Have you tried integrating data from a 3rd party application into Salesforce to give your sales team a 360-degree view of your customers?
If the answer’s yes, my guess is it most likely involved purchasing an extension of Salesforce with a 3rd party application (via the AppExchange) or by creating a custom application.
But what if there’s no AppExchange listing for your particular need? Wouldn’t it be useful if you could still hook that system to your Salesforce ecosystem and benefit from seeing that additional data?
In this blog, we’re going to unpack how to integrate legacy systems with Salesforce, and how you can use CloverDX to do it efficiently. But first, let’s look a little closer at the advantages of connecting your systems.
Integrating Salesforce with other applications is a great way to get more value from your data.
Specifically, the benefits include:
So, there are many reasons to integrate Salesforce with other systems, but how exactly do you do it?
If you’re a CloverDX customer (or are thinking about it), you can use CloverDX in this broker type of role.
CloverDX can not only integrate a legacy system that's not natively connectable to Salesforce, but also bring added value by allowing you to massage and adapt the data to best suit your users' needs along the way.
My goal in this blog is to better acquaint you with Salesforce data integrations in general.
I’m not going to dive into any technical solution too deeply. Instead, I’ll walk through the value of integrating data from a legacy 3rd party application into Salesforce using CloverDX, share my experience with it, and offer some advice and suggestions that may help you in the future. But first, let me set the stage about where the idea came from.
Migrating Legacy Systems to ERP: Read The Case Study
Where it all began (for us, anyway)...
Here at CloverDX, we held a hackathon to brainstorm fresh ideas, solve old problems, and come up with new problems to solve. One topic suggested by our Sales Engineering team stood out, which I want to share here: integrating data from a legacy system with Salesforce.
We had been wanting to improve how we connected our support ticketing system (we were using open source OTRS at the time) to Salesforce for a more well-rounded customer view without forcing Salesforce users to log into OTRS to look up their contacts manually. As you can guess, OTRS didn’t come with a ready-made Salesforce component at that time.
So, this was a great opportunity to not only address a business need of our own, but also tackle an interesting technical challenge. Two great things for a consultant like me. By the end of the two-day hackathon, we developed a solution that worked! Sure, it wasn’t production ready, but all the essentials were in place. It felt good to build something useful in such a short, intensive timeframe—and it didn’t hurt that we ourselves could benefit from it.
Why bother with Salesforce when you have a system that works perfectly on its own? Before I jump into some advice, I want to highlight the value of integrating your legacy system's data with Salesforce. After all, if you don’t get buy-in from management or the business team, your project will not get off the ground.
In our case of integrating data from the support ticketing system (OTRS), benefits were quite clear:
Your list might look slightly different, but the reality is that Salesforce quickly becomes the central piece of software (or “no software” to be precise) within business units, and data tends to gravitate to it. Users of Salesforce demand more reach and more visibility from within the comfort of the familiar Salesforce interface.
So how is an integration between Salesforce and a legacy system different with CloverDX compared to a typical AppExchange solution? Well, in short, you get much greater flexibility in exchange for investing a little extra time and work.
Typical modern systems come with out-of-the-box integration modules with a fairly simple configuration, yet limited capabilities. CloverDX, on the other hand, is a platform that lets you design and implement arbitrary functionality. In such a scenario, CloverDX pulls data from the legacy system, transforms, joins, and aggregates it based on the business requirements, and pushes the results to Salesforce.
You can even go as far as having a tiny custom application sit inside Salesforce (written in APEX, Salesforce’s programming language) that uses CloverDX to get data, then provides some advanced functionality on its own. All that data movement in and out usually happens by regularly polling either system, or is based on triggers. CloverDX typically sits somewhere in between, either hosted in the cloud or on-premise, close to the legacy system.
Reducing Salesforce Data Loading Time - Read The Case Study
Once you identify the need for your system’s data integration into Salesforce and get the buy-in from the business stakeholders, you can get started on the project. Here are a few things we considered during the hackathon when we began moving forward with a solution.
The simplest form of integration is to have CloverDX populate some Salesforce objects, standard or custom, without coding. However, whenever you’re uploading data into Salesforce, you want to be selective with it. You need to assess what data you have in your source and what information you actually want to show in Salesforce.
In the case of our support ticketing system, we had to think whether we were fine with just presenting aggregated stats (like open/closed tickets ratio, average response time per customer, etc.) or if we wanted to list individual tickets with all their details and history right in Salesforce. It’s often about finding the balance between providing enough valuable information versus overloading. In my experience, you want to give the sales team the most important information only—just enough that they have a complete, well-rounded view of the customer. Anything else is superfluous.
Also, keep in mind that Salesforce storage does not come free. You’re paying Salesforce based on the amount of data you store (in addition to number of seats), so it wouldn’t be in your best interest to upload anything unnecessary.
There’s no magic prescription I can offer here.
Figuring out how to connect CloverDX to your legacy systems takes, well, a technical understanding of your legacy systems.
I recommend asking yourself the following questions: Is there a backend database that CloverDX could read from? Is there a Web Service API that CloverDX could request data from? Is everything stored in files (Excel, CSV, etc)? You have to determine how to expose that data before you can start extracting and integrating into Salesforce.
CloverDX packs a wide range of connectors, from the ability to read various files and databases, to direct connections to applications via standard API endpoints (REST or SOAP). So I bet it has you covered in this department. Many of the legacy systems aren’t designed with interoperability in mind, so you might need to get creative to find out how to dig the data out.
In cases when you choose not to plainly dump the source data in Salesforce, some kind of processing must happen between the point where the data leaves the legacy system and the point it shows up in Salesforce.
This additional processing can also be done with CloverDX (e.g. computing the average response time across all tickets per customer), bringing value to the raw data—something that might be really tough, if not impossible to achieve in either system alone.
Apart from aggregations, CloverDX can perform smart filtering or data enrichment to create new views of your data once it’s in Salesforce. This streamlined integration leverages CloverDX from beginning to end, allowing you to transform data from your legacy systems to present the right business view to fit your needs.
Now you can start building your solution. Here, I outline a couple of problems that you should look out for along the way, as well as offer a few suggestions based on our experience to ease ongoing development, as well make the integration more valuable.
As you can see, there are a number of decisions and tasks that must happen in order to integrate your legacy data into Salesforce, but I think you can see that it’s achievable in a short period of time.
And, it's well worth doing. Moving data around manually is time-consuming and error prone. It’s better to integrate your systems so everything works automatically.
Finally, I’m glad I can share some of our insight with others looking to integrate legacy data with Salesforce. If you don’t think you have the technical expertise or know-how for a successful implementation, let us know. Our team would be more than happy to help.
Case study - Migrating legacy systems into Workday