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Today on the Salesforce Admins Podcast, we talk to Jennifer Lee, Lead Admin Evangelist at Salesforce and the host of How I Solved It and Automate This!
Join us as we chat about everything coming with the Spring ’25 release and what’s new for Agentforce and AI on Salesforce. You should subscribe for the full episode, but here are a few takeaways from our conversation with Jennifer Lee.
Every year, Jen’s release readiness blog post is our most popular piece of content. So I thought I’d bring her on the pod to talk about Spring ’25 so we can hear it straight from the source. She shares four areas where there will be big changes:
With Spring ’25, more orgs than ever before will get access to Agentforce for free with Salesforce Foundations. This is a game changer for smaller orgs and solo admins, allowing you to use AI to harness the power of the Sales, Service, and Marketing Clouds to transform your business.
One thing Jen wants to highlight is the ability to add agent quick actions right on a record page. Prompting is an art, but sometimes your users just need the AI to do the thing. Now you can give them a magic button to give the agent the correct prompt.
If you have Einstein Bots, you can easily convert them into templates for agents to save some steps getting started with Agentforce.
For the flownatics out there, there are a ton of new ways that AI enhancements in Spring ’25 can help you build flows. You can describe what you want a formula or flow to do, and Einstein will build it for you. While you’ll need to go in and iron out the details, it can get you 80% of the way there. No more googling to look up how to write a specific formula.
If you’re like most admins, your Salesforce org is probably full of flows that you didn’t build yourself. With Spring ’25, you’ll be able to get Einstein to summarize what they do, which makes documentation and debugging much easier.
Meanwhile, there are several user management changes coming in Spring ’25 aimed at minimizing clicks and making permissions easier to manage. The group summary page lets you view all the sharing rules and list views in one place, so it’s much simpler to figure out why someone can see something but someone else can’t.
Action buttons let you automatically trigger a flow when your user clicks a button, but what if you could pull up the output without any other user interaction? That’s where screen flows come in. For example, when your user selects a contact you can automatically pull up the associated cases or opportunities.
Jen’s advice for going through release notes is to start with your org. What features do you rely on? Search through the release notes for those things, specifically, and make sure you know what’s new and what’s changing.
Two things that will affect every org are security updates and release updates. These security and performance enhancements will improve your org across the board, so be sure you know when they’ll be enforced and how to test them. Remember, a sandbox org is your best friend.
There’s a lot more great stuff from Jen to get ready for Spring ’25, so be sure to listen to the full episode. And don’t forget to subscribe to the Salesforce Admins Podcast.
Mike:
Now, before we jump into the conversation with Jennifer, I want to make sure that you are following the Salesforce Admin’s podcast on your favorite platform so that you never miss an episode, which could include really cool features like this one. So with that, let’s get Jennifer on the podcast. So Jen, welcome back to the podcast.
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
So let’s dive into Spring ’25. So I’m really excited about these Agentforce AI features come first because that’s what we’re talking about these days is Agentforce and AI. So really excited that folks can get their hands on Agentforce for free with Salesforce Foundation. So you can get access to Agentforce for sales and Agentforce for service and start playing around with it and getting your hands dirty. So that’s pretty cool.
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So when you do, let’s say you do a lookup on a contact, and as soon as you select that contact, it comes back with the associated cases for example, or opportunities. You don’t even have to click the button. It does it for you. So that again, minimizes clicks. And then again, when you’re working on screen flows, you want to give your users a sense of where they are in the progression of their flow. How many times have you worked on a survey and you’re like, “How many screens is the survey?”
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This is awesome. Hey, one thing we haven’t covered, and I think it’s evolution because you and I grew up back in the olden days when we would print the release notes. Also the release notes weren’t a billion pages.
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
And definitely read through the release updates. It’s also in your org and setup. It’ll go through and highlight the updates and when they’d be in force, how to go about testing them. Release updates are pieces of functionality, things like performance enhancements, security enhancements that Salesforce is pushing through to the platform. So it’s really important to be mindful of those because you are given a timeframe before that release update is in force. So you definitely want to give yourself enough time to test it out. In a sandbox, in some cases it might change the behavior or something, and you need to take action on it in your org in order for it to work once that release update is enabled. So you definitely want to get ahead of it and again, test, test, test, test.
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
So how much fun was that to chat with Jennifer about the Spring ’25 release feature? Seriously, if features were a game show, she’d be the reigning champion. I know, I’m sure you’re probably nodding along, taking furious notes, but don’t worry. Links to her blog post will be included in the show notes, which can all be found on admin.salesforce.com, including a transcript in case you missed anything on the podcast.
Now, don’t forget to join the discussion over in the Admin Trailblazer group, that is in the Trailblazer community. Link for that is over in the show notes. So until next week, we’ll see you in the cloud.
The post Spring ’25 Salesforce Features: AI, Flows, and User Management Updates appeared first on Salesforce Admins.
4.7
199199 ratings
Today on the Salesforce Admins Podcast, we talk to Jennifer Lee, Lead Admin Evangelist at Salesforce and the host of How I Solved It and Automate This!
Join us as we chat about everything coming with the Spring ’25 release and what’s new for Agentforce and AI on Salesforce. You should subscribe for the full episode, but here are a few takeaways from our conversation with Jennifer Lee.
Every year, Jen’s release readiness blog post is our most popular piece of content. So I thought I’d bring her on the pod to talk about Spring ’25 so we can hear it straight from the source. She shares four areas where there will be big changes:
With Spring ’25, more orgs than ever before will get access to Agentforce for free with Salesforce Foundations. This is a game changer for smaller orgs and solo admins, allowing you to use AI to harness the power of the Sales, Service, and Marketing Clouds to transform your business.
One thing Jen wants to highlight is the ability to add agent quick actions right on a record page. Prompting is an art, but sometimes your users just need the AI to do the thing. Now you can give them a magic button to give the agent the correct prompt.
If you have Einstein Bots, you can easily convert them into templates for agents to save some steps getting started with Agentforce.
For the flownatics out there, there are a ton of new ways that AI enhancements in Spring ’25 can help you build flows. You can describe what you want a formula or flow to do, and Einstein will build it for you. While you’ll need to go in and iron out the details, it can get you 80% of the way there. No more googling to look up how to write a specific formula.
If you’re like most admins, your Salesforce org is probably full of flows that you didn’t build yourself. With Spring ’25, you’ll be able to get Einstein to summarize what they do, which makes documentation and debugging much easier.
Meanwhile, there are several user management changes coming in Spring ’25 aimed at minimizing clicks and making permissions easier to manage. The group summary page lets you view all the sharing rules and list views in one place, so it’s much simpler to figure out why someone can see something but someone else can’t.
Action buttons let you automatically trigger a flow when your user clicks a button, but what if you could pull up the output without any other user interaction? That’s where screen flows come in. For example, when your user selects a contact you can automatically pull up the associated cases or opportunities.
Jen’s advice for going through release notes is to start with your org. What features do you rely on? Search through the release notes for those things, specifically, and make sure you know what’s new and what’s changing.
Two things that will affect every org are security updates and release updates. These security and performance enhancements will improve your org across the board, so be sure you know when they’ll be enforced and how to test them. Remember, a sandbox org is your best friend.
There’s a lot more great stuff from Jen to get ready for Spring ’25, so be sure to listen to the full episode. And don’t forget to subscribe to the Salesforce Admins Podcast.
Mike:
Now, before we jump into the conversation with Jennifer, I want to make sure that you are following the Salesforce Admin’s podcast on your favorite platform so that you never miss an episode, which could include really cool features like this one. So with that, let’s get Jennifer on the podcast. So Jen, welcome back to the podcast.
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
So let’s dive into Spring ’25. So I’m really excited about these Agentforce AI features come first because that’s what we’re talking about these days is Agentforce and AI. So really excited that folks can get their hands on Agentforce for free with Salesforce Foundation. So you can get access to Agentforce for sales and Agentforce for service and start playing around with it and getting your hands dirty. So that’s pretty cool.
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
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Jennifer Lee:
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Jennifer Lee:
So when you do, let’s say you do a lookup on a contact, and as soon as you select that contact, it comes back with the associated cases for example, or opportunities. You don’t even have to click the button. It does it for you. So that again, minimizes clicks. And then again, when you’re working on screen flows, you want to give your users a sense of where they are in the progression of their flow. How many times have you worked on a survey and you’re like, “How many screens is the survey?”
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
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Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
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Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
This is awesome. Hey, one thing we haven’t covered, and I think it’s evolution because you and I grew up back in the olden days when we would print the release notes. Also the release notes weren’t a billion pages.
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
And definitely read through the release updates. It’s also in your org and setup. It’ll go through and highlight the updates and when they’d be in force, how to go about testing them. Release updates are pieces of functionality, things like performance enhancements, security enhancements that Salesforce is pushing through to the platform. So it’s really important to be mindful of those because you are given a timeframe before that release update is in force. So you definitely want to give yourself enough time to test it out. In a sandbox, in some cases it might change the behavior or something, and you need to take action on it in your org in order for it to work once that release update is enabled. So you definitely want to get ahead of it and again, test, test, test, test.
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
Jennifer Lee:
Mike:
So how much fun was that to chat with Jennifer about the Spring ’25 release feature? Seriously, if features were a game show, she’d be the reigning champion. I know, I’m sure you’re probably nodding along, taking furious notes, but don’t worry. Links to her blog post will be included in the show notes, which can all be found on admin.salesforce.com, including a transcript in case you missed anything on the podcast.
Now, don’t forget to join the discussion over in the Admin Trailblazer group, that is in the Trailblazer community. Link for that is over in the show notes. So until next week, we’ll see you in the cloud.
The post Spring ’25 Salesforce Features: AI, Flows, and User Management Updates appeared first on Salesforce Admins.
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