They don’t want to hear about config. They want to know if this helps the business and what it costs. Keep it high-level, or you’ll lose them in the first thirty seconds.
- The Power User or Department Lead lives in the system every day and wants their specific pain solved now. They’re your closest ally or your loudest critic, depending on how you treat them.
- The “I Used to Be Technical” Stakeholder is the tricky one. They built an Access database in 2009 and now believe they understand software. Half-knowledge is harder to work with than no knowledge, because they argue with confidence.
- The Skeptic got burned by a CRM project that failed badly in the past. They’re not against you personally. They’ve just learned not to trust promises.
- The Absentee Approver is the individual whose approval you require but who is often absent from meetings and does not reply to your messages. A significant part of your job is obtaining a decision from them.
Map Influence Against Interest
A quick mental exercise helps here. Sort your stakeholders by how much power they hold and how much they care about the project. The high-power, high-interest people get your direct attention. The high-power, low-interest ones need to be kept satisfied with short updates. It sounds basic, but most failed rollouts ignored someone who quietly had the authority to kill the whole thing.
Translating Technical Constraints Into Business Language
This is the skill that separates people who get listened to from people who get tuned out.
Talk About Impact, Not Mechanism
Nobody outside the platform cares what a governor’s limit is. They care what it costs them. Your job is to stop explaining the engine and start describing the consequences.
A few translations that work:
- Instead of “we’ll hit a SOQL limit,” try “this design will start slowing down or failing once you cross around 50,000 records, and based on your growth, you’ll hit that by Q3.”
- Instead of “That’s not possible declaratively,” say: “We can build it, but it turns a two-day configuration into a three-week custom build, plus ongoing maintenance every release.”
Same facts. One makes you sound like a blocker. The other makes you sound like an advisor protecting their investment.
Keep a Few Good Analogies Ready
Analogies do heavy lifting when you’re short on time.
Governor limits are like living in an apartment building with shared water pressure. There’s a cap so one tenant can’t drain the whole system. Technical debt is interest on a loan you didn’t realise you took out, and it gets more expensive the longer you ignore it. Changing the core data model late in a project is like moving a load-bearing wall after the house is built.
People remember these long after they forget the technical term.
Put Everything in Time, Money, or Risk
Non-technical people understand three currencies. How long does it take, what does it cost, and what could go wrong? If you can frame a constraint in one of those, you’ll be heard. If you can’t, you’re just making noise.
Setting Expectations Around Platform Limitations
Most stakeholder pain is really expectation pain. The work wasn’t bad. The surprise was.
Set Expectations Early, Not When It Breaks
The most damaging pattern in Salesforce work is saying yes, going quiet, and then surprising everyone with bad news at the deadline. People forgive limitations they hear about upfront. They don’t forgive surprises. Raise the constraint while it’s still cheap to discuss.
How to Say No Without Actually Saying No
Flat refusals make you the enemy. Trade-offs make you the expert. Try “Yes, and here’s what it costs” instead of “No.”
Tiered options work beautifully. Give people a good version, a better version, and a built-properly version, with the time and risk attached to each. Now they’re choosing, not being blocked. When someone says, “The last consultant said this was easy,” you can calmly reply, “It can be quick if we accept some limitations. Here’s what those are, and you decide what trade-off you’re comfortable with.”
Write Decisions Down
When a project goes wrong, “but I told you in Slack” never holds up. Keep a simple decision log. Record the choice, who made it, and what trade-off they accepted. This isn’t bureaucracy or covering yourself out of fear. It’s how you stay the trusted advisor instead of the scapegoat six months later.
Getting Decisions Made by People Who Don’t Speak Salesforce
Half the battle is just getting a yes-or-no from someone.
Bring Decisions, Not Information Dumps
When you flood a stakeholder with technical detail, you don’t look thorough. You look like you can’t make a call. Bring two or three clear options with a recommendation attached. Reduce the thinking they have to do. “Here are our three paths. I’d go with option two for these reasons. Are you happy with that?” gets a decision far faster than an open-ended explanation.
Trust Is the Real Currency
Influence is built on a track record. Deliver small, reliable wins, and people start believing your bigger estimates. And counterintuitively, admitting when you don’t know something builds more authority than pretending. “I’m not certain, let me confirm and come back to you by the end of the day” makes you more credible, not less. Communication and business partnership skills consistently rank alongside technical ability as markers of a high-performing admin.
Managing Up Is Different From Managing Across
Executives want brevity and outcomes. Peer departments want to feel heard and included. Use the same translation skills, but adjust the volume. A two-line summary for the sponsor, a proper working session for the team that has to live with the result.
Mistakes Salesforce Pros Make Again and Again
The most common one is over-explaining. You don’t earn respect by proving how complex your job is. You earn it by making complexity feel manageable.
Close behind is being a pure order-taker. Building exactly what’s asked, every time, is how orgs turn into junk drawers. Going quiet during a long build is another quiet killer, because silence reads as trouble even when everything’s fine. And finally, plenty of people win the technical argument and lose the relationship. Being right isn’t the same as being effective.
Best Practices Checklist
- Translate every constraint into time, money, or risk.
- Set expectations before work starts, not when something breaks.
- Offer options with a clear recommendation.
- Bring recommendations, not raw information.
- Document decisions and the trade-offs, especially the ones made against your advice.
- Deliver small wins to bank trust for bigger asks.
- Keep stakeholders updated during long builds, even when there’s nothing dramatic to report.
How Stakeholder Management Is Changing in the AI Era
Stakeholders now arrive with a new expectation shaped by AI hype. “Can’t the AI just do it?” is the new “Can’t you just add a button?” Tools like Agentforce and the broader push toward low-code have made everything look effortless from the outside, widening the gap between perception and reality.
That makes your translation skills more valuable, not less. When anyone can watch a slick demo and assume the work is trivial, the professional who can clearly explain what’s real, what’s hype, and what it actually costs becomes the person leadership relies on. The role is shifting from builder to trusted advisor, and the advisors who can speak both languages will be the ones who matter.
Final Thoughts
Here’s the thing nobody tells you early in a Salesforce career. The platform skills get you hired. The people skills get you promoted. You can be the best builder in the org, but if you can’t get a non-technical executive to make a decision or explain why their “quick” request isn’t quick, you’ll spend your career frustrated and underused.
None of this means becoming a politician or losing your technical edge. It means treating communication as part of the craft, not a distraction from it. Get good at translating, expectation-setting, and earning trust, and you’ll find the technical work gets easier too, because the people around you finally understand what you’re protecting them from.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Skip the mechanics and focus on impact. Frame the limitation in terms of time, money, or risk, and use a simple analogy if it helps. They don’t need to understand governor limits, just what those limits mean for their goals.
Don’t say a flat no. Offer trade-offs and tiered options instead. Show them the cost of each path and let them choose. That turns you from a blocker into an advisor.
Set them early and write them down. The damage rarely comes from the work itself. It comes from surprises. A decision log of what was agreed and what trade-offs were accepted protects everyone.
Acknowledge that some things genuinely are quick, then explain what adds time in their specific case, like real data volumes, security needs, or integrations. Honesty up front beats a missed deadline later.
Yes. Technical ability gets you in the door, but communication and stakeholder skills are what move you into senior, architect, and consulting roles where you’re trusted to guide decisions.
Reduce their effort. Bring two or three clear options with a recommendation rather than an open question. Keep it brief, tie it to outcomes, and ask for a simple yes-or-no.

Priya Rastogi
Priya is a Salesforce Admin who believes in the power of continuous learning and collaboration. She’s passionate about exploring how Salesforce can simplify work, boost productivity, and create better user experiences. When she’s not experimenting with new features or automating processes, Priya enjoys connecting with fellow Trailblazers and sharing insights to help others grow in their Salesforce journey.
- Priya Rastogi
- Priya Rastogi
- Priya Rastogi





