The Vantage View | Salesforce

Change Champions: Your Secret Weapon for Salesforce Adoption

Written by David Cockrum | Jan 21, 2026 1:14:59 PM

 

How to Build a Network of Salesforce Advocates Who Actually Drive Adoption

The Bottom Line

The best Salesforce training doesn't come from IT. It comes from peers. Change Champions are respected team members who become Salesforce advocates—and they're the single highest-ROI investment in adoption.

What is a Salesforce Change Champion?

A Change Champion is an employee who serves as a Salesforce advocate, peer trainer, and feedback conduit between end users and the admin team.

As one experienced implementation lead put it: "Champions aren't cheerleaders. They're translators between IT and the business."

Why You Need Change Champions for Salesforce

There are three compelling reasons to build a Change Champion network:

Scale: One admin can't effectively train 200 users. Champions distribute the knowledge burden across your organization, making training sustainable and personalized.

Trust: Peers trust peers more than IT or management. When someone from their own team shows them how Salesforce makes their job easier, they listen.

Context: Champions understand role-specific workflows in ways centralized IT never will. They know the nuances of how sales, service, or operations actually work day-to-day.

Research shows peer-led training has 85% retention versus just 20% for lecture-based training. That difference alone justifies the investment.

How Many Change Champions Do You Need?

The ideal ratio is one Champion per 10-15 users. Here's what that looks like at different scales:

  • 50 users: 4-5 Champions
  • 100 users: 7-10 Champions
  • 200 users: 15-20 Champions
  • 500 users: 35-50 Champions

Too few champions leads to burnout. Too many dilutes accountability. Finding the right balance ensures sustainable support without overwhelming your Champions.

What Makes a Good Salesforce Change Champion?

Select for influence, not just enthusiasm. The most effective Champions share these traits:

Respected by peers: Their endorsement carries weight. When they say something works, people believe them.

Patient: They'll answer the same question ten times without frustration, understanding that repetition is part of learning.

Tech-comfortable: They're not afraid to experiment, click around, and figure things out.

Communicative: They proactively surface issues rather than waiting to be asked.

Positive: They see possibilities, not just problems. They approach change with optimism.

Red Flags to Watch For

Not everyone who volunteers will make a good Champion. Be cautious of people who:

  • Volunteered only to avoid other work
  • Are already overwhelmed with responsibilities
  • Have a history of negative attitudes toward change

How to Select Your Change Champions

Step 1: Nominate

Ask managers to nominate respected team members across different departments and seniority levels. You want diversity in your Champion network.

Step 2: Screen

Verify genuine interest (not just manager pressure), confirm they have available time (4-6 hours per week), and assess their attitude toward the project.

Step 3: Confirm

Get manager approval for the time commitment, set clear expectations in writing, and include Champion responsibilities in job performance discussions.

Training Your Change Champions

Champions need three layers of training to be effective:

Layer 1: Advanced Salesforce Skills

They need features beyond their daily use, admin-level understanding of configuration, and the ability to troubleshoot common issues.

Layer 2: Training & Support Skills

They must learn how to teach adults effectively, handle frustrated users with empathy, and know when to escalate versus solve problems themselves.

Layer 3: Change Management Awareness

Help them understand why change is hard, the adoption curve, and proven strategies for handling resistance.

What Change Champions Actually Do

Daily Responsibilities

Champions answer quick questions from team members, model Salesforce best practices in their own work, and note recurring issues for escalation.

Weekly Activities

They lead 15-minute team Salesforce tips sessions, submit feedback and issue logs to the admin team, and check in with struggling users.

Monthly Commitments

Champions attend network meetings, review adoption metrics for their team, and communicate upcoming changes or features.

Keeping Change Champions Engaged

Champions burn out without recognition and support. Here's how to keep them motivated:

Recognition: Monthly shout-outs in company communications and annual awards ceremonies show appreciation.

Access: Give them early previews of new features so they feel valued and can prepare their teams.

Community: Monthly Champion meetups create peer support and prevent isolation.

Growth: Fund Salesforce certifications as professional development opportunities.

Influence: Give them a voice in roadmap decisions. Champions who feel heard stay engaged. Champions who feel used disappear.

Building a Change Champion Network

A structured community of Champions should meet regularly to share what's working (and what isn't), learn new features together, solve problems collaboratively, and provide collective feedback to leadership.

Meet monthly for 60 minutes with this agenda:

  1. Adoption metrics review (10 minutes)
  2. Issue roundtable (20 minutes)
  3. Feature deep-dive (20 minutes)
  4. Open discussion (10 minutes)

Measuring Champion Effectiveness

Track these metrics to ensure your Champion program delivers results:

  • Team adoption rate: Should be above company average
  • Support tickets from their team: Should be below average
  • Training session attendance: Target 90%+
  • Feedback submitted: Weekly minimum
  • Champion retention: 80%+ annually

Change Champion Job Description Template

Role: Salesforce Change Champion (in addition to current role)

Time Commitment: 4-6 hours per week

Reports to: Salesforce Project Manager (dotted line)

Responsibilities

  • Serve as first-line Salesforce support for team
  • Lead weekly team training sessions
  • Collect and escalate user feedback
  • Attend monthly Champion network meetings
  • Model Salesforce best practices daily

Qualifications

  • Respected by peers
  • Comfortable with technology
  • Strong communication skills
  • Patient and positive attitude

Benefits

  • Advanced Salesforce training
  • Certification opportunities
  • Recognition in company communications
  • Voice in system design decisions

Key Takeaways

Champions are more effective than admins for peer training and support. Aim for a 1:10-15 ratio for optimal coverage. Select for influence, not just enthusiasm. Invest in your Champions through training, recognition, and community building. Measure effectiveness by tracking team adoption rates and support ticket volumes.

The most successful Salesforce implementations don't have the best technology—they have the best Champions.

Tomorrow: Salesforce Training That Sticks—Beyond the One-Time Workshop

About Vantage Point

Vantage Point is a specialized Salesforce and HubSpot consultancy serving the financial services industry. We help wealth management firms, banks, credit unions, insurance providers, and fintech companies transform their client relationships through intelligent CRM implementations. Our team of 100% senior-level, certified professionals combines deep financial services expertise with technical excellence to deliver solutions that drive measurable results.

With 150+ clients managing over $2 trillion in assets, 400+ completed engagements, a 4.71/5 client satisfaction rating, and 95%+ client retention, we've earned the trust of financial services firms nationwide.

About the Author

David Cockrum, Founder & CEO

David founded Vantage Point after serving as COO in the financial services industry and spending 13+ years as a Salesforce user. This insider perspective informs our approach to every engagement—we understand your challenges because we've lived them. David leads Vantage Point's mission to bridge the gap between powerful CRM platforms and the specific needs of financial services organizations.