June 4, 2026

The Real Reason Salesforce Fails, And It Has Nothing To Do With The Software

I work in CRM implementation.

Which means I spend a lot of time thinking about systems, workflows, data architecture, and adoption rates.

 

But the longer I do this work, the more I come back to one thing.

People.

 

Everything we build, every system we configure, every implementation we design,  at the end of it, a human being has to use it. 

 

A sales rep. A programme manager. A finance officer. A field officer updating beneficiary records from their phone.

 

If that person is not considered from the very beginning, the system will fail. 

 

Not technically but because nobody will use it.

 

Most CRM investments are made with the customer in mind. 

The pipeline, revenue, reporting.

 

Leadership wants visibility. 

Finance wants ROI. The board wants scale.

All of that is valid, very much.

 

But somewhere between the boardroom where the budget gets approved and the sales floor where the system goes live, the most important question never gets asked.

 

What does the team actually need to do their job well?

 

Not what we assume they need. 

What do the actual human beings, doing the actual work, need from this system on weekdays?

 

Organisations spend millions on Salesforce and end up with a system that collects dust.

 

 Not because Salesforce is a bad platform,  it powers 90% of Fortune 500 companies. But because the people who were going to use it every day were not really part of the conversation.

 

Nobody asked them or sat with them. Nobody watched how they actually worked before designing a system around how someone assumed they worked.

 

The result is a CRM that feels like it was built for a version of the team that doesn’t exist. And people quietly go back to their spreadsheets. Their WhatsApp groups. 

 

The investment stays on the balance sheet. The value never arrives.

 

Here is what I believe, and it shapes everything we do at Dkloud:

You shouldn’t build a system for people without building it with people.

 

It is not just good implementation practice, It is respect.

 

When a leader signs off on a CRM investment, they are making a commercial decision. But the return on that decision is held entirely in the hands of the team using the system. 

 

Keeping people at the centre of every decision. The employer. The employee. The end user. The customer they serve.

 

Because at the end of every implementation, every configuration, every workflow and dashboard and automation, there is a person on the other side of it.

 

Build for them, build with them.

Everything else follows.

 

Written by:

Silvia Peter

Marketing Manager, Dkloud

 

The success of Salesforce has never been about the platform alone, it’s about the people who use it every day.

When teams are involved, adoption follows. When people are overlooked, even the best technology falls short.

Ready to build Salesforce with your people, not just for them?

📩 bam@dkloudconsulting.com
📩 enquiries@dkloudconsulting.com

DKLOUD Consulting — Clarity. Scalability. Impact.

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