Basics
Basics
@salesforcedocs
Last updated: September 1, 2023
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names and marks. Other marks appearing herein may be trademarks of their respective owners.
CONTENTS
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 268
GET STARTED WITH SALESFORCE
Welcome to Salesforce, the award-winning cloud computing service designed to help you manage
EDITIONS
your customer relationships, integrate with other systems, and build your own applications! Here
are some key concepts to help you understand the Salesforce products and editions and guide you Available in: Salesforce
through common tasks in Salesforce. Classic (not available in all
orgs)
What Is Salesforce? Available in: All editions
Salesforce is your customer success platform, designed to help you sell, service, market, analyze,
and connect with your customers.
Log In, Navigate, and Search Salesforce
New to Salesforce? Learn how to navigate, customize, and manage basic CRM features.
Verify Your Identity
Use identity verification tools to secure and protect your data from unauthorized access.
Personalize Your Salesforce Experience
Update your personal information, for example your email address. Change your password and security question. If you have
administrator permissions, you can also customize your Salesforce org.
What Is Salesforce?
Salesforce is your customer success platform, designed to help you sell, service, market, analyze,
EDITIONS
and connect with your customers.
Run your business from anywhere with Salesforce. Use standard products and features to manage Available in: both Lightning
relationships with prospects and customers, collaborate and engage with employees and partners, Experience and Salesforce
and store your data securely in the cloud. Classic
But standard products and features are only the beginning. With our platform, you can customize Your Salesforce edition
and personalize the experience for your customers, partners, and employees and easily extend determines which features
beyond out of the box functionality. and functionality you can
access.
1
Get Started with Salesforce What Is Salesforce?
2
Get Started with Salesforce Concepts, Products, and Services
Cloud Computing Technology that enables Internet-based services that let you sign up and
log in through a browser. Salesforce delivers its service in the cloud. Other
familiar cloud computing services include Google Apps and Amazon.com.
Software as a Software delivered not by traditional means (such as on disk) but in the
Service (SaaS) cloud, as a service. There’s nothing to download or install, and updates are
automatic.
Lightning Platform The Lightning platform is the first platform as a service (PaaS). Developers can create and deliver any
kind of business application entirely on demand and without software. The platform also includes easy
to use point-and-click customization tools to help you create solutions for your unique business
requirements, without any programming experience.
AppExchange AppExchange is a marketplace featuring hundreds of cloud applications created by Salesforce customers,
developers, and partners. Many of the applications are free and all of them are pre-integrated with
Salesforce, enabling you to easily and efficiently add functionality.
3
Get Started with Salesforce The Salesforce Admin
Terms
Term Definition
App Short for application. A collection of components such as tabs, reports, dashboards, and Visualforce pages
that address specific business needs. Salesforce provides standard apps, which you can customize, such
as Sales and Service. You can customize the standard apps to match the way you work.
Edition One of several bundles of Salesforce products and services, each geared toward a different set of business
needs. All Salesforce editions share the look and feel, but they vary by feature, functionality, and pricing.
Object A definition of a specific type of information you can store in Salesforce. For example, the Case object
lets you store information about customer inquiries. For each object, your organization has multiple,
specific records.
Salesforce comes with lots of standard objects, but you can create custom objects, as well.
Organization A deployment of Salesforce that has a defined set of licensed users. Your organization includes all your
data and applications.
Record A collection of fields that store information about a specific item of a specific type. A record is an object,
such as a contact, an account, or an opportunity. For example, you can have a contact record to store
information about Joe Smith, and a case record store information about his training inquiry.
Release Salesforce releases new products and features three times per year, and we identify releases by
season—Winter, Spring, and Summer—along with the calendar year. Example: Winter ’15.
For every Salesforce release, the Salesforce release notes include new features and products that are
generally available or in beta release. They also describe all changes to existing features and products.
You can find the release notes when you search for “Release Notes” in the Salesforce Help.
Salesforce The name of the Salesforce cloud computing CRM service and the company name.
4
Get Started with Salesforce What Happens When You Purchase Salesforce
Here are a few examples of the kinds of things your admin can help you with or do for you.
• Find or use an object, field, or feature you heard about during training.
• Create a custom workflow that lets you find out when a case is closed.
• Create a custom approval process that allows you to sign off on employee expenses.
• Create a custom report for your sales region.
• Give you a user permission that’s not granted as part of your user profile.
• Answer questions about your own or others’ access to records.
• Address those cursed error messages that ask you to contact your administrator for help or more information.
How you contact your administrator, and when and why, depends on your company’s internal business policies and practices.
Org-Level Licenses
When you purchase Salesforce, you purchase an org-level license, or edition. An edition defines your:
• Features, such as contracts or Collaborative Forecasts
• Amounts, such as quantity of storage and the number of sandboxes
To check how much storage or the number of sandboxes that your org has, from Setup, in the Quick Find box, enter Storage Usage
or Sandboxes.
User-Level Licenses
Your org receives a specific number of user licenses, such as Salesforce or Chatter Free user licenses. A user license defines:
• User permissions, such as Activate Contracts or View All Forecasts
• CRUD (Create, Read, Update, and Delete) access allowed on objects, such as who can create a contract or delete an account
When you create users, you assign each one to a user license. A user license defines the permissions or the maximum capabilities that
a user can have.
To see which user licenses your org has, from Setup, in the Quick Find box, enter Company Information, and then select User Licenses.
5
Get Started with Salesforce What Happens When You Purchase Salesforce
To check which permission set licenses your org has, from Setup, in the Quick Find box, enter Company Information, and select
Permission Set Licenses.
Add-On Licenses
Your org receives a specific number of user licenses, such as Salesforce or Chatter Free user licenses. A user license defines:
• User permissions, such as Activate Contracts or View All Forecasts
• CRUD (Create, Read, Update, and Delete) access allowed on objects, such as who can create a contract or delete an account
When you create users, you assign each one to a user license. A user license defines the permissions or the maximum capabilities that
a user can have. To see which user licenses your org has, from Setup, in the Quick Find box, enter Company Information, and
then select User Licenses.
Add-on licenses extend functionality at the org level. An example is the purchase of more API requests to extend the limit for your org.
Permissions
User permissions specify:
• Tasks that users can perform
• Features that users can access in your org configuration
The base user permissions, such as Activate Contracts or View All Forecasts, that someone has depends on the user license assigned.
You can use profiles and permission sets to refine which permissions a group of users has.
For example, users with the View All Forecasts permission can view other users’ forecasts, but they must have the correct user license.
If you assign the Chatter Free user license to users, they do not receive the View All Forecasts permission because this user license does
not offer it.
To find which user license a user is assigned, from Setup, in the Quick Find box, enter Users. Click the name of the user whose
information you want to view. Look for User License.
Profiles
You can have standard profiles and custom profiles, depending on the edition that you purchase. Profiles define:
• User access to objects and data
• What users can do within the org
When you create users, you assign each user a profile. A profile belongs to exactly one user license type. Let’s say that your purchase
comes with the Salesforce and Chatter Free license types, among others. You assign profiles to users based on these licenses.
For example, based on the Salesforce user license, you can assign the System Administrator, Standard User, or one of several other profiles
to a user. Based on the Chatter Free user license, you can assign only the Chatter Free User or Chatter Moderator User profiles to users.
6
Get Started with Salesforce Push Updated Licenses to Sandbox Orgs
You can create custom profiles to offer different permissions or functionality to users with the same user license. However, using a
permission set is typically a more efficient way to achieve the same goal. (Make sure that the permissions defined in the profile or
permission set don’t exceed the permissions defined in the user license, though.) For example, you can assign a profile to a group of
users. Then, you can assign users different permission sets to give certain people in that group more capabilities.
To see which profile and permission sets that a user is assigned, from Setup, in the Quick Find box, enter Users. Click the name of the
user whose information you want to view. To check the assigned profile, look for Profile. Click Permission Set License Assignments
or Permission Set Assignments: Activation Required for permission set information.
SEE ALSO:
Salesforce Editions
Data and File Storage Allocations
Licenses Overview
Warning: If the sandbox’s related production environment is in trial or demo status, do not use the matching tool. Using the tool
with a trial or demo org can result in destructive changes. If you’re unsure whether the sandbox’s production org is in active status,
log a case with Salesforce Customer Support. They can confirm your org’s status before you use the tool.
7
Get Started with Salesforce License Updates and Your Org
SEE ALSO:
Salesforce Editions
What Happens When You Purchase Salesforce
Licenses Overview
Salesforce Editions
We offer bundles of features and services, each geared toward specific business needs.
EDITIONS
These bundles, called editions, share a look and feel but vary by functionality and pricing. Some
customers start with a basic edition and upgrade to a more feature-rich edition as business Available in: both Salesforce
requirements evolve. Classic and Lightning
Experience
It’s easy to learn which features are available in various editions. Just search for features in Salesforce
Help. Toward the top of every topic, you can see the editions in which the feature’s available. Here’s Available in: Essentials,
a quick description of each edition we offer. Starter, Professional,
Enterprise, Unlimited, and
Edition What’s Great About It Developer Editions
Essentials Designed for small businesses getting started with CRM to boost sales or service
productivity. It includes a setup assistant and administration tools to customize
your deployment as you grow.
Starter Want to get started with sales, service, and marketing functionality all in one?
With out-of-the-box tools and built-in guidance, Salesforce Starter is the fastest
way to get started with the Salesforce CRM suite. It’s perfect if you’re a first-time
user who wants to find, win, and keep customers and build stronger
relationships from day one.
8
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Editions
Enterprise Meets the needs of large and complex businesses. It gives you advanced customization and administration
tools, in addition to all the functionality available in Professional Edition, that can support large-scale
deployments. Enterprise Edition also includes access to Salesforce APIs, so you can easily integrate with
back-office systems.
Unlimited Maximizes your success and extends it across the entire enterprise through the Lightning Platform. It gives
you new levels of platform flexibility for managing and sharing all your information on demand. Includes all
Enterprise Edition functionality, Premier Support, full mobile access, unlimited custom apps, increased storage
limits, and other features.
Developer Provides access to the Lightning Platform and APIs. It lets developers extend Salesforce, integrate with other
applications, and develop new tools and applications. Developer Edition also provides access to many of the
features available in Enterprise Edition.
Salesforce doesn’t provide technical support for Developer Edition. But you can ask for help from developer
community message boards after you register for the Lightning Platform developer website:
developer.salesforce.com.
For many trial and purchased subscription editions for new orgs, Lightning Experience is the exclusive user interface for end users. See
Lightning Experience Only Editions.
Compare editions and their features in Salesforce Pricing and Editions.
9
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Editions
1. From Setup, enter Company Information in the Quick Find box, then select Company Information.
2. Organization Edition appears in the lower right.
If you believe that your org has a strong business need for your end users to access Salesforce Classic, use the exception request process.
1. Go to Salesforce Help Finder and log in with your Salesforce credentials .
2. Click the Feature Activation topic, and then the Other category .
3. Click Log a New Case.
4. For the Subject field, enter Enable Classic.
5. For the Description field, enter details on why you are requesting end-user access to Salesforce Classic.
6. Check that the OrgId is accurate, and then submit the case.
10
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Editions
Group Edition
This edition is designed for small businesses and work groups with a limited number of users. Group Edition users can manage their
customers from the start of the sales cycle through the end and provide customer support and service. Group Edition offers access to
accounts, contacts, opportunities, leads, cases, dashboards (read only), and reports.
Customers already using Group Edition can buy additional subscriptions, up to 10 Group Edition subscriptions total.
Personal Edition
This edition is a CRM solution designed for an individual sales representative or other single user. Personal Edition provides access to
key contact management features such as accounts, contacts, and synchronization with Microsoft Outlook®. It also provides sales
representatives with sales tools such as opportunities.
Note: Personal Edition orgs purchased after June 2009 don’t have access to opportunities.
Performance Edition
This edition is designed for customers who want to drive growth, increase customer satisfaction, and maximize sales and service success
in the social and mobile world. Performance Edition orgs include all Unlimited Edition functionality plus clean, targeted lead and customer
data from Data.com, coaching and feedback tools from WDC, trusted identity services from Identity, and more. For customers in Japan,
Singapore, and South Korea, we offer Performance Edition Limited, which includes all Performance Edition functionality except Data.com.
Database.com
Database.com is a multitenant cloud database service that’s designed to store data for mobile, social enterprise applications. You can
use Database.com as the back-end database for applications that are written in any language and run on any platform or mobile device.
Database.com's built-in social computing infrastructure and native support for building sophisticated REST-based APIs enable you to
create employee-facing, native mobile and social apps.
As a Salesforce customer, you already use Database.com when you create custom objects, manage security, or import data with the
Lightning Platform and API. A stand-alone version of Database.com is available for developers who want to create applications that
harness other languages, platforms, and devices.
We don’t provide Database.com-specific documentation. Refer to the Salesforce documentation and the list of features that Database.com
supports. This list identifies the Salesforce documentation subjects that apply to Database.com. Also, every feature’s Edition Table includes
Database.com if the feature is available in Database.com. Use Salesforce Help, release notes, workbooks, and developer guides for APIs,
Apex, SOQL, and SOSL.
SEE ALSO:
Salesforce Editions
Note: This document details the features that require outbound or external connections. Customers and their system administrators
that choose to enable a feature turned off by default will need to verify if any external connection(s) become enabled prior to
11
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Editions
turning on that previously disabled feature as described below. As the Controlled Setting offerings evolve, the list of unavailable
or disabled features might change. Check this document after each release for the most current information.
Adoption Assistance These features aren’t available because they rely on external resources:
• Optimizer app
• Access to the Transition Assistant
• Lightning Experience Welcome Mat
B2B Commerce deployed B2B Commerce deployed with Lightning Experience is unavailable.
with Lightning Experience
Einstein Bots External data connectors are limited to Salesforce Connector, Amazon
S3, and AWS RDS.
12
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Editions
Einstein Prediction Builder Prediction Builder and related features are unavailable.
Email Compliance BCC Email, DKIM Keys, Gmail Integration and Sync, Outlook
Integration and Sync, Send through External Email Services, and Test
Deliverability are disabled.
13
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Editions
Lightning Bridge In Canvas App Previewer, the Heroku Quick Start button is unavailable.
Lightning Platform Google Sheets, Skype for Salesforce, and Cisco Spark are unavailable.
Partnerships
Maps and Location Services Maps and location services are unavailable.
Medication Management Disabled by default. When enabled, RxNorm integration uses outbound
(Health Cloud) connections to an external data source.
Sales Cloud Leads Lead generation integration is restricted (no public lead sources are
available).
14
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Service Cloud - Social Social Publisher and Social Objects are unavailable.
Customer Service
Social Accounts, Contacts, Social profiles (such as Twitter and YouTube) are unavailable.
and Leads
Note: For usage restrictions that apply to Sales Cloud, Service Cloud, and Sales & Service Cloud, see this document.
15
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
SEE ALSO:
Salesforce Editions
Data and File Storage Allocations
Attachments: maximum size in • 25 MB for file attachments You can add an attachment to
the Notes & Attachments the Attachments related list of
• 2 GB for feed attachments.
related list a case, solution, campaign, task,
or event, or to the Notes &
Attachments related list of an
account, contact, lead,
opportunity, or custom object.
If you don’t see the related list
on task or event page layouts,
ask your admin to add it.
Certificates: maximum 50
16
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Custom fields per object 500 An org can’t have more than 900 custom
fields on most object types, regardless of
the edition or source of those fields. In
addition to the limits listed above, you can
install custom fields from AppExchange for
a total of 900 fields. For example, you can
create 800 custom fields on an object in the
Unlimited Edition, plus install 100 custom
fields from a managed package that are
limited to specific objects. Additional
restrictions apply for activities, long text area
fields, relationship fields, and roll-up
summary fields. For more information, see
Custom Fields Allowed Per Object.
17
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Custom objects: deletion of parent records Available unless more than 200 junction
in a many-to-many relationship object records are associated with the
deleted parent record and the junction
object has a roll-up summary field that rolls
up to the other parent.
18
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Master-detail relationship: maximum child 10,000 Maximum objects that can be pending for
records Omni-Channel routing in an org. When an
item is assigned to Omni-Channel-enabled
queues, Omni attempts to route it to an
available agent. If no agent is available, the
work is pending routing. You may
experience degraded performance in
Omni-Channel Supervisor when queues
surpass 10,000 pending routing requests.
19
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Omni-Channel: maximum queued work 45,000 per hour If your org exceeds its daily Web-to-Case or
items Web-to-Lead amount, the default case
owner or default lead creator receives a
notification email that contains information
about the case or lead. When your org
reaches the 24-hour max, Salesforce stores
additional requests in a pending request
queue that contains Web-to-Case and
Web-to-Lead requests. The requests are
submitted when the amount refreshes. The
pending request queue has an allocation of
50,000 combined requests. If your org
reaches the pending request maximum,
additional requests are rejected and not
queued. Your admin receives email
notifications for the first five rejected
submissions. Contact Salesforce Customer
Support to change your org’s pending
request allocation.
20
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Web-to-Case: maximum new cases 5,000 For custom compound fields, each
generated in a 24–hour period component counts as one custom field
21
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Web-to-Lead: maximum new leads 500 For custom compound fields, each
generated in a 24–hour period component counts as one custom field
toward your org’s allocations. Each
geolocation field counts as three custom
fields: one for latitude, one for longitude,
and one for internal use. Similarly, each
custom address field counts as nine custom
fields: one each for street, city, postal code,
country code, state code, geocode accuracy
level, longitude, and latitude, plus one for
internal use. Additional restrictions apply for
activities, long text area fields, relationship
fields, and roll-up summary fields. See
Custom Fields Allowed Per Object.
Attachments: maximum size in • 25 MB for file attachments You can add an attachment to
the Notes & Attachments the Attachments related list of
• 2 GB for feed attachments.
related list a case, solution, campaign, task,
or event, or to the Notes &
Attachments related list of an
account, contact, lead,
opportunity, or custom object.
If you don’t see the related list
22
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Certificates: maximum 50
23
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Custom links: maximum URL length 3,000 bytes When data is substituted for the tokens in
the URL, the link can exceed 3,000 bytes.
Some browsers enforce additional limits for
the maximum URL length.
Custom objects: deletion of parent records Available unless more than 200 junction
in a many-to-many relationship object records are associated with the
deleted parent record and the junction
object has a roll-up summary field that rolls
up to the other parent.
24
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Entitlement processes and milestones You can create up to 1,000 entitlement If your org was created before Summer ’13,
processes total, with up to 10 milestones its maximum entitlement processes can be
per process. lower. Contact Salesforce to increase it.
25
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Master-detail relationship: maximum child 10,000 Maximum objects that can be pending for
records Omni-Channel routing in an org. When an
item is assigned to Omni-Channel-enabled
queues, Omni attempts to route it to an
available agent. If no agent is available, the
work is pending routing. You may
experience degraded performance in
Omni-Channel Supervisor when queues
surpass 10,000 pending routing requests.
Omni-Channel: maximum pending routing 200,000 Maximum records that can be queued per
requests hour in an org, across all
Omni-Channel-enabled queues. Each time
an item is assigned to an Omni-Channel
queue, the platform checks how many items
were queued in the preceding hour. If the
max has been reached, the item isn’t
assigned to the queue.
Omni-Channel: maximum queued work 45,000 per hour If your org exceeds its daily Web-to-Case or
items Web-to-Lead amount, the default case
owner or default lead creator receives a
notification email that contains information
about the case or lead. When your org
reaches the 24-hour max, Salesforce stores
additional requests in a pending request
queue that contains Web-to-Case and
Web-to-Lead requests. The requests are
submitted when the amount refreshes. The
pending request queue has an allocation of
50,000 combined requests. If your org
reaches the pending request maximum,
26
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
27
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Web-to-Case: maximum new cases 5,000 For custom compound fields, each
generated in a 24–hour period component counts as one custom field
toward your org’s allocations. Each
geolocation field counts as three custom
fields: one for latitude, one for longitude,
and one for internal use. Similarly, each
custom address field counts as nine custom
fields: one each for street, city, postal code,
country code, state code, geocode accuracy
level, longitude, and latitude, plus one for
internal use. Additional restrictions apply for
activities, long text area fields, relationship
fields, and roll-up summary fields. See
Custom Fields Allowed Per Object.
Web-to-Lead: maximum new leads 500 For custom compound fields, each
generated in a 24–hour period component counts as one custom field
28
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Attachments: maximum size in • 25 MB for file attachments You can add an attachment to
the Notes & Attachments the Attachments related list of
• 2 GB for feed attachments.
related list a case, solution, campaign, task,
or event, or to the Notes &
Attachments related list of an
account, contact, lead,
opportunity, or custom object.
If you don’t see the related list
on task or event page layouts,
ask your admin to add it.
29
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Custom fields per object 100 An org can’t have more than 900 custom
fields on most object types, regardless of
the edition or source of those fields. In
addition to the limits listed above, you can
install custom fields from AppExchange for
a total of 900 fields. For example, you can
create 800 custom fields on an object in the
Unlimited Edition, plus install 100 custom
fields from a managed package that are
limited to specific objects. Additional
restrictions apply for activities, long text area
fields, relationship fields, and roll-up
summary fields. For more information, see
Custom Fields Allowed Per Object.
Custom links: maximum URL length 3,000 bytes When data is substituted for the tokens in
the URL, the link can exceed 3,000 bytes.
Some browsers enforce additional limits for
the maximum URL length.
30
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
31
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Master-detail relationship: maximum child 10,000 Maximum objects that can be pending for
records Omni-Channel routing in an org. When an
item is assigned to Omni-Channel-enabled
queues, Omni attempts to route it to an
available agent. If no agent is available, the
work is pending routing. You may
experience degraded performance in
Omni-Channel Supervisor when queues
surpass 10,000 pending routing requests.
Omni-Channel: maximum pending routing 200,000 Maximum records that can be queued per
requests hour in an org, across all
Omni-Channel-enabled queues. Each time
an item is assigned to an Omni-Channel
queue, the platform checks how many items
were queued in the preceding hour. If the
max has been reached, the item isn’t
assigned to the queue.
Omni-Channel: maximum queued work 45,000 per hour If your org exceeds its daily Web-to-Case or
items Web-to-Lead amount, the default case
owner or default lead creator receives a
notification email that contains information
about the case or lead. When your org
reaches the 24-hour max, Salesforce stores
additional requests in a pending request
queue that contains Web-to-Case and
Web-to-Lead requests. The requests are
submitted when the amount refreshes. The
pending request queue has an allocation of
50,000 combined requests. If your org
reaches the pending request maximum,
additional requests are rejected and not
queued. Your admin receives email
notifications for the first five rejected
submissions. Contact Salesforce Customer
Support to change your org’s pending
request allocation.
32
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
33
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Attachments: maximum size in • 25 MB for file attachments You can add an attachment to
the Notes & Attachments the Attachments related list of
• 2 GB for feed attachments.
related list a case, solution, campaign, task,
or event, or to the Notes &
Attachments related list of an
account, contact, lead,
opportunity, or custom object.
If you don’t see the related list
on task or event page layouts,
ask your admin to add it.
34
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Custom fields per object 100 An org can’t have more than 900 custom
fields on most object types, regardless of
the edition or source of those fields. In
addition to the limits listed above, you can
install custom fields from AppExchange for
a total of 900 fields. For example, you can
create 800 custom fields on an object in the
Unlimited Edition, plus install 100 custom
fields from a managed package that are
limited to specific objects. Additional
restrictions apply for activities, long text area
fields, relationship fields, and roll-up
summary fields. For more information, see
Custom Fields Allowed Per Object.
Custom links: maximum URL length 3,000 bytes When data is substituted for the tokens in
the URL, the link can exceed 3,000 bytes.
Some browsers enforce additional limits for
the maximum URL length.
35
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Custom objects: deletion of parent records Available unless more than 200 junction
in a many-to-many relationship object records are associated with the
deleted parent record and the junction
object has a roll-up summary field that rolls
up to the other parent.
Entitlement processes and milestones You can create up to 1,000 entitlement If your org was created before Summer ’13,
processes total, with up to 10 milestones its maximum entitlement processes can be
per process. lower. Contact Salesforce to increase it.
36
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Master-detail relationship: maximum child 10,000 Maximum objects that can be pending for
records Omni-Channel routing in an org. When an
item is assigned to Omni-Channel-enabled
queues, Omni attempts to route it to an
available agent. If no agent is available, the
work is pending routing. You may
experience degraded performance in
Omni-Channel Supervisor when queues
surpass 10,000 pending routing requests.
Omni-Channel: maximum pending routing 200,000 Maximum records that can be queued per
requests hour in an org, across all
Omni-Channel-enabled queues. Each time
an item is assigned to an Omni-Channel
queue, the platform checks how many items
were queued in the preceding hour. If the
max has been reached, the item isn’t
assigned to the queue.
Omni-Channel: maximum queued work 45,000 per hour If your org exceeds its daily Web-to-Case or
items Web-to-Lead amount, the default case
owner or default lead creator receives a
notification email that contains information
about the case or lead. When your org
reaches the 24-hour max, Salesforce stores
additional requests in a pending request
37
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
38
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Web-to-Case: maximum new cases 5,000 For custom compound fields, each
generated in a 24–hour period component counts as one custom field
toward your org’s allocations. Each
geolocation field counts as three custom
fields: one for latitude, one for longitude,
and one for internal use. Similarly, each
custom address field counts as nine custom
fields: one each for street, city, postal code,
country code, state code, geocode accuracy
level, longitude, and latitude, plus one for
internal use. Additional restrictions apply for
activities, long text area fields, relationship
fields, and roll-up summary fields. See
Custom Fields Allowed Per Object.
Web-to-Lead: maximum new leads 500 For custom compound fields, each
generated in a 24–hour period component counts as one custom field
toward your org’s allocations. Each
geolocation field counts as three custom
fields: one for latitude, one for longitude,
and one for internal use. Similarly, each
custom address field counts as nine custom
fields: one each for street, city, postal code,
country code, state code, geocode accuracy
level, longitude, and latitude, plus one for
internal use. Additional restrictions apply for
activities, long text area fields, relationship
fields, and roll-up summary fields. See
Custom Fields Allowed Per Object.
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Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
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Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Attachments: maximum size in • 25 MB for file attachments You can add an attachment to
the Notes & Attachments the Attachments related list of
• 2 GB for feed attachments.
related list a case, solution, campaign, task,
or event, or to the Notes &
Attachments related list of an
account, contact, lead,
opportunity, or custom object.
If you don’t see the related list
on task or event page layouts,
ask your admin to add it.
41
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Certificates: maximum 50
Content packs: maximum files 50 Lightning apps, custom apps, and custom
tabs that are contained in a managed
package that’s publicly posted on
AppExchange don’t count against the
allocations for your Salesforce edition.
Custom fields per object 800 An org can’t have more than 900 custom
fields on most object types, regardless of
the edition or source of those fields. In
addition to the limits listed above, you can
install custom fields from AppExchange for
42
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Custom links: maximum URL length 3,000 bytes When data is substituted for the tokens in
the URL, the link can exceed 3,000 bytes.
Some browsers enforce additional limits for
the maximum URL length.
Custom objects: deletion of parent records Available unless more than 200 junction
in a many-to-many relationship object records are associated with the
deleted parent record and the junction
object has a roll-up summary field that rolls
up to the other parent.
43
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Entitlement processes and milestones You can create up to 1,000 entitlement If your org was created before Summer ’13,
processes total, with up to 10 milestones its maximum entitlement processes can be
per process. lower. Contact Salesforce to increase it.
44
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Master-detail relationship: maximum child 10,000 Maximum objects that can be pending for
records Omni-Channel routing in an org. When an
item is assigned to Omni-Channel-enabled
queues, Omni attempts to route it to an
available agent. If no agent is available, the
work is pending routing. You may
experience degraded performance in
Omni-Channel Supervisor when queues
surpass 10,000 pending routing requests.
Omni-Channel: maximum pending routing 200,000 Maximum records that can be queued per
requests hour in an org, across all
Omni-Channel-enabled queues. Each time
an item is assigned to an Omni-Channel
queue, the platform checks how many items
were queued in the preceding hour. If the
max has been reached, the item isn’t
assigned to the queue.
Omni-Channel: maximum queued work 45,000 per hour If your org exceeds its daily Web-to-Case or
items Web-to-Lead amount, the default case
owner or default lead creator receives a
notification email that contains information
about the case or lead. When your org
reaches the 24-hour max, Salesforce stores
additional requests in a pending request
queue that contains Web-to-Case and
Web-to-Lead requests. The requests are
submitted when the amount refreshes. The
pending request queue has an allocation of
50,000 combined requests. If your org
reaches the pending request maximum,
additional requests are rejected and not
queued. Your admin receives email
notifications for the first five rejected
submissions. Contact Salesforce Customer
45
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
46
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Web-to-Case: maximum new cases 5,000 For custom compound fields, each
generated in a 24–hour period component counts as one custom field
toward your org’s allocations. Each
geolocation field counts as three custom
fields: one for latitude, one for longitude,
and one for internal use. Similarly, each
custom address field counts as nine custom
fields: one each for street, city, postal code,
country code, state code, geocode accuracy
level, longitude, and latitude, plus one for
internal use. Additional restrictions apply for
activities, long text area fields, relationship
fields, and roll-up summary fields. See
Custom Fields Allowed Per Object.
Web-to-Lead: maximum new leads 500 For custom compound fields, each
generated in a 24–hour period component counts as one custom field
toward your org’s allocations. Each
geolocation field counts as three custom
fields: one for latitude, one for longitude,
and one for internal use. Similarly, each
custom address field counts as nine custom
fields: one each for street, city, postal code,
47
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Attachments: Not applicable • 25 MB for file • 25 MB for file You can add an
maximum size in attachments attachments attachment to the
the Notes & Attachments
• 2 GB for feed • 2 GB for feed
Attachments related list of a
attachments. attachments.
related list case, solution,
campaign, task, or
event, or to the
Notes &
Attachments
related list of an
account, contact,
lead, opportunity,
or custom object.
If you don’t see
the related list on
task or event
page layouts, ask
your admin to
add it.
Content 50 GB 50 GB 50 GB
deliveries: default
delivery
bandwidth per
rolling 24-hour
window
48
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Content deliveries: 25 MB 25 MB 25 MB
maximum file size for
online viewing
49
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Custom links: maximum 3,000 bytes 3,000 bytes 3,000 bytes When data is substituted
URL length for the tokens in the URL,
the link can exceed 3,000
bytes. Some browsers
enforce additional limits
for the maximum URL
length.
50
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Custom objects: deletion Not applicable Available unless more Available unless more
of parent records in a than 200 junction object than 200 junction object
many-to-many records are associated records are associated
relationship with the deleted parent with the deleted parent
record and the junction record and the junction
object has a roll-up object has a roll-up
summary field that rolls summary field that rolls
up to the other parent. up to the other parent.
51
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
Documents: maximum 20 KB 20 KB 20 KB
size of custom app logo
Documents: maximum 5 MB 5 MB 5 MB
size of document to
upload
Flows and Processes: total Not applicable Not applicable Not applicable
Formulas: unique 15 15 15
relationships per object
Formulas: VLOOKUP 10 10 10
functions per object
52
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
53
Get Started with Salesforce Data and File Storage Allocations
Static resources Not applicable A static resource can be A static resource can be
up to 5 MB. An org can up to 5 MB. An org can
have up to 250 MB of have up to 250 MB of
static resources total. static resources total.
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Get Started with Salesforce Data and File Storage Allocations
• Campaigns
• Campaign Members
• Cases
• Case Teams
• Contacts
• Contracts
• Custom objects
• Data translations
• Email messages
• Events
• Forecast items
• Google docs
• Ideas
• Leads
• List Email
• Notes
• Opportunities
• Opportunity Splits
• Orders
• Quotes
• Quote Template Rich Text Data
• Solutions
• Tags: Unique tags
• Tasks
• All objects tied to Field Service enablement (for a full list, see the Field Service Developer Guide)
Data Storage
Starting in late March 2019, Contact Manager, Group, Essentials, Professional, Enterprise, Performance, and Unlimited Editions are allocated
10 GB for data storage, plus incrementally added user storage. For example, a Professional Edition org with 10 users receives 10 GB of
data storage, plus 200 MB, for 10.2 GB of total data storage.
File Storage
Contact Manager, Group, Professional, Enterprise, Performance, and Unlimited Editions are allocated 10 GB of file storage per org.
Essentials edition is allocated 1 GB of file storage per org.
Orgs are allocated additional file storage based on the number of standard user licenses. In Enterprise, Performance, and Unlimited
Editions, orgs are allocated 2 GB of file storage per user license. Contact Manager, Group, Professional Edition orgs are allocated 612 MB
per standard user license, which includes 100 MB per user license plus 512 MB per license for the Salesforce CRM Content feature license.
An org with fewer than 10 users will receive a total of 1 GB of per-user file storage rather than 100 MB per user license.
Each Salesforce CRM Content feature license provides an additional 512 MB of file storage, whether Salesforce CRM Content is enabled
or not.
55
Get Started with Salesforce Maps and Location Service Allocations
File storage and data storage are calculated asynchronously, so if you import or add a large number of records or files, the change in
your org’s storage usage isn’t reflected immediately.
The minimum values apply to Salesforce and Salesforce Platform user licenses. If your org uses custom user licenses, contact Salesforce
to determine your exact storage amount.
Salesforce Edition Data Storage Data Storage File Storage File Storage
Minimum per Org Allocation per User Allocation per Org Allocation per User
License License
Contact Manager
Group 612 MB
20 MB
Professional
Enterprise 10 GB 10 GB
Performance 120 MB
20 MB for Lightning 2 GB
Unlimited
Platform Starter user
licenses
Developer 5 MB
Personal 20 MB (approximately 20 MB
N/A N/A
10,000 records)
Essentials 10 GB 1 GB
The values in the File Storage Allocation Per User License column apply to Salesforce and Salesforce Platform user licenses.
SEE ALSO:
Salesforce Editions
Salesforce Features and Edition Allocations
56
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
Note: Display of billing and shipping address on the same record is considered separate map views.
Note: Map markers with location defined by latitude and longitude don't incur a map view.
Supported Languages
Salesforce offers three levels of language support: fully supported languages, end-user languages, and platform-only languages. For
fully supported languages, Salesforce features and user interface (UI) text appear in the chosen language. End-user languages allow
individual users to select a language other than the company’s default language for end-user facing UI. In situations where Salesforce
doesn’t provide default translations, use platform-only languages to localize apps and custom functionality that you build on the
Salesforce Platform.
User Interface Language Support
Understand the available languages in the user interface (UI) for your cloud. If your company’s default language or the user’s personal
language isn’t available in the UI, the language defaults to English (US).
Right-to-Left (RTL) Language Support
To make right-to-left (RTL) language users feel more at home, Salesforce supports Arabic and Hebrew as end-user languages and
Urdu as a platform language. In Lightning Experience and Experience Builder sites, the RTL Language Layout is the default layout
for right-to-left languages, with some important limitations. Salesforce Classic and Experience Cloud sites using Salesforce Tabs +
Visualforce offer limited support for RTL languages for some features.
Supported Languages
Salesforce offers three levels of language support: fully supported languages, end-user languages, and platform-only languages. For
fully supported languages, Salesforce features and user interface (UI) text appear in the chosen language. End-user languages allow
individual users to select a language other than the company’s default language for end-user facing UI. In situations where Salesforce
doesn’t provide default translations, use platform-only languages to localize apps and custom functionality that you build on the
Salesforce Platform.
User Interface Language Support
Understand the available languages in the user interface (UI) for your cloud. If your company’s default language or the user’s personal
language isn’t available in the UI, the language defaults to English (US).
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Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
Supported Languages
Salesforce offers three levels of language support: fully supported languages, end-user languages, and platform-only languages. For
fully supported languages, Salesforce features and user interface (UI) text appear in the chosen language. End-user languages allow
individual users to select a language other than the company’s default language for end-user facing UI. In situations where Salesforce
doesn’t provide default translations, use platform-only languages to localize apps and custom functionality that you build on the Salesforce
Platform.
A two-character language code identifies each language, such as en. A five-character locale code is used for languages that differ
depending on the location. For example, en_AU.
In addition to the Salesforce language support, you can localize your org. One option is to use the Translation Workbench to translate
your text customizations and override labels and translations from managed packages. You can translate everything from custom picklist
values to custom fields so that your global users can use Salesforce in their language.
Another option is to rename tabs and fields in Salesforce. If your custom application uses only a few standard Salesforce tabs and fields,
you can translate them.
Note: Setting a default language is different from setting a default locale. See Select Your Language, Locale, and Currency in
Salesforce Help for more information.
Some clouds and features support a subset of these languages in the UI. For details, see User Interface Language Support in Salesforce
Help.
• Chinese (Simplified): zh_CN
• Chinese (Traditional): zh_TW
• Danish: da
• Dutch: nl_NL
• English: en_US
• Finnish: fi
• French: fr
• German: de
• Italian: it
• Japanese: ja
• Korean: ko
• Norwegian: no
• Portuguese (Brazil): pt_BR
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Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
• Russian: ru
• Spanish: es
• Spanish (Mexico): es_MX Spanish (Mexico) defaults to Spanish for customer-defined translations.
• Swedish: sv
• Thai: th The Salesforce user interface is fully translated to Thai, but Help is in English.
End-User Languages
End-user languages are useful if you have a multilingual organization or partners who speak languages other than your company’s
default language. For end-user languages, Salesforce provides translated labels for standard objects and pages, except admin pages,
Setup, and Help. Some clouds and features support a subset of these languages in the UI. For details, see User Interface Language Support
in Salesforce Help. When you select an end-user language, labels that aren’t translated and Salesforce Help appear in English. End-user
languages are intended only for personal use by end users. Don’t use end-user languages as corporate languages. Salesforce doesn’t
provide customer support in end-user languages.
End-user languages include:
• Arabic: ar
• Bulgarian: bg
• Croatian: hr
• Czech: cs
• English (UK): en_GB
• Greek: el
• Hebrew: iw
• Hungarian: hu
• Indonesian: in
• Polish: pl
• Portuguese (European): pt_PT
• Romanian: ro
• Slovak: sk
• Slovenian: sl
• Turkish: tr
• Ukrainian: uk
• Vietnamese: vi
Important: Before enabling end-user languages Arabic and Hebrew, review the right-to-left language support limitations.
Platform-Only Languages
In situations where Salesforce doesn’t provide default translations, use platform-only languages to localize apps and custom functionality
that you build on the Salesforce Platform. You can translate items such as custom labels, custom objects, and field names. You can also
rename most standard objects, labels, and fields. Informational text and non-field label text aren’t translatable.
Platform-only languages are available in all places where you can select a language in the application. However, when you select a
platform-only language, all standard Salesforce labels default to English or, in select cases, to an end-user or fully supported language.
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Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
Note: Language support is closely tied to the API version. For example, we introduced support for Belgian Dutch (nl_BE) in API
version 40.0. To take advantage of this language, you must use API version 40.0 or later. In general, we recommend using the most
recent version of the API to make the most of our language features.
When you specify a platform-only language, labels for standard objects and fields default to English, except:
• Dutch (Belgium) defaults to Dutch
• English (Australia), English (India), English (Malaysia), and English (Philippines) default to English (UK)
• French (Belgium), French (Canada), French (Luxembourg), and French (Switzerland) default to French
• German (Austria), German (Belgium), German (Luxembourg), and German (Switzerland) default to German
• Italian (Switzerland) defaults to Italian
• Malay defaults to Indonesian
• Montenegrin defaults to Serbian (Latin)
• Romanian (Moldova) defaults to Romanian
The following platform-only languages are supported.
• Albanian: sq
• Afrikaans: af
• Amharic: am
• Arabic (Algeria): ar_DZ
• Arabic (Bahrain): ar_BH
• Arabic (Egypt): ar_EG
• Arabic (Iraq): ar_IQ
• Arabic (Jordan): ar_JO
• Arabic (Kuwait): ar_KW
• Arabic (Lebanon): ar_LB
• Arabic (Libya): ar_LY
• Arabic (Morocco): ar_MA
• Arabic (Oman): ar_OM
• Arabic (Qatar): ar_QA
• Arabic (Saudi Arabia): ar_SA
• Arabic (Sudan): ar_SD
• Arabic (Syria): ar_SY
• Arabic (Tunisia): ar_TN
• Arabic (United Arab Emirates): ar_AE
• Arabic (Yemen): ar_YE
• Armenian: hy
• Basque: eu
• Bosnian: bs
• Bengali: bn
• Burmese: my
• Catalan: ca
• Chinese (Hong Kong): zh_HK
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Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
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Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
• Irish: ga
• Italian (Switzerland): it_CH
• Kannada: kn
• Kazakh: kk
• Khmer: km
• Latvian: lv
• Lithuanian: lt
• Luxembourgish: lb
• Macedonian: mk
• Malay: ms
• Malayalam: ml
• Maltese: mt
• Marathi: mr
• Montenegrin: sh_ME
• Punjabi: pa
• Romanian (Moldova): ro_MD
• Romansh: rm
• Russian (Armenia): ru_AM
• Russian (Belarus): ru_BY
• Russian (Kazakhstan): ru_KZ
• Russian (Kyrgyzstan): ru_KG
• Russian (Lithuania): ru_LT
• Russian (Moldova): ru_MD
• Russian (Poland): ru_PL
• Russian (Ukraine): ru_UA
• Samoan: sm
• Serbian (Cyrillic): sr
• Serbian (Latin): sh
• Spanish (Argentina): es_AR
• Spanish (Bolivia): es_BO
• Spanish (Chile): es_CL
• Spanish (Colombia): es_CO
• Spanish (Costa Rica): es_CR
• Spanish (Dominican Republic): es_DO
• Spanish (Ecuador): es_EC
• Spanish (El Salvador): es_SV
• Spanish (Guatemala): es_GT
• Spanish (Honduras): es_HN
• Spanish (Nicaragua): es_NI
• Spanish (Panama): es_PA
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Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
Important: Before enabling Urdu as a platform-only language, review the right-to-left language support limitations.
SEE ALSO:
User Interface Language Support
Right-to-Left (RTL) Language Support
Language, Locale, and Currency Settings
Sales Cloud
Enablement Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English
(UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak,
Slovenian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Revenue Intelligence Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English
(UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese,
63
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
Partner Relationship Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English
Management (UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak,
Slovenian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Salesforce Maps Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German, Italian,
Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin
America), Swedish, and Thai
Salesforce Mobile App Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German,
Greek, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil),
Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Service Cloud
Field Service Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English (UK),
English (US), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean,
Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Slovenian,
Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Digital Service Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English
(US), English (UK), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak,
Slovenian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Einstein Bots doesn’t support Arabic and Hebrew.
Salesforce Field Service Mobile Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German,
App Greek, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil),
Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Self-Service Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German, Italian,
Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America),
Swedish, and Thai
64
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
Marketing Cloud
Advertising English (US), French, French (Canada), German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil), Spanish, and
Spanish (Mexico/Latin America)
Data Cloud for Marketing Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English
(UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak,
Slovenian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Engagement English (US), French, French (Canada), German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil), Spanish, and
Spanish (Mexico/Latin America)
Analytics Cloud
CRM Analytics Mobile App Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German,
Greek, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil),
Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Commerce Cloud
B2C Commerce Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), English (US), French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean,
Portuguese (Brazil), and Spanish (Mexico/Latin America)
Commerce Portals Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English
(UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak,
Slovenian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
65
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
Salesforce Industries
Consumer Goods Cloud Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (UK), English (US), Finnish, French,
German, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese (Brazil),
Portuguese (Portugal), Russian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, and Vietnamese
Education Cloud Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German, Italian,
Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America),
Swedish, and Thai
Financial Services Cloud Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (US), French, German, Hebrew, Italian,
Japanese, Korean, Portuguese (Brazil), Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), and Swedish
Health Cloud Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (UK), English (US), Finnish, French,
German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, and Spanish
(Mexico/Latin America)
Loyalty Management Arabic, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, Danish, Dutch, English (UK), English (US),
Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian,
Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Russian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America),
Slovenian, Swedish, and Thai
Manufacturing Cloud Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German, Italian,
Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America),
Swedish, and Thai
Net Zero Cloud Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German, Italian,
Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America),
Swedish, and Thai
Nonprofit Cloud Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German, Italian,
Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America),
Swedish, and Thai
Public Sector Solutions Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (UK), English (US), Finnish, French,
German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Spanish
(Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, and Thai
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Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
Trailhead
Trailhead GO mobile app Chinese (Simplified), English (US), French, German, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese (Brazil), and Spanish
(Mexico/Latin America)
Other
Salesforce Web3 Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English
(UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak,
Slovenian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Nonprofit Cloud Case Dutch, English (UK), English (US), French, German, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil), Spanish, and Spanish
Management (Mexico/Latin America)
Nonprofit Cloud Program Dutch, English (UK), English (US), French, German, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil), Spanish, and Spanish
Management (Mexico/Latin America)
Nonprofit Success Pack (NPSP) Dutch, English (UK), English (US), French, German, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil), and Spanish
Education Data Architecture Catalan, Dutch, English (UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil),
(EDA) Spanish, and Spanish (Mexico/Latin America)
Accounting Subledger (ASL) Catalan, Dutch, English (UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil),
and ASL for Industries Spanish, and Spanish (Mexico/Latin America)
Insights Platform Dutch, English (UK), English (US), French, German, and Portuguese (Brazil)
Marketing Cloud for Nonprofits Dutch, English (UK), English (US), French, German, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil), and Spanish
Advisor Link and Pathways Catalan, Dutch, English (UK), English (US), French, Spanish, and Spanish (Mexico/Latin America)
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Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
SEE ALSO:
Supported Languages
Right-to-Left (RTL) Language Support
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Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
Experience Cloud Can be applied with custom CSS Not supported in sites using
in Aura sites built with Salesforce Tabs + Visualforce
Experience Builder. Limited
support available for standard
components in sites built using
Lightning Web Runtime (LWR)
Marketing Cloud No No
CRM Analytics No No
Emails No No
Enterprise Territory No No
Management
Feeds No No
Field Service No No
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Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
Sales Dialer No No
PDF generation No No
Visualforce No No
70
Get Started with Salesforce Accessibility Standards
Feedback
Have questions or comments on right-to-left language support in Lightning Experience? Open the Help Menu and select Give feedback
about Salesforce to share your thoughts.
SEE ALSO:
Supported Languages
Right-to-Left (RTL) Language Limitations
Technical Requirements for Tablets
Accessibility Standards
Learn about the standards for low-vision users and deaf or hearing impaired users that Salesforce
EDITIONS
follows to design applications with accessibility in mind.
Salesforce is committed to providing on-demand enterprise applications accessible to all individuals, Available in: Salesforce
including users working with assistive devices, such as speech recognition software and screen Classic (not available in all
readers. orgs)
Important: Accessibility features in Salesforce Classic are no longer maintained or enhanced. Available in: All editions
We recommend that you instead use Lightning Experience, which offers the latest accessibility except Database.com
features. The use of a screen reader isn’t supported in Lightning Experience on iPad Safari
because Apple Safari’s screen reader, VoiceOver, doesn’t support:
• Reporting detailed information in tables that use the data type, grid
• Accurately reading the menu items in a dropdown list
• Focus management
We recommend that you use Lightning Experience on a desktop when using a screen reader.
To help meet our goal of universal design, Lightning Experience follows the internationally recognized best practices in Section 508 of
the Rehabilitation Act and the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 Level AA to the extent possible. Find Voluntary Product
Accessibility Templates (VPATs) for specific Salesforce products on our Product Accessibility Status page.
Windows, latest version Freedom Scientific JAWS, latest version Google Chrome, latest version
Note: Salesforce pilot and beta features don’t always provide full accessibility.
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Important: The use of a screen reader isn’t supported in Lightning Experience on iPad Safari Available in: Lightning
because Apple Safari’s screen reader, VoiceOver, doesn’t support: Experience
• Reporting detailed information in tables that use the data type, grid Available in: All editions
• Accurately reading the menu items in a dropdown list
• Focus management
We recommend that you use Lightning Experience on a desktop when using a screen reader.
The examples focus on using Sales Cloud pages, but many tips are applicable to other products when you choose Lightning Experience.
See browser and screen reader recommendations in Accessibility Standards.
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Page Header
The page header includes:
• Skip links
• Global search box
• Buttons for navigating to favorites and managing them
• Global Actions quick create menu
• Contextual help menu, which launches a panel
• Setup menu
• Notifications button, which launches a panel
• User profile button, which launches a panel
Skip Links
The top of each page has two links: Skip to Navigation and Skip to Main Content.
• Skip to Navigation moves the focus to the navigation section after the page header. The navigation section begins with an App
Launcher button that launches the app picker. In most Salesforce apps, the App Launcher button is followed by navigation items
that provide access to the main Salesforce objects, such as Accounts and Opportunities. In Console apps, the App Launcher button
is followed by a link to a Salesforce object, a menu to select another object type, and a set of open tabs.
• Skip to Main Content moves the focus to the content of the current page and bypasses common links at the top of each page. For
example, if you open Chatter, you’re placed at the top of your feed. This link skips both the page header and the navigation items.
For accessibility, every feed has a hidden Skip Feed link that you get to by tabbing. Skip Feed skips you past the feed to the End Feed
tag. From End Feed, you can tab into the column that typically shows features like Einstein Recommendations and Trending Topics.
Whether a Chatter publisher is present, the Skip Feed link follows the tab succession, Sort by, Search, Filter (if present), Refresh this feed,
and then Skip Feed.
The Activities component on record pages has a hidden Skip Timeline link that lets you skip to the bottom of the activity timeline.
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Global Search
The top of each Salesforce page has an editable combo box labeled Search Salesforce. Use this box to search your Salesforce org for
records, files, Chatter groups and posts, and users. When you begin typing, a list of auto-suggested searches and records displays. Use
the arrow keys to navigate the list of search suggestions. Or continue typing your search term, and press Enter to do a full search. When
you press Enter on a suggested record, you go directly to the item. When you press Enter on a suggested search in the list, you go to a
Search Results screen. On the screen, the search results are grouped by the object type, such as User or Group.
The Search Results screen is divided into sections, each marked with a heading level 2.
• The first heading level 2 is “Searchable objects from navigation bar.” This section contains links to narrow your search.
• Subsequent heading level 2s list the types of records returned. A search for Universal Containers can produce headings for Accounts,
Contacts, Leads, and Opportunities.
If no headings follow the “Searchable objects from navigation bar” heading, your search didn’t return any results. If the search did return
results, you hear the number of results when the page loads.
Favorites
The page header has two buttons for managing favorite pages. Use the first button to add or remove the current page. The button label
is Add Favorite if the page isn’t on your favorites list. The label changes to Remove Favorite when the page is added. This button is
disabled on pages that don’t support favorites.
The next button, Favorites List, opens a dialog that you can use to jump to a favorite page in Salesforce. The dialog lists your favorites
and includes an Edit Favorites button. If you have many favorites, the dialog starts with a favorites search combo box, which is in focus
when you open the dialog. Type a search term, or use your arrow keys to navigate through your favorites list. Press Enter to navigate to
the highlighted favorite. Use the Edit Favorites button to open a new dialog where you can rearrange, rename, and remove pages in
your favorites list.
See Favorites Considerations.
Navigation Region
After the header region is the navigation section of the page. This section begins with the App Launcher button, which opens a quick
view of the App Launcher with a View All link. Use the View All link to open the full App Launcher dialog that contains apps configured
by your administrator. Use this dialog to switch between apps. You can also use the App Launcher to access a Salesforce object in your
org.
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Page Content
After the navigation section is the main content of the page. There are two main types of pages, each with a similar layout: object home
pages and record pages.
Beyond these two common page types, there are several unique pages, including Home, Tasks, Notes, Reports, Dashboards, News,
Forecasts, and Chatter. Chatter pages include the feed, user profiles, groups, and Files. We encourage you to explore these page types
and develop your own navigation strategies.
Record pages and Home pages can contain hidden heading level 2 assistive text for screen reader navigation. For example, the Tabs
component, which can be found on both Home and record pages, has hidden heading level 2 assistive text, as does the Activities
component.
Object Home
All object home pages in Lightning Experience have the same layout. At the beginning of the main content section is the List View
picker. To select a list view, use the associated heading level 1 link. After the list view heading link, an object home page has several
actions.
• Action bar, which can contain several buttons or links and an overflow menu of actions that you can take at the object level
• List view control menu, where you can create, share, delete, and edit list views for the object
• Display picker, where you can switch between a list view and a Kanban view
• Refresh button
• Edit button, to edit values inline
• Chart button
• Filter button, which opens a panel for filtering your list view results
After this set of controls is the list view, which is an inline editable grid. After you tab to the grid, press the Enter key to enter the grid. To
navigate the grid, use the arrow keys or screen reader table navigation. Edit buttons indicate that editing is allowed. Use an Edit button
to change the values of fields. If you’ve made edits, press the Escape key to leave the grid, and then press the Tab key to access the Save
and Cancel buttons.
Record Page
The main content area on a record page begins with the object type, followed by the record name, which is the page’s heading level 1.
After the heading is the action bar for the page. These buttons and links, and possibly an overflow menu, contain actions that relate to
this record. The actions can include Edit, Delete, Change Owner, and so on. Most of these actions open and place focus in a modal dialog.
After the action bar is the highlights panel, which has top details about the record, taken from the object’s primary compact layout.
Unless the record page has been customized differently, after the highlights panel, you find two lists of tabs (also called tab sets).
Depending on the record’s object type, these tabs reveal record details, Chatter for the record, related lists, record activities, or anything
else configured by your admin. Use these tabs to get information, activity, and collaboration related to the record.
Related Lists
Related lists contain information about records that are linked to the record that you’re on. All related lists and similar cards on record
pages begin with a heading level 2 and are identified with the ARIA article landmark.
You can perform actions on objects and records inside related list cards.
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Modal Dialogs
Many buttons in the Salesforce user interface open modal dialogs in the current browser window. When a modal dialog opens, everything
else on the page is obscured so that your attention stays on the modal dialog’s content. Keyboard focus also stays in the modal dialog
until you close it.
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Close a modal dialog by using the Close button near the top of the modal or by pressing the Escape key. When you close a modal, the
underlying page’s interactivity is restored, and your focus returns to the button that you used to launch that modal dialog.
In Lightning console apps, modal dialogs are limited to the tab that triggered them. So even if a modal dialog takes your keyboard focus,
you can still navigate away from that tab. To start a “go to” keyboard shortcut, press Ctrl+Alt+g or Cmd+Opt+g instead of only pressing
g.
Tab Sets
When you encounter a tab set in Lightning Experience, use the arrow keys to navigate between the tabs. Use the Tab key to navigate
to the first focusable element in the selected tab’s panel.
Known issue: Lightning tab sets are wrapped in an application role. You can’t navigate them using the NVDA virtual cursor.
Sales Path
Opportunity workspace and Lead workspace page layouts can include the Sales Path feature, which represents the stages required for
working through a sales process. Sales Path consists of stages represented with tabs that you can navigate with your arrow keys. To
indicate that you’ve completed a stage, select its stage tab and use the Mark Stage as Complete button.
Navigation Mode
Navigation mode is the default mode for list views to let you quickly navigate the list view’s contents.
Navigation mode has the following keyboard functionality.
• Use arrow keys to navigate between cells.
• Press the Tab key to navigate out of the list view.
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• Press the Enter key to switch to action mode. If your screen reader cursor is on a cell that contains a single interactive control, pressing
Enter switches to action mode. It then performs that control’s default action. If the current cell has more than one interactive control,
pressing Enter switches to action mode. Your focus is then placed on the first interactive control in the cell.
Action Mode
Many cells in a list view can have actionable content, such as links, action menus, and inline edit. Switching to action mode lets you
interact with these controls.
Action mode has the following keyboard functionality.
• Use arrow keys or the Tab key to navigate between controls.
• With focus on a control, you can use any key that you normally use to activate the control. For example, use the Spacebar to select
a checkbox or the Enter key to follow a link.
• Press the Escape key to switch back to navigation mode. There’s a known issue with Windows screen readers when you press Escape
on a list view. The screen reader switches out of interaction mode instead of switching the list view out of action mode. To continue
navigating the list view, manually switch your screen reader back to its interaction mode.
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Note: Accessibility features in Salesforce Classic are no longer maintained or enhanced. We Available in: All editions
recommend that you instead use Lightning Experience, which offers the latest accessibility except Database.com
features.
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Note: As a result, you can’t request a meeting in accessibility mode, and the Requested Meetings subtab in the Calendar
section of the Home tab doesn’t display any meetings.
Note: Report builder is required to create or edit joined reports and reports containing cross filters or buckets. Users with
accessibility mode enabled can run those reports, but can’t create or edit them. To create reports in accessibility mode, you
must use the report wizard.
Tip: Users with accessibility mode enabled should use the search box on the Answers tab to see if their question has already been
asked before they post their question.
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• A skip link (the first keyboard-focusable link on each page) allows you to shift the focus to the start of the main content area. This
feature bypasses the navigational menus before the main content area and reduces the number of tab presses required to reach
the main content area of the page.
• Keyboard focus is placed inside dialog boxes when they open and remains locked there until the dialog is closed.
• On edit pages, the keyboard focus defaults to the first editable field on the page. When creating or editing a task or event, the
keyboard focus defaults to the Subject field, regardless of its location on the page.
• Buttons, links, and fields that aren't currently active are labeled with a “disabled” attribute. For example, when using a wizard with
multiple steps, some buttons are disabled until you select a specific option.
Note: The underlying report can contain more data than what is represented in the dashboard component. It can also contain
some data that you don’t have access to due to sharing settings.
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Keyboard Shortcuts
Use keyboard shortcuts to work efficiently in Salesforce. Shortcuts help you navigate and work with
EDITIONS
records faster and without using your mouse. You can use these shortcuts with your web browser
shortcuts. Available in: Salesforce
Keyboard shortcuts aren’t case-sensitive. For example, Shift+B is the same as Shift+b. If Ctrl, Alt, or Classic (not available in all
Shift is part of the shortcut, the sequence of the keys doesn’t matter. For example, Ctrl+Alt+A is orgs) and Lightning
the same as Alt+Ctrl+A. Experience
These shortcuts work in all Lightning apps with standard navigation. Lightning apps with console navigation have additional shortcuts.
You can’t use these shortcuts in apps created in Salesforce Classic.
Insert quick text Displays the quick text browser. Use the browser to find, preview, and insert quick Windows: Ctrl+.
text. macOS: Cmd+.
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Show keyboard shortcut Displays the available keyboard shortcuts in a window. Windows: Ctrl+/
menu macOS: Cmd+/
Navigation
Focus notifications Focuses the notification panel. Press the shortcut again to focus the next c
notification.
Focus notifications (reverse Focuses the notification panel. Press the shortcut again to focus the previous Shift+c
order) notification.
Go to other region On certain pages, moves among regions of the page. For example: Windows: Ctrl+F6
• Between a prompt, such as a walkthrough, and a feature macOS: Cmd+F6
• Between a kanban card and the side panel
• Among panes in a builder, such as the Lightning App Builder
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Moves through the list of open composer windows in the overflow Up Arrow and Down Arrow
menu
Moves between open composer windows Left Arrow and Right Arrow
Show or hide sidebar Show or hide the collapsible sidebar. Windows: Alt+S
To use this shortcut, your org must enable macOS: Option+S
the collapsible sidebar.
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Note: Customer support is not available for Personal and Developer edition users. In addition, Available in: Lightning
knowledge base access is not available for Developer Edition users. Experience
Report an Issue
If you’ve found an accessibility issue you’d like to report or simply need additional user support, follow the appropriate steps to create
a support case. Use the 'Disability and Product Accessibility' topic when creating the case.
Supported Languages
Salesforce offers three levels of language support: fully supported languages, end-user languages, and platform-only languages. For
fully supported languages, Salesforce features and user interface (UI) text appear in the chosen language. End-user languages allow
individual users to select a language other than the company’s default language for end-user facing UI. In situations where Salesforce
doesn’t provide default translations, use platform-only languages to localize apps and custom functionality that you build on the
Salesforce Platform.
User Interface Language Support
Understand the available languages in the user interface (UI) for your cloud. If your company’s default language or the user’s personal
language isn’t available in the UI, the language defaults to English (US).
Right-to-Left (RTL) Language Support
To make right-to-left (RTL) language users feel more at home, Salesforce supports Arabic and Hebrew as end-user languages and
Urdu as a platform language. In Lightning Experience and Experience Builder sites, the RTL Language Layout is the default layout
for right-to-left languages, with some important limitations. Salesforce Classic and Experience Cloud sites using Salesforce Tabs +
Visualforce offer limited support for RTL languages for some features.
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Supported Languages
Salesforce offers three levels of language support: fully supported languages, end-user languages, and platform-only languages. For
fully supported languages, Salesforce features and user interface (UI) text appear in the chosen language. End-user languages allow
individual users to select a language other than the company’s default language for end-user facing UI. In situations where Salesforce
doesn’t provide default translations, use platform-only languages to localize apps and custom functionality that you build on the
Salesforce Platform.
User Interface Language Support
Understand the available languages in the user interface (UI) for your cloud. If your company’s default language or the user’s personal
language isn’t available in the UI, the language defaults to English (US).
Right-to-Left (RTL) Language Support
To make right-to-left (RTL) language users feel more at home, Salesforce supports Arabic and Hebrew as end-user languages and
Urdu as a platform language. In Lightning Experience and Experience Builder sites, the RTL Language Layout is the default layout
for right-to-left languages, with some important limitations. Salesforce Classic and Experience Cloud sites using Salesforce Tabs +
Visualforce offer limited support for RTL languages for some features.
Supported Languages
Salesforce offers three levels of language support: fully supported languages, end-user languages, and platform-only languages. For
fully supported languages, Salesforce features and user interface (UI) text appear in the chosen language. End-user languages allow
individual users to select a language other than the company’s default language for end-user facing UI. In situations where Salesforce
doesn’t provide default translations, use platform-only languages to localize apps and custom functionality that you build on the Salesforce
Platform.
A two-character language code identifies each language, such as en. A five-character locale code is used for languages that differ
depending on the location. For example, en_AU.
In addition to the Salesforce language support, you can localize your org. One option is to use the Translation Workbench to translate
your text customizations and override labels and translations from managed packages. You can translate everything from custom picklist
values to custom fields so that your global users can use Salesforce in their language.
Another option is to rename tabs and fields in Salesforce. If your custom application uses only a few standard Salesforce tabs and fields,
you can translate them.
Note: Setting a default language is different from setting a default locale. See Select Your Language, Locale, and Currency in
Salesforce Help for more information.
Some clouds and features support a subset of these languages in the UI. For details, see User Interface Language Support in Salesforce
Help.
• Chinese (Simplified): zh_CN
• Chinese (Traditional): zh_TW
• Danish: da
• Dutch: nl_NL
• English: en_US
• Finnish: fi
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• French: fr
• German: de
• Italian: it
• Japanese: ja
• Korean: ko
• Norwegian: no
• Portuguese (Brazil): pt_BR
• Russian: ru
• Spanish: es
• Spanish (Mexico): es_MX Spanish (Mexico) defaults to Spanish for customer-defined translations.
• Swedish: sv
• Thai: th The Salesforce user interface is fully translated to Thai, but Help is in English.
End-User Languages
End-user languages are useful if you have a multilingual organization or partners who speak languages other than your company’s
default language. For end-user languages, Salesforce provides translated labels for standard objects and pages, except admin pages,
Setup, and Help. Some clouds and features support a subset of these languages in the UI. For details, see User Interface Language Support
in Salesforce Help. When you select an end-user language, labels that aren’t translated and Salesforce Help appear in English. End-user
languages are intended only for personal use by end users. Don’t use end-user languages as corporate languages. Salesforce doesn’t
provide customer support in end-user languages.
End-user languages include:
• Arabic: ar
• Bulgarian: bg
• Croatian: hr
• Czech: cs
• English (UK): en_GB
• Greek: el
• Hebrew: iw
• Hungarian: hu
• Indonesian: in
• Polish: pl
• Portuguese (European): pt_PT
• Romanian: ro
• Slovak: sk
• Slovenian: sl
• Turkish: tr
• Ukrainian: uk
• Vietnamese: vi
Important: Before enabling end-user languages Arabic and Hebrew, review the right-to-left language support limitations.
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Platform-Only Languages
In situations where Salesforce doesn’t provide default translations, use platform-only languages to localize apps and custom functionality
that you build on the Salesforce Platform. You can translate items such as custom labels, custom objects, and field names. You can also
rename most standard objects, labels, and fields. Informational text and non-field label text aren’t translatable.
Platform-only languages are available in all places where you can select a language in the application. However, when you select a
platform-only language, all standard Salesforce labels default to English or, in select cases, to an end-user or fully supported language.
Note: Language support is closely tied to the API version. For example, we introduced support for Belgian Dutch (nl_BE) in API
version 40.0. To take advantage of this language, you must use API version 40.0 or later. In general, we recommend using the most
recent version of the API to make the most of our language features.
When you specify a platform-only language, labels for standard objects and fields default to English, except:
• Dutch (Belgium) defaults to Dutch
• English (Australia), English (India), English (Malaysia), and English (Philippines) default to English (UK)
• French (Belgium), French (Canada), French (Luxembourg), and French (Switzerland) default to French
• German (Austria), German (Belgium), German (Luxembourg), and German (Switzerland) default to German
• Italian (Switzerland) defaults to Italian
• Malay defaults to Indonesian
• Montenegrin defaults to Serbian (Latin)
• Romanian (Moldova) defaults to Romanian
The following platform-only languages are supported.
• Albanian: sq
• Afrikaans: af
• Amharic: am
• Arabic (Algeria): ar_DZ
• Arabic (Bahrain): ar_BH
• Arabic (Egypt): ar_EG
• Arabic (Iraq): ar_IQ
• Arabic (Jordan): ar_JO
• Arabic (Kuwait): ar_KW
• Arabic (Lebanon): ar_LB
• Arabic (Libya): ar_LY
• Arabic (Morocco): ar_MA
• Arabic (Oman): ar_OM
• Arabic (Qatar): ar_QA
• Arabic (Saudi Arabia): ar_SA
• Arabic (Sudan): ar_SD
• Arabic (Syria): ar_SY
• Arabic (Tunisia): ar_TN
• Arabic (United Arab Emirates): ar_AE
• Arabic (Yemen): ar_YE
• Armenian: hy
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• Basque: eu
• Bosnian: bs
• Bengali: bn
• Burmese: my
• Catalan: ca
• Chinese (Hong Kong): zh_HK
• Chinese (Singapore): zh_SG
• Chinese (Malaysia): zh_MY
• Dutch (Belgium): nl_BE
• English (Australia): en_AU
• English (Belgium): en_BE
• English (Canada): en_CA
• English (Cyprus): en_CY
• English (Germany): en_DE
• English (Hong Kong): en_HK
• English (India): en_IN
• English (Ireland): en_IE
• English (Israel): en_IL
• English (Malaysia): en_MY
• English (Malta): en_MT
• English (Netherlands): en_NL
• English (New Zealand): en_NZ
• English (Philippines): en_PH
• English (Singapore): en_SG
• English (South Africa): en_ZA
• English (United Arab Emirates): en_AE
• Estonian: et
• Farsi: fa
• French (Belgium): fr_BE
• French (Canada): fr_CA
• French (Luxembourg): fr_LU
• French (Morocco): fr_MA
• French (Switzerland): fr_CH
• Georgian: ka
• German (Austria): de_AT
• German (Belgium): de_BE
• German (Luxembourg): de_LU
• German (Switzerland): de_CH
• Greek (Cyprus): el_CY
• Greenlandic: kl
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• Gujarati: gu
• Hawaiian: haw
• Haitian Creole: ht
• Hindi: hi
• Hmong: hmn
• Icelandic: is
• Irish: ga
• Italian (Switzerland): it_CH
• Kannada: kn
• Kazakh: kk
• Khmer: km
• Latvian: lv
• Lithuanian: lt
• Luxembourgish: lb
• Macedonian: mk
• Malay: ms
• Malayalam: ml
• Maltese: mt
• Marathi: mr
• Montenegrin: sh_ME
• Punjabi: pa
• Romanian (Moldova): ro_MD
• Romansh: rm
• Russian (Armenia): ru_AM
• Russian (Belarus): ru_BY
• Russian (Kazakhstan): ru_KZ
• Russian (Kyrgyzstan): ru_KG
• Russian (Lithuania): ru_LT
• Russian (Moldova): ru_MD
• Russian (Poland): ru_PL
• Russian (Ukraine): ru_UA
• Samoan: sm
• Serbian (Cyrillic): sr
• Serbian (Latin): sh
• Spanish (Argentina): es_AR
• Spanish (Bolivia): es_BO
• Spanish (Chile): es_CL
• Spanish (Colombia): es_CO
• Spanish (Costa Rica): es_CR
• Spanish (Dominican Republic): es_DO
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Important: Before enabling Urdu as a platform-only language, review the right-to-left language support limitations.
SEE ALSO:
User Interface Language Support
Right-to-Left (RTL) Language Support
Language, Locale, and Currency Settings
Sales Cloud
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Revenue Intelligence Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English
(UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak,
Slovenian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Partner Relationship Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English
Management (UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak,
Slovenian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Salesforce Maps Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German, Italian,
Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin
America), Swedish, and Thai
Salesforce Mobile App Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German,
Greek, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil),
Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Service Cloud
Field Service Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English (UK),
English (US), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean,
Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Slovenian,
Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Digital Service Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English
(US), English (UK), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak,
Slovenian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Einstein Bots doesn’t support Arabic and Hebrew.
Salesforce Field Service Mobile Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German,
App Greek, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil),
Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
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Marketing Cloud
Advertising English (US), French, French (Canada), German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil), Spanish, and
Spanish (Mexico/Latin America)
Data Cloud for Marketing Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English
(UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak,
Slovenian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Engagement English (US), French, French (Canada), German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil), Spanish, and
Spanish (Mexico/Latin America)
Analytics Cloud
CRM Analytics Mobile App Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German,
Greek, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil),
Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Commerce Cloud
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Commerce Portals Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English
(UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak,
Slovenian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Salesforce Order Management Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English
(UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak,
Slovenian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Salesforce Industries
Consumer Goods Cloud Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (UK), English (US), Finnish, French,
German, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese (Brazil),
Portuguese (Portugal), Russian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, and Vietnamese
Education Cloud Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German, Italian,
Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America),
Swedish, and Thai
Financial Services Cloud Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (US), French, German, Hebrew, Italian,
Japanese, Korean, Portuguese (Brazil), Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), and Swedish
Health Cloud Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (UK), English (US), Finnish, French,
German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, and Spanish
(Mexico/Latin America)
Loyalty Management Arabic, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, Danish, Dutch, English (UK), English (US),
Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian,
Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Russian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America),
Slovenian, Swedish, and Thai
Manufacturing Cloud Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German, Italian,
Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America),
Swedish, and Thai
Net Zero Cloud Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (US), Finnish, French, German, Italian,
Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America),
Swedish, and Thai
95
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
Public Sector Solutions Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, English (UK), English (US), Finnish, French,
German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Spanish
(Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, and Thai
Trailhead
Trailhead GO mobile app Chinese (Simplified), English (US), French, German, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese (Brazil), and Spanish
(Mexico/Latin America)
Other
Salesforce Web3 Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English
(UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak,
Slovenian, Spanish, Spanish (Mexico/Latin America), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
Nonprofit Cloud Case Dutch, English (UK), English (US), French, German, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil), Spanish, and Spanish
Management (Mexico/Latin America)
Nonprofit Cloud Program Dutch, English (UK), English (US), French, German, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil), Spanish, and Spanish
Management (Mexico/Latin America)
Nonprofit Success Pack (NPSP) Dutch, English (UK), English (US), French, German, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil), and Spanish
Education Data Architecture Catalan, Dutch, English (UK), English (US), Finnish, French, German, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil),
(EDA) Spanish, and Spanish (Mexico/Latin America)
96
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
Insights Platform Dutch, English (UK), English (US), French, German, and Portuguese (Brazil)
Marketing Cloud for Nonprofits Dutch, English (UK), English (US), French, German, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil), and Spanish
Advisor Link and Pathways Catalan, Dutch, English (UK), English (US), French, Spanish, and Spanish (Mexico/Latin America)
Experience Cloud for Dutch, English (UK), English (US), French, German, Japanese, Portuguese (Brazil), Spanish, and Spanish
Nonprofits (Mexico/Latin America)
SEE ALSO:
Supported Languages
Right-to-Left (RTL) Language Support
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Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
• Lightning right-to-left support is available with Technical Requirements for Tablets. Otherwise, it isn’t supported in the Salesforce
mobile app or any other mobile app or mobile browser.
• Salesforce doesn’t provide default translations for Urdu because it’s a platform-only language. However, you can localize apps and
custom functionality that you build on the Salesforce Platform with Urdu. If the app or functionally has right-to-left support, the
resulting translations display right to left. See Supported Languages in Salesforce Help for more information on platform-only
languages.
Experience Cloud Can be applied with custom CSS Not supported in sites using
in Aura sites built with Salesforce Tabs + Visualforce
Experience Builder. Limited
support available for standard
components in sites built using
Lightning Web Runtime (LWR)
Marketing Cloud No No
CRM Analytics No No
98
Get Started with Salesforce Salesforce Language Support
Enterprise Territory No No
Management
Feeds No No
Field Service No No
Sales Dialer No No
PDF generation No No
Visualforce No No
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Get Started with Salesforce Supported Browsers and Devices for Lightning Experience
Feedback
Have questions or comments on right-to-left language support in Lightning Experience? Open the Help Menu and select Give feedback
about Salesforce to share your thoughts.
SEE ALSO:
Supported Languages
Right-to-Left (RTL) Language Limitations
Technical Requirements for Tablets
Experience Not supported Not supported Supports latest Supports latest Supports latest Supports latest
Builder sites stable browser stable browser stable browser stable browser
version. Internet version version version
Explorer mode
for Microsoft
Edge Chromium
isn’t supported.
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Note: The browser vendor defines “latest.” Check with your browser vendor to determine the latest version available.
Tablet Browsers
Use Apple Safari on iPadOS (iOS 13.x) or later. Portrait orientation and orientation switching aren’t supported on Lightning Experience
on iPad Safari. Use landscape orientation and maximize your Safari browser to full width. To avoid orientation switching, turn on the
iPad rotation lock.
We support only the Salesforce mobile app for Android-based tablets.
Salesforce treats touch-enabled laptops, including Microsoft Surface and Surface Pro devices, as laptops instead of tablets. You can’t
access the Salesforce mobile app on these devices. Users are redirected to the full site experience that’s enabled for them—Lightning
Experience or Salesforce Classic. Only standard keyboard and mouse inputs are supported on these types of devices.
Phones
For the best experience, use the Salesforce mobile app.
SEE ALSO:
Technical Requirements for Lightning Experience
CRM Analytics Requirements
Technical Requirements for Tablets
Technical Requirements for Phones
Requirements for the Salesforce Mobile App
Supported Browsers for Experience Cloud Sites
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Get Started with Salesforce Supported Browsers and Devices for Lightning Experience
Screen resolution The minimum screen resolution required to support all Salesforce features
is 1024 x 768.
The Three Regions template and the pinned region templates are designed
with Lightning console apps in mind.
Three-region templates require more screen width to display correctly
and can display incorrectly on certain devices or monitors with low
resolutions.
Hover Hover isn’t supported on Lightning Experience on iPad Safari except for
these features.
Einstein Search
If you view Lightning Experience on an iPad, Einstein Search record
previews and related list quick links do not show hover pages.
• To see record previews, tap on the ellipses across from the record
name shown in the instant results. The record preview appears on
the right. If you tap on a record name, you go to that record’s home
page.
• In the related list quick links, tap on any link to see the list view for
that entry. You can’t hover over a quick link to show the home page.
Calendar
When using Lightning Experience on iPad Safari, users can tap events to
see the event preview card. To close, users can tap anywhere outside the
preview card.
Setup Setup isn’t supported, including anything accessed from the Setup
Menu and Setup Home, like Lightning App Builder and Flow Builder.
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Utility bar: Pop-out Popping-out docked utility bar items isn't supported in Lightning
Experience on iPad Safari.
Visualforce and Custom Visualforce pages and custom iframes aren’t supported in Lightning
iframes Experience on iPad Safari.
iPad keyboards iPad keyboards aren’t supported on Lightning Experience on iPad Safari.
Safari settings If you encounter UI rendering issues, turn off these Safari settings.
• Block All Cookies
• Prevent Cross-Site Tracking
• Private Browsing
• Block Pop-ups (Pop-up blocking can prevent some pages from
opening in a new tab.)
Sales Dialer Sales Dialer isn’t supported on Lightning Experience on iPad Safari. We
recommend that you use Lightning Experience on a desktop to use Sales
Dialer.
Dialer Dialer features are available in Lightning Experience on the desktop only.
Outlook Integration On an iPad, the buttons at the bottom of the Outlook integration pane,
such as Save and Cancel, aren’t visible when using the Outlook on the
web email client in Safari. Sales reps can scroll to use the buttons at the
bottom of the pane.
Account Engagement apps Account Engagement isn’t supported on Lightning Experience on iPad
Safari. To use Account Engagement, Account Engagement Lightning App,
Sales Emails and Alerts (Salesforce Engage), B2B Marketing Analytics, or
Snippets, we recommend you use Lightning Experience on desktop.
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Get Started with Salesforce Supported Browsers and Devices for Salesforce Classic
Service
Field Service: Creating Creating service reports from work orders or service appointments isn't
service reports supported on Lightning Experience on iPad Safari.
Field Service: Dispatcher The dispatcher console isn’t supported on iPad Safari. We recommend
console that you use Lightning Experience on a desktop to use the dispatcher
console.
Feed Publisher In the Spring ’20 edition of Lightning Experience on iPad Safari, check
your text editors for rich text editor support. For example, check for support
in a feeds publisher. If you don’t have rich text editor support—you can’t
add an emoji or a hyperlink—you’re using an older, unsupported editor.
Talk with Salesforce Support to upgrade to the latest editor.
Service Cloud Voice Voice isn’t supported on Lightning Experience on iPad Safari. We
recommend that you use Lightning Experience on a desktop to use Voice.
Analytics
CRM Analytics Salesforce currently doesn't support CRM Analytics with Apple Safari.
Report Builder: Dragging When you build or edit reports with Lightning Experience on Apple iPad
fields and columns Safari, you can't drag fields and columns in the Fields and Overview panes.
As a workaround, add columns using the Add column... lookup. To
reorder columns, remove them from the report, then add them back in
the order you prefer.
Dashboard Builder: When you build or edit dashboards with Lightning Experience on Apple
Dragging components to iPad Safari, you can’t drag components to reposition or resize them. We
reposition or resize recommend that you use Lightning Experience on a desktop to reposition
or resize dashboard components.
External Apps
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Get Started with Salesforce Recommendations and Requirements for All Browsers
Where
Salesforce Classic is available in all editions.
Salesforce Classic IE 11 no longer Not supported Supports latest Supports latest Supports latest Not supported
Console supported after stable browser stable browser stable browser
December 31, version. Internet version version
2022 Explorer mode
for Microsoft
Edge Chromium
isn’t supported.
Note: The browser vendor defines “latest.” Check with your browser vendor to determine the latest version available.
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• Some features use iframes to work in Lightning Experience, so you must have the appropriate browser security settings for iframes
to load correctly. Follow your browser’s instructions to enable working with iframes and third-party cookies. For example: In Internet
Explorer, set the Launching programs and files in an IFRAME security setting to Enable or Prompt. In Safari and Chrome, we
recommend changing your privacy settings to allow all cookies.
• The minimum screen resolution required to support all Salesforce features is 1024 x 768. Lower screen resolutions don’t always
properly display Salesforce features such as Report Builder and Page Layout Editor. The Three Regions template and the pinned
region templates are designed with Lightning console apps in mind. They feature a main region and two sidebars with fixed
proportional widths. The main region is 50%, and the side region widths are each 25%. Three-region templates require more screen
width to display correctly. Three-region templates can display incorrectly on certain devices or monitors with low resolutions.
Note: Even if your monitor settings meet the minimum screen resolution, resizing a Salesforce browser window to below
the minimum resolution can cause display issues.
• 4K displays can cause issues with components that are programmed with screen percentages in mind. Resize and then refresh your
window to solve most issues.
• Moving a window from a 4K display to a 1080p or 1440p display can cause unwanted behavior or resizing issues.
• For Mac OS users on Apple Safari or Chrome, make sure the system setting Show scroll bars is set to Always.
• Some third-party browser plug-ins and extensions can interfere with the functionality of Chatter. If you experience malfunctions or
inconsistent behavior with Chatter, disable the browser's plug-ins and extensions and try again.
Other products and features may also be affected by third-party plug-ins and extensions.
Some features in Salesforce—and some desktop clients, toolkits, and adapters—have their own browser requirements. For example,
Internet Explorer is the only supported browser for:
• Standard mail merge (Salesforce Classic)
• Connect Offline
For the best experience on machines with 8 GB of RAM in the Salesforce Console, use Chrome.
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Get Started with Salesforce Recommendations and Requirements for All Browsers
SEE ALSO:
Technical Requirements for Lightning Experience
CRM Analytics Requirements
Technical Requirements for Phones
Technical Requirements for Tablets
Important: Support for the non-Chromium version of Microsoft Edge in Lightning Experience and Salesforce Classic ended on
December 31, 2020.
The Microsoft Edge Chromium browser uses the icon, while non-Chromium Edge uses the icon.
Important: As of December 31, 2020, when using Lightning Experience in IE11, a permanent banner displays in your Salesforce
org indicating that you're on an unsupported browser. IE11 has significant performance issues in Lightning Experience.
Keep the following considerations in mind when using Salesforce with Microsoft Internet Explorer.
• Lightning Experience sometimes exceeds IE11 data storage limits, which can cause performance problems. When you exceed the
limits, you receive a message similar to “Do you want to allow force.com to use additional storage on your computer?” Agreeing
removes the data limit for Lightning Experience. Another option is to set a 30-MB storage limit by following these steps.
– In Settings, select Internet Options.
– On the General tab, under the Browser History section, click Settings.
– On the Cache and Databases tab, increase the Notify me when a website cache or database exceeds option to 30 MB.
– Click OK.
• Before December 31, 2022, Salesforce Classic is supported in IE11 on Windows 8 and 8.1 for touch-enabled laptops with standard
keyboard and mouse inputs only. There’s no support for mobile devices or tablets where touch is the primary means of interaction.
• If you’re using Microsoft® Internet Explorer® versions 9–10, you’re redirected to Salesforce Classic even if your preference is set to
Lightning Experience.
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Tab Settings
General Tab • From the General tab, click Settings under Browsing History.
• For the Check for newer versions of stored pages option, select Automatically.
• For the Disk space to use option, enter at least 50 MB.
Security Tab • From the Security tab, click Custom Level under Internet and scroll to the Scripting section.
• Make sure the Active Scripting option is enabled. JavaScript depends on this setting being
enabled.
Advanced Tab From the Advanced tab, scroll to the Security section and do the following:
• Don’t select the Do not save encrypted pages to disk option.
• Select Use TLS 1.0, Use TLS 1.1, and Use TLS 1.2. Make sure to deselect Use SSL
2.0 and Use SSL 3.0. SSL is no longer supported by Salesforce. TLS 1.0 won’t be supported after
we deactivate it, currently scheduled for June 2016 for sandbox orgs and early 2017 for production orgs.
The Empty Temporary Internet Files folder when browser is closed option
causes the cache to clear when Internet Explorer is shut down. This increases privacy but sometimes decreases
performance.
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Get Started with Salesforce Recommendations and Requirements for All Browsers
• If you use Internet Explorer, confirm that you have TLS 1.1 and TLS 1.2 enabled.
• The HTML solution editor in Internet Explorer 11 isn’t supported in Salesforce Knowledge.
To display content for Visualforce pages, follow the steps in the Cannot Load Images and Other Content When Using Safari knowledge
article to change your org’s metadata.
You can also turn off these Safari settings.
• Block All Cookies
• Prevent Cross-Site Tracking
Warning: Salesforce isn’t responsible for any sharing of data based on this change from default settings.
• Private Browsing
• Block Pop-ups
Pop-up blocking can prevent some pages from opening in a new tab.
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Get Started with Salesforce Additional Resources
5. Change how the browser retains common resources across requests by setting these caching preferences.
browser.cache.disk.capacity 50,000 or more; increase to use more hard disk space 50,000
6. Change how the browser retains common resources across requests by setting these caching preferences.
You can set some of these preferences by clicking Tools > Options in the Firefox browser. Refer to Firefox Help for details.
Setting privacy.sanitize.sanitizeOnShutdown to “True” causes the cache to clear when Firefox shuts down. This increases privacy, but
can decrease performance.
To view the contents of your cache, type about:cache in the Firefox location bar and press Enter.
Refer to MozillaZine Knowledge Base and Firefox Support Home Page for more information on these and other preferences.
Additional Resources
Looking for more resources? Check out our tip sheets, implementation guides, videos, and
EDITIONS
walkthroughs.
Available in: All Editions
Tip Sheets and Implementation Guides
Salesforce publishes additional material to help you be successful. These documents include
tip sheets, implementation guides, and other resources that describe the features and capabilities of Salesforce.
Get More Done Faster with Walkthroughs
Interactive walkthroughs guide you step-by-step through a task or feature. Salesforce creates walkthroughs to help you be successful
with Salesforce.
110
Get Started with Salesforce Additional Resources
Note: Adobe Reader® is required to open Adobe® PDF files. To download the latest version of Reader, go to
www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html.
• Printable Tip Sheets & User Guides — All Users
• Learn More About Setting Up Salesforce
• Resources for the Sales Professional
• Service Cloud Printed Resources
• Reports and Dashboards
• Collaboration Resources for Users
• Experience Cloud Resources
• Printable Tip Sheets and User Guides — For Administrators
• Health Cloud Resources
Note: Keep in mind that walkthroughs guide you through your own Salesforce account rather than a demo environment. So
you're actually changing the data in your org as you follow along through the steps. If you’re concerned about these changes,
follow the walkthrough in a sandbox account or other test environment first.
111
Get Started with Salesforce Additional Resources
112
Get Started with Salesforce Additional Resources
113
Get Started with Salesforce Additional Resources
Sales Administration
• Get Started with Sales Cloud
• Enhance Your Sales Cloud Implementation
• Einstein Conversation Insights Implementation Guide
• Sales Engagement Implementation Guide
• Salesforce Maps Territory Planning Implementation Guide
• Set Up Sales Cloud Einstein
• Team Selling Implementation Guide
• Collaborative Forecasts Implementation Guide
• Salesforce CRM Content Implementation Guide
• Getting Started with Relationship Groups
• Sales Dialer Implementation Guide
• WDC Implementation Guide
• Implementing Data.com Clean
• Utility Bar API Implementation Guide
Product or
Feature
Case Management • Case Management Implementation Guide
114
Get Started with Salesforce Additional Resources
Product or
Feature
Marketing Administration
• Salesforce Lead Management Implementation Guide
• Campaign Management Implementation Guide
• Salesforce Ideas Implementation Guide
Communities Administration
• Set Up and Manage Experience Cloud Sites
• Community Management Guide for Experience Cloud
Collaboration Administration
• Quick Actions Implementation Guide
• Salesforce Files Sync Implementation Guide
• Salesforce Files Connect Implementation Guide
115
Get Started with Salesforce Additional Resources
Salesforce Implementations
• Salesforce Enterprise Edition Upgrade Guide
Extending Salesforce
• OEM User License Comparison
• Custom Metadata Types Implementation Guide
Globalization
• International Organizations: Using Multiple Currencies
Health Cloud
• Health Cloud Implementation Guide
• Health Cloud Developer Guide
•
• Tip Sheet: Manage Bulk Permission Set License (PSL) Assignments for Health Cloud
116
Get Started with Salesforce Additional Resources
Printable Tip Sheets & User Guides — For Analytics Admins and End Users
This topic contains tip sheets and implementation guides that can be reused in multiple topics and in multiple cloud-based bundles.
Analytics
• Analytics Setup Guide
Learn how to set up Analytics Cloud.
Printable Tip Sheets & User Guides — For Experience Cloud Admins
This topic contains tip sheets and implementation guides that can be reused in multiple topics and in multiple cloud-based bundles.
• Set Up and Manage Experience Cloud Sites
• Community Management Guide for Experience Cloud
117
Get Started with Salesforce Additional Resources
Printable Tip Sheets & User Guides — For Health Cloud Admins and End Users
This topic contains tip sheets and implementation guides that can be reused in multiple topics and in multiple cloud-based bundles.
• Getting Started with Salesforce Health Cloud
• Health Cloud Implementation Guide
• Health Cloud Developer Guide
•
Account Management
• Getting Microsoft® Outlook® and Salesforce in Sync
• Get Ready to Sync Contacts and Events with Exchange Sync (Beta)
• Guidelines for Uploading Mail Merge Templates
• Sample Mail Merge Templates (Zip file)
Pipeline Management
• Collaborative Forecasts Implementation Guide—For administrators of Collaborative Forecasts.
Sales Administration
• Get Started with Sales Cloud
• Enhance Your Sales Cloud Implementation
• Einstein Conversation Insights Implementation Guide
• Sales Engagement Implementation Guide
• Salesforce Maps Territory Planning Implementation Guide
• Set Up Sales Cloud Einstein
• Team Selling Implementation Guide
• Collaborative Forecasts Implementation Guide
• Salesforce CRM Content Implementation Guide
• Getting Started with Relationship Groups
• Sales Dialer Implementation Guide
• WDC Implementation Guide
118
Get Started with Salesforce Additional Resources
Salesforce CPQ
• Salesforce CPQ Asset Amendment Tip Sheet
Printable Tip Sheets & User Guides — For Data and Security Professionals
This topic contains tip sheets and implementation guides that can be reused in multiple topics and in multiple cloud-based bundles.
Data Import
• Data Loader Guide
Learn how to use the Data Loader for bulk data imports and exports.
Data Management
• Salesforce Field Reference Guide
Security
• Security Implementation Guide
• Salesforce Identity Connect 3.0.1 Release Notes and Implementation Guide or Salesforce Identity Connect 2.1.0 Release Notes and
Implementation Guide
• Platform Encryption Implementation Guide
• Understanding User Sharing
• Understanding Defer Sharing Calculations
Product or
Feature
Case Management • Case Management Implementation Guide
119
Get Started with Salesforce Additional Resources
Product or
Feature
Entitlements • The Admin’s Guide to Entitlement Management
Get Started
• Learn Salesforce Basics | PDF
• Set Up and Maintain Your Organization | PDF
• Evaluate and Roll Out Lightning Experience for Your Org | PDF
120
Get Started with Salesforce Log In, Navigate, and Search Salesforce
Analytics
• Analyze Your Data | PDF
Work.com
• Return to the Workplace with Work.com (includes Use Workplace Command Center) | PDF
• Use Workplace Command Center (standalone version for end users) | PDF
• Employee Workspace | PDF
121
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122
Get Started with Salesforce Log In for the First Time
is already in use in your production, trial, or Sandbox orgs. Deactivate or change the username for the user record, then create your
account with your desired username in your production org. If you’re unable to change or deactivate a username, contact your Salesforce
admin for help. If you’re unable to locate the org where the username is already in use, try a different username to create your account.
123
Get Started with Salesforce Log In with Your Email Address
124
Get Started with Salesforce Log In with Your Email Address
3. Copy the verification code from the email, and enter it in the fields on the Verify Your Identity page.
After your account is verified, the Environment Switcher opens with a tile for each of the Salesforce properties that you can access.
Log in to any of the orgs in the Environment Switcher by clicking its tile and completing the login process. Your company defines the
login process, which can involve entering a password or logging in through a third-party identity provider.
125
Get Started with Salesforce Log In with Your Email Address
1. Open https://welcome.salesforce.com.
The Welcome back page displays a list of the email address that you verified and used to log in.
2. Select Use a Different Login.
3. Enter the email address for the account that you want to log in with, and choose Continue.
126
Get Started with Salesforce Change Your Password
1. Open https://welcome.salesforce.com.
The Welcome back page displays a list of the email address that you verified and used to log in.
2. Choose Edit List.
3. On the Edit List page, choose the email address to remove, and select Remove.
127
Get Started with Salesforce Change Your Security Question
Navigate Salesforce
At the top of each Salesforce page are tabs and links for navigating to major features in Salesforce.
EDITIONS
128
Get Started with Salesforce Navigate Salesforce
129
Get Started with Salesforce Navigate Salesforce
Home in Salesforce Classic gives you a high-level view of your work, including recently viewed items, your Chatter feed, and calendar
of events.
Explore Objects
Object home pages show information for your Salesforce objects, like a list of your accounts.
Let’s walk through what you see on the Accounts object home page. From the App Launcher, find and open Sales, and then click
Accounts.
The navigation model in Lightning Experience is optimized for efficiency with actions in the navigation bar. However, both Salesforce
Classic and Lightning Experience provide similar functionality on object pages:
• A dropdown menu (1) for list views related to Accounts. You can also create list views and edit existing ones (2).
• Recent account records (3). You can also click New (4) to create an account record.
• Tools to import and manage records (5).
• Ways to visualize data with reports and charts (6).
130
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131
Get Started with Salesforce Navigate Salesforce
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Get Started with Salesforce Navigate Salesforce
Note: These steps work in Salesforce Classic. If you see the App Launcher icon ( ) on the left side of the navigation bar at the
top of your screen, you're in Lightning Experience. If not, you're in Salesforce Classic.
You must have access to the Salesforce app or connected app to see and open it from the App Launcher.
• To open the App Launcher, from the drop-down app menu at the upper-right corner of any Salesforce page, select App Launcher.
• In the App Launcher, click the tile for the app that you want.
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These steps work in Lightning Experience. If you see the App Launcher icon ( ) on the left side Available in: Lightning
of the navigation bar at the top of your screen, you're in Lightning Experience. If not, you're in Experience
Salesforce Classic. Available in: all editions
• To open the App Launcher, on the left side of the navigation bar, click except Database.com and
.
Starter
The App Launcher displays all your available Salesforce apps and items. In contrast, the navigation
bar displays all the items contained in the app that you’re currently using.
USER PERMISSIONS
To use an app:
• Access to that app as
specified in your user
profile or permission
sets.
A quick view of the App Launcher displays a search bar and the first 7 apps listed in the App Launcher.
• To look for apps or items by name, use the Search apps and items box.
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Get Started with Salesforce Navigate Salesforce
For example, start typing the name of an app or item, such as Service. Up to 7 apps or items (or if there are both app and item
results, up to 5 each) containing the string appear as you type. If there are more results, a View More link appears and when clicked,
the full App Launcher opens with all the results highlighted.
• To see all your available Salesforce apps and items, click View All.
The App Launcher displays standard Salesforce apps, custom apps, and the connected apps that your Salesforce admin has installed
for your convenience. Connected apps are third-party apps, such as Gmail, Google Drive, and Windows365.
135
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When you open a connected app, it opens in a new tab. If you are using Safari, be sure to set your popup blocker to allow popups.
Otherwise, your connected app doesn’t launch.
• To look for apps or items by name, use the Search apps and items box at the top of the App Launcher.
For example, start typing the name of the app, such as Service, and all apps and items containing the string appear and are
highlighted as you type.
136
Get Started with Salesforce Navigate Salesforce
• Drag an app tile from one position to another to sort them by the apps that you use most (1). Hover over a truncated description
(2) to see the full description of the app.
137
Get Started with Salesforce Navigate Salesforce
Don’t see what you want? Ask your Salesforce admin if more apps are available.
Setup isn’t supported, including anything accessed from the Setup Menu and Setup Home, like Lightning App Builder and Flow
Builder.
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SEE ALSO:
Search List Views in Lightning Experience
Work Faster and Smarter with Einstein Search
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Get Started with Salesforce Search Across Salesforce
2. As you type, the list updates with suggested matches and search options.
In the instant results dropdown list, you can also:
• Search across all searchable objects (1). You can also press Enter for the same results.
• Search within the current object you’re on (2).
• Select a suggested record and go directly to the record (3).
3. If you don’t see the record that you want, press Enter to see the full search results.
The Top Results page shows the best matches for the objects you use most. From this high-level overview, it’s easy to find what you
need. To see results for a specific object, click the object’s name in the sidebar. If you don’t see an object listed under Search Results,
select Show More. Searchable objects are listed alphabetically.
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To adjust column widths on the search results page, click and drag the borders in the column header.
Text wrapping is on by default, but you can change this preference for a column by clicking the down arrow in the column header.
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Note:
• Column width and text wrapping preferences aren’t remembered for Tasks, Events, and Dashboards search results. They go
back to their defaults in future searches.
• Column resizing and text wrapping aren’t available for search results from external sources.
Still can’t find a record? Here are easy things you can do to quickly get on the right search track.
• Limit the number of results by entering more specific search terms. For example, enter the full name and company (Mike Jones
Salesforce) or last name and ZIP code (Jones 94123).
• Searching for a specific contact or opportunity? Get more targeted results by adding the account name to your phrase. For example,
John Smith Acme or 200 Widgets Acme. Adding the account name also works for record suggestions in Lightning
Experience instant results.
• Check your spelling and make sure you enter the complete search term.
• If you recently created or updated the record, wait a few minutes for the record to be made searchable. If you can’t find your record
after 15 minutes, contact your admin. Not all fields on a record are searchable.
• If you think the record isn't appearing due to permission issues, check with your admin. We show you only the records that you have
access to.
With global search from your internal org, you can get uneven results when searching for an Experience Cloud site User record. Here’s
why and what you can do about it. Each Experience Cloud site has a unique network ID. When you create a user through Contact
record > Create External User, the new User record is assigned to a site's network ID.
Global search looks for records in the internal org, which has a different network ID than the Experience Cloud site. A global search
doesn't search inside Experience Cloud sites. Since the User record is associated with a network ID, global search doesn't return results
for that record.
The workaround is to create User records in the internal org, and then associate the records to an Experience Cloud site. You can associate
an internal User record to a site by linking the internal record to a Contact record. After you forge the link, you can find the User record
through global search. The User record's network ID is now associated with the internal org.
SEE ALSO:
Filter and Sort Search Results in Lightning Experience
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The Top Results page shows the best matches for the objects you use most. It's what you see when Available in: All Editions
you don't search for a specific object. To see more results for an object, click View More. except Database.com
Search results update as you apply filters. See which filters are applied above the results (2). To remove a filter, click Clear (3).
The fields that can be filtered for an object are the ones your admin includes in the search results layout for that object. Keep in mind,
you can also filter on inactive record types.
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When you filter by dates, you can select from predefined ranges such as “Last 7 Days” and “Last 30 Days.” You can’t enter a custom date
range.
To change the sort direction, click the field name or the arrow in the column header.
If the search layout includes all non-sortable fields, the sort dropdown menu is disabled.
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Note: Salesforce supports hyperlinks and entity links, but only hyperlinks are searchable. An entity link is a user at-mention or a
record slash-mention. An easy way to tell if a link is a hyperlink or entity link is to hover over the link in a post. If a hover card pops
up with details about the user or record, then it’s an entity link. If there’s no hover card but instead a tooltip with the link url, then
it’s a hyperlink.
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Instant Results When Search Box Is You see a list of your Not available. Start typing to see
Selected most recently used instant results.
records across all
objects.
Instant Results as You Type The characters you The characters you type filter the list
type filter the list of of most recently used records.
most recently used
records. As you type,
the list also starts
showing matching
records across
multiple objects that
you haven't accessed
recently.
Full Search Results You see Top Results, You see the top 5 records for each
which lists the top of your most recently used objects.
results for your most Results are grouped by object and
frequently used sorted by relevance.
objects. Change the
object to see more
results.
Results are sorted by
relevance.
Sorting and Filtering Results You can sort results You can sort results by column
by column heading or heading.
by using the sort If enabled by your admin, filtering
menu. is also available.
You can filter results
for some objects.
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Search Term Characters Returns results for the first 100 Sidebar and Advanced: Returns results for the
characters of your search term. first 80 characters of your search term.
SEE ALSO:
Common Einstein Search Cases
Search Features The Salesforce mobile app supports personalization, natural language search, and recommended results.
Instant Results • Instant results show in a dropdown menu below the search box. They include recent items and
matching records. If you don’t see a record in instant results, perform a full search by tapping the
Search for option.
• The mobile app doesn’t support actionable instant results.
Search Results • For Salesforce for iOS, global search returns results for the first 155 characters of your search term.
Feed search returns results for the first 100 characters. For Salesforce for Android, search returns results
for entire search term, regardless of the number of characters.
• External results for federated search objects aren’t available. However, you can add custom objects
created for federated search to the navigation menu.
• List views aren’t included in search results.
• Full search results, which you see when you enter text in the search bar then tap Search or the Search
for option, show Top Results. Top Results lists the top three records for the objects you use the most.
Results are grouped by object and sorted by relevance.
• To view results for specific objects, tap the object name in the search scope bar beneath the search
box.
• You can’t sort search results.
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• You can't filter search results. Search filters that are added to URLs are also unsupported.
• Global search allows you to infinitely scroll through results across all objects.
• Search results show the first five fields from the search layout.
• The Recommended Results is highlighted at the top of the search results, but record previews and
actions aren't available.
Lookup Searchers Lookups are supported on the Salesforce mobile app. The lookup experience can vary depending on
which feature you’re using, so review the documentation for the feature.
Chatter Feed Searches Use the Chatter feed search and not the global search. Global search doesn't find information in feeds.
3.
To update your contact information, click under your profile photo. In the Edit Profile box, complete the fields on the Contact
tab and the About tab.
Tip: Complete your profile with details about the department you work in, your experience, or projects you are currently
working on.
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Get Started with Salesforce View and Display FAQ
2. Enter the name of the Setup page, record, or object that you want in the Quick Find box, then select the appropriate page
from the menu.
Tip: Type the first few characters of a page’s name in the Quick Find box. As you type, pages that match your search
terms appear in the menu. For example, to find the Language Settings page, type lang in the Quick Find box, then
select Language Settings.
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Get Started with Salesforce View and Display FAQ
The options in your sidebar vary depending on the features that are available in your org and whether your administrator has customized
the page layout.
Why Can't I View Salesforce Popup Windows Such as Lookup Dialogs and Help Pages?
Test your browser’s popup blocker settings. If the settings are configured for maximum security, you can’t view any popup windows
within Salesforce, including popups that provide necessary functionality.
For example, maximum security settings block calendar popup for choosing a date on an activity, lookup dialogs for selecting a record,
and Help pages.
To allow popup windows for Salesforce, add Salesforce as a trusted site within your browser's popup blocker settings. Consult the help
for your browser for specific instructions.
Some browser add-ons, like the Google toolbar, also have popup blocking. Consult your software documentation on those products for
details on how to configure them to allow popup windows from Salesforce.
To test your popup settings:
1. From your personal settings, enter Reminders in the Quick Find box, then select Activity Reminders. No results? Enter
Personal Information in the Quick Find box, then select Personal Information.
2. Click Open a Test Reminder.
Salesforce Classic
he Sharing button lets users grant other users access to a record beyond the organization-wide defaults or sharing rules. You can easily
remove this access after it’s no longer needed.
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You have access to the Sharing button when your sharing model is either Private or Public Read Only for a type of record or related
record. For example, the Sharing button may appear on an account even though your organization-wide default for accounts is Public
Read/Write, if your organization-wide default for related opportunities is Public Read Only.
When the button is available on the page layout, administrators see the button on all records. Non-administrators see this button on
records that only they own.
Why Did My Data Disappear When I Pressed the Backspace Key While Editing a
Record in Salesforce Classic?
Some versions of Internet Explorer use the Backspace key as a keyboard shortcut for the browser’s Back button. When you press the
Backspace key and your cursor is not within a text field, the browser goes back to the previous page. To retrieve your data and return to
the page you were working on, click your browser’s Forward button.
Can I Change or Delete the List of Entries That Appears When I Edit a Text Field in
Salesforce Classic?
No. These auto-complete entries that appear when you are editing certain text fields are a feature of Internet Explorer.
The browser remembers text that you entered previously and provides a list of those entries for you to automatically complete the field.
If you would like to turn off this feature, click Tools on your browser’s menu bar. Select Internet Options, click the Content tab, and
then choose the AutoComplete button to change your browser’s settings.
• Related lists are links featured at the bottom of object pages. Related lists provide quick access to other related objects. This feature
adds much value, because it gives you fast access to information. It means less navigation and can speed up your workflow. In the
Accounts object, your related lists can look something like this:
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Salesforce delivers the application with some standard related lists, but administrators can also customize some related list items.
• Our help and training materials probably mention some features that your company hasn’t enabled, or that your permissions profile
doesn’t allow you to access. To find out more about a feature, contact the Salesforce administrator at your company. Not sure who
that is? Reach out to the person at your company who introduced you to Salesforce.
• Save your work! It’s easy to update the fields in a record and then navigate away from that screen without saving. Make a habit of
seeking out the save button before clicking away through another page element.
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SEE ALSO:
Verify Your Identity with a TOTP Authenticator App
Note: Over the course of 2023, Salesforce is automatically enabling MFA for Salesforce customers. If you need help logging in
after MFA is auto-enabled for your org, see Register for Multi-Factor Authentication (or Get a Little More Time If You Need It).
You can verify your identity with these verification methods.
Method
Salesforce Authenticator Mobile App This free app from Salesforce sends a push notification to your mobile device. When you get the
notification, open the app, verify the connection details, and tap Approve on your mobile device.
Built-In Authenticator A built-in authenticator on your device, such as Touch ID, Face ID, or Windows Hello, verifies
your identity with a biometric reader or a PIN or password. When you log in, your browser prompts
you to use the built-in authenticator.
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Get Started with Salesforce Register for Multi-Factor Authentication (or Get a Little More
Time If You Need It)
Method
U2F Security Key A small physical device that verifies your identity with the press of a button. Simply connect a
U2F-compliant security key to your computer when prompted.
Time-Based One-Time Password Third-party authenticator apps, such as Google Authenticator, Microsoft Authenticator, or Authy,
Generator App generate a time-based one-time password (TOTP) code that you enter when logging in. A code
is valid for 30 seconds and then a new one is generated.
SMS Text Message (not available for If you have a verified mobile number associated with your account, you receive a verification
MFA) code, or one-time password (OTP) in a text message sent to your phone. If you don’t have a
verified mobile number, you’re prompted to register one when you log in to Salesforce. Registering
your mobile phone number verifies it and enables this method when you’re challenged in the
future. If your mobile number changes, contact your Salesforce admin.
Email (not available for MFA) Salesforce sends an OTP in an email to the address associated with your account. The code
expires after 24 hours.
The identity verification page includes a Don’t ask again option, which is selected by default. If you leave the option selected and click
Verify, Salesforce doesn’t ask you to verify your identity again when you log in from the same browser or application. Exceptions are if
you clear browser cookies, set your browser to delete cookies, or browse in private or incognito mode. In these cases, you’re prompted
to verify your identity every time you log in to Salesforce from an IP address that’s not defined as trusted for your org.
When you log in from a public or shared device, deselect Don’t ask again. Deselecting this option ensures that subsequent users have
to verify their identity when they log in from that device.
SEE ALSO:
What Is Multi-Factor Authentication?
Connect Your Salesforce Account to Salesforce Authenticator
Register a Built-In Authenticator for Identity Verification
Register a U2F or WebAuthn Security Key for Identity Verification
Verify Your Identity with a TOTP Authenticator App
Register for Multi-Factor Authentication (or Get a Little More Time If You
Need It)
To help protect your Salesforce account from unauthorized access, logins to your org now require multi-factor authentication (MFA) in
addition to a username and password. To use MFA, register at least one verification method that you’ll use to prove your identity when
you access your account. Salesforce supports several kinds of verification methods, such as authenticator apps and security keys. If you’re
not ready for MFA yet, there’s a small grace period where you can skip registration and log in without it. If you still need more time after
the grace period ends, Salesforce admins can temporarily disable MFA for your org.
This topic covers:
• What Is MFA and What Are Verification Methods? on page 155
• How to Register a Verification Method for MFA on page 155
• Not Ready for MFA Yet? on page 156
• 30 Days Not Enough? Salesforce Admins Can Temporarily Disable MFA on page 157
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Get Started with Salesforce Register for Multi-Factor Authentication (or Get a Little More
Time If You Need It)
MFA helps prevent unauthorized access to your Salesforce account by asking you to enter two pieces of evidence – or factors – to
confirm it’s really you when you log in. A familiar example of MFA at work is the two factors needed to withdraw money from an ATM
– your ATM card and your PIN. Requiring two factors means even if a bad actor gets ahold of one of them, the odds are low they can
also guess or hack your other factor.
When logging in to your Salesforce account, the first factor you supply is your username and password. The second factor is one of the
following verification methods:
• Salesforce Authenticator mobile app (download for free from the App Store or Google Play)
• A third-party authenticator app, like Google Authenticator, Microsoft Authenticator, or Authy
• A physical security key, such as Yubico's YubiKey or Google's Titan Security Key
• An authenticator that's built in to your computer, such as Touch ID, Face ID, or Windows Hello
If you’re not sure which of these options to use or have questions about MFA, talk to your Salesforce admin for guidance.
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Get Started with Salesforce Register for Multi-Factor Authentication (or Get a Little More
Time If You Need It)
Tip: If the registration experience begins with the Connect Salesforce Authenticator option and that's the method you want to
register, follow the steps on the screen. To set up an alternate method, select Choose Another Verification Method, pick the
method you want, and then follow the steps presented to you.
If you’d rather not register for MFA while logging in, you can do so at any time from your personal settings in Salesforce. See the following
help for step-by-step registration guidance.
• Connect Your Salesforce Account to Salesforce Authenticator
• Register a Built-In Authenticator for Identity Verification
• Register a U2F or WebAuthn Security Key for Identity Verification
• Verify Your Identity with a TOTP Authenticator App
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Time If You Need It)
The grace period begins on the day your org is auto-enabled to require MFA and it applies uniformly to all users in your org. For example,
if you log in 20 days after Salesforce turned on MFA for your org, you can continue skipping MFA for 10 more days. There’s a timer on
the Connect Salesforce Authenticator screen that lets you keep track of how many days remain in your org’s grace period.
When the grace period ends, if you haven’t already, you must register a verification method before you can finish logging in (unless your
admin opts to temporarily disable MFA).
SEE ALSO:
Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) Enforcement Roadmap
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Time If You Need It)
Register for Multi-Factor Authentication (or Get a Little More Time If You
Need It)
To help protect your Salesforce account from unauthorized access, logins to your org now require multi-factor authentication (MFA) in
addition to a username and password. To use MFA, register at least one verification method that you’ll use to prove your identity when
you access your account. Salesforce supports several kinds of verification methods, such as authenticator apps and security keys. If you’re
not ready for MFA yet, Salesforce admins can temporarily disable it for your org.
This topic covers:
• What Is MFA and What Are Verification Methods? on page 158
• How to Register a Verification Method for MFA on page 158
• Not Ready for MFA Yet? Salesforce Admins Can Temporarily Disable It on page 159
MFA helps prevent unauthorized access to your Salesforce account by asking you to enter two pieces of evidence – or factors – to
confirm it’s really you when you log in. A familiar example of MFA at work is the two factors needed to withdraw money from an ATM
– your ATM card and your PIN. Requiring two factors means even if a bad actor gets ahold of one of them, the odds are low they can
also guess or hack your other factor.
When logging in to your Salesforce account, the first factor you supply is your username and password. The second factor is one of the
following verification methods:
• Salesforce Authenticator mobile app (download for free from the App Store or Google Play)
• A third-party authenticator app, like Google Authenticator, Microsoft Authenticator, or Authy
• A physical security key, such as Yubico's YubiKey or Google's Titan Security Key
• An authenticator that's built in to your computer, such as Touch ID, Face ID, or Windows Hello
If you’re not sure which of these options to use or have questions about MFA, talk to your Salesforce admin for guidance.
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Time If You Need It)
Tip: If the registration experience begins with the Connect Salesforce Authenticator option and that's the method you want to
register, follow the steps on the screen. To set up an alternate method, select Choose Another Verification Method, pick the
method you want, and then follow the steps presented to you.
You can add additional verification methods to your account at any time from your personal settings in Salesforce. See the following
help for step-by-step registration guidance.
• Connect Your Salesforce Account to Salesforce Authenticator
• Register a Built-In Authenticator for Identity Verification
• Register a U2F or WebAuthn Security Key for Identity Verification
• Verify Your Identity with a TOTP Authenticator App
Not Ready for MFA Yet? Salesforce Admins Can Temporarily Disable It
If you’re a Salesforce admin, you can temporarily turn off MFA for your org. If you do so, keep in mind that it will be re-enabled when
Salesforce enforces MFA for your org. We recommend using the MFA Rollout Pack to prepare your users for logging in with MFA.
To temporarily disable MFA for your org, navigate to Setup. In the Quick Find box, enter Identity, and then select Identity Verification.
Deselect Require multi-factor authentication (MFA) for all direct UI logins to your Salesforce org, then save your changes.
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Salesforce Authenticator
Welcome to the Salesforce Authenticator mobile app. You can use Salesforce Authenticator as a
EDITIONS
verification method for device activation or multi-factor authentication (MFA) login requirements.
Salesforce Authenticator
What Is Multi-Factor Authentication? setup available in: both
We all want to keep our online accounts and data secure. Multi-factor authentication (MFA) is Salesforce Classic and
a great way to do just that. MFA adds an extra layer of security to Salesforce by requiring you Lightning Experience
to enter two or more pieces of evidence about your identity—or factors—each time you log Multi-factor authentication
in. The first factor is something you know, like your username and password combination. The with Salesforce
second is a verification method that you have in your possession, like the Salesforce Authenticator Authenticator available in:
mobile app. With MFA, even if hackers steal your password, they can’t log in because they don't Essentials, Group,
have your mobile device with Salesforce Authenticator installed on it. Professional, Enterprise,
Performance, Unlimited,
Requirements for Salesforce Authenticator
Developer, and Contact
The Salesforce Authenticator mobile app is supported on various mobile platforms, with some
Manager Editions
device, operating system, and mobile browser requirements. You need an Internet connection
to communicate with Salesforce for user verifications of account activity and location-based
automated verifications. The app generates verification codes as time-based one-time passwords, or TOTPs without an Internet
connection on your mobile device, so you can still log in to your other accounts when you're offline.
Salesforce Authenticator Accessibility Considerations
Salesforce Authenticator is designed with accessibility in mind and delivers a fully accessible mobile experience for everyone, including
users working with screen readers. Unlike the full Salesforce site, Salesforce Authenticator doesn’t require accessibility mode to give
users working with assistive devices a fully accessible experience.
Locale and Language Support for Salesforce Authenticator
Salesforce Authenticator works with almost all Salesforce-supported locales and the fully supported end-user languages. Salesforce
Help includes a list of supported locales and languages. Languages that are read right to left, including Arabic and Hebrew, aren’t
currently supported.
Connect Your Salesforce Account to Salesforce Authenticator
Connect your Salesforce account to the Salesforce Authenticator mobile app so you can use the app as a verification method for
multi-factor authentication (MFA). Sometimes in Salesforce, you’re prompted to connect your account as you log in, or you connect
the account through your personal settings.
Back Up Your Connected Accounts in the Salesforce Authenticator Mobile App
You can back up your Connected Accounts in the Salesforce Authenticator mobile app. If you lose, damage, or replace your mobile
device, you can restore your Connected Accounts on another mobile device.
Restore Connected Accounts in the Salesforce Authenticator Mobile App
If you back up your Connected Accounts in the Salesforce Authenticator mobile app, you can restore them on another mobile device.
Remove an Account from Salesforce Authenticator
When you no longer want to use the app for multi-factor authentication (MFA) logins, or want to switch to a new device, remove
your Salesforce account from the Salesforce Authenticator mobile app.
Verify Your Identity with Salesforce Authenticator
After you install the Salesforce Authenticator app on your mobile device and connect your Salesforce account, use the app to securely
log in to your account or access restricted resources in Salesforce. Also, you can block activity that you don't recognize and report
it to your admin.
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Multi-factor authentication
Supported Devices and Browsers with Salesforce
Salesforce Authenticator is supported in portrait orientation in these environments. Authenticator available in:
Essentials, Group,
Professional, Enterprise,
Salesforce Authenticator Supported Devices Supported Mobile
Performance, Unlimited,
App Operating Systems
Developer, and Contact
iOS, v3.7.2 or later iPhone 5 or later models iOS 13.4 or later Manager Editions
For optimal Salesforce Authenticator performance, we recommend keeping your mobile device’s operating system updated and
upgrading to a late model device as allowed by your mobile plan. Future Salesforce versions sometimes require removing support for
older operating systems, and sometimes newer operating system releases don’t perform well on older devices.
Salesforce Editions
• Group Edition
• Professional Edition
• Enterprise Edition
• Performance Edition
• Unlimited Edition
• Developer Edition
• Contact Manager Edition
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• Salesforce users These user license types aren’t supported: portal users (unless a
member of a Salesforce community), Database.com users, Sites
• Salesforce Platform and Salesforce users
and Site.com users, Data.com users, and WDC users.
• Customer Community, Customer Community Plus, and Partner
Community external users
• Portal users who are a member of a Salesforce community
Wireless Connection
Salesforce Authenticator needs a Wi-Fi or cellular network connection to communicate with Salesforce. For cellular connections, a 3G
network or faster is required. For the best performance, we recommend using Wi-Fi or LTE. Salesforce Authenticator generates valid
verification codes when your device is offline, so you can still use it to log in to your other accounts. You can also view your activity
history and list of trusted locations when the device is offline.
2. From your personal settings, in the Quick Find box, enter Advanced User Details,
then select Advanced User Details. No results? In the Quick Find box, enter Personal Information, then select Personal
Information.
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7. In your Salesforce browser window, enter the phrase in the Two-Word Phrase field.
8. Click Connect.
9. In the Salesforce Authenticator app on your mobile device, you see details about the account you’re connecting. To complete the
account connection, tap Connect in the app.
To help keep your account secure, we send you an email notification whenever a new identity verification method is added to your
Salesforce account. You get the email whether you add the method or your Salesforce admin adds it on your behalf.
Note: When you back up your connected accounts, your encrypted TOTP data is stored on Salesforce servers. Salesforce handles
this data in compliance with our privacy policy. During backup and restore events, your passcode is used to verify your ownership
of the backed-up accounts.
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Note: When you back up your connected accounts, your encrypted TOTP data is stored on Salesforce servers. Salesforce
handles this data in compliance with our privacy policy. During backup and restore events, your passcode is used to verify
your ownership of the backed-up accounts.
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If you’re disconnecting an account to switch to a new device, follow the steps to back up your Connected Accounts before proceeding.
1. Begin in a web browser, in your Salesforce account. From your personal settings, in the Quick Find box, enter Advanced User
Details, then select Advanced User Details. No results? In the Quick Find box, enter Personal Information, then
select Personal Information.
2. Find App Registration: Salesforce Authenticator, and click Disconnect.
3. Open the Salesforce Authenticator app on your mobile device.
4. In the app list of Connected Accounts, find the account you want to remove.
5. Swipe left on the account username.
6. Tap Remove or Delete, whichever appears.
A confirmation dialog appears.
7. To confirm the removal of the account, tap Remove.
If Salesforce Authenticator was your only MFA verification method, you’re prompted to register another method the next time you log
in to Salesforce.
SEE ALSO:
Back Up Your Connected Accounts in the Salesforce Authenticator Mobile App
Disconnect Salesforce Authenticator from a User’s Account
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If you deny a login request, Salesforce Authenticator asks you what to do about the unrecognized activity. To prevent unauthorized
access to your account and alert your admin of the potential security breach, tap Block Activity and Flag. This action also creates
a log entry in Identity Verification History. To prevent access to your account without flagging, tap Just Block Activity.
SEE ALSO:
Use TOTP Codes When Push Notifications Are Unavailable in Salesforce Authenticator
Note: During periods of extremely high traffic, automated approvals and push notifications may be temporarily unavailable in
the Authenticator app. If your activity isn’t automated, and you don’t receive a push notification, you can verify your identity with
TOTP codes instead on page 171.
To automate a request in Salesforce Authenticator, save it as a trusted request.
1. Respond to a request notification by opening the app on your mobile device.
The app shows you five factors describing the request.
Factor Description
Service The service that’s trying to verify your identity, such as your
Salesforce org.
Username Your username for the account. You can have multiple accounts
with a single service.
Client Information about your device and the browser or app that you’re
using to access your account.
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2. If you trust all the factors shown, switch on Trust and automate this request.
3. Tap Approve.
In Salesforce, you’re logged in or granted access to the desired resource. The next time Authenticator receives a request with the
same five factors, the app automatically verifies the activity without prompting you for approval.
If all factors of a request match one of your trusted requests except the client, save the trusted request with a new client:
• On the first notification, manually approve the request.
• On the second notification, switch on New recurring client detected. Automate future requests from this client? and approve
the request again.
The detected client of your incoming requests can change based on your web browser configuration. Using private browsing modes,
using virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI), and switching between browser applications can inhibit automation performance.
Your Salesforce admin sets automation policies for the service that you’re accessing. If the service doesn’t allow automation for certain
actions, Authenticator can’t automate trusted requests for those actions. Contact your Salesforce admin to learn which types of requests
are restricted from automation.
SEE ALSO:
Optimize and Troubleshoot Automation in Salesforce Authenticator
Note: To automate your activity, Authenticator needs to know your location at the time of the request. Your location data never
leaves the app.
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Here are two common scenarios where the request can't be automated.
Example: Authenticator doesn’t recognize the client (1). To automate this request in the future, save a trusted request with the
new client.
Example: The service blocked automation for the request (1). The service can temporarily block automation if it notices unusual
activity or a potential security risk. To find out why automation was blocked for a request, contact your Salesforce
admin.
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When you save a trusted request, the app remembers each factor in the context of the factor before it. The client is trusted only at the
detected location, and the location is trusted only for the detected action.
Example: Compare the Incoming Request with Trusted Request #1 and Trusted Request #2.
Client Chrome Desktop Browser Salesforce Mobile App Chrome Desktop Browser
The Chrome Desktop Browser client is trusted only at the Office location (Trusted Request #1), and the only trusted client at the
Home location is the Salesforce Mobile App (Trusted Request #2). Because neither trusted request captures the Chrome Desktop
Browser client at the Home location, the Incoming Request can’t be automated.
You can automate more of your activity over time by saving trusted requests for different sets of factors.
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Use TOTP Codes When Push Notifications Are Unavailable in Salesforce Authenticator
If you can’t receive push notifications in Salesforce Authenticator, use time-based one-time passwords
EDITIONS
(TOTP) to verify your identity. The app automatically generates TOTP codes for each of your connected
accounts. Available in: All Editions
1. Log in to Salesforce, or try to access a restricted resource in Salesforce.
2. When prompted to check your mobile device, click Having Trouble?
3. Click Use a different verification method.
4. When prompted to enter a verification code, open Salesforce Authenticator to view your accounts list.
5. Enter the six-digit code for the account that you’re logging in to.
6. Click Verify.
Note: TOTP codes are refreshed periodically. Make sure to enter the code before it expires.
4. In your browser window for the account you're logging in to, enter the 6-digit verification code.
You're logged in to your account.
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• Make sure that you have a built-in authenticator such as Touch ID, Face ID, or Windows Hello Available in: Essentials,
set up on your device. Contact Manager,
• A built-in authenticator is tied to a single device. If you access Salesforce from multiple devices, Database.com, Developer,
Enterprise, Group,
make sure you have a secondary verification method registered, such as Salesforce Authenticator.
Performance, Professional,
Otherwise, you need a temporary verification code from your admin to log in on your other
and Unlimited Editions
devices.
• To register a built-in authenticator on any new device, you must be currently logged in to
Salesforce on the new device. The initial login requires a secondary verification method or a temporary code from your admin.
• Your device, operating system, and browser must support the FIDO2 WebAuthn standard. For more information, see the FIDO
website and the WebAuthn guide.
1. From your personal settings, in the Quick Find box, enter Advanced User Details, and then select Advanced User Details.
No results? In the Quick Find box, enter Personal Information, and then select Personal Information.
2. Scroll down to find Built-in Authenticators, and then click Add.
If you don’t see this option, your Salesforce admin doesn’t allow built-in authenticators.
3. For security purposes, you’re sometimes prompted to either log in again or verify your identity.
4. At the prompt from Salesforce, click Register.
5. At the prompt from your browser, provide the identifier that you previously set up with your built-in authenticator, such as your
fingerprint, facial scan, PIN, or password.
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Verification
For example, if you’re registering Touch ID, use your fingerprint scanner.
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5. At the prompt, insert your security key into the appropriate port on your computer or mobile device. If it has a button, touch the
button.
Security keys aren’t a biometric device, even though some have a button that requires your touch to activate the device.
Important: If you registered a U2F key before Summer ’22, your registration is encrypted with a master encryption key
accessible on the Certificate and Key Management page in Setup. Be careful when handling this master encryption key. If you
delete it, you can’t use your U2F key to log in. When you use the key for the first time after Summer ’22, it updates to become
WebAuthn-compatible. After the update, this warning no longer applies. Read about how to back up and manage master
encryption key material in Manage Master Encyption Keys.
Now you’re ready to use this identity verification method. When we prompt you for your security key, insert it, and touch the button if
it has a button. The security key generates the required credentials, and the browser passes them on to Salesforce to complete the
verification.
Note: Chrome version 41 or later and Microsoft Edge Chromium are the only browsers that natively support U2F. Most major
browsers support WebAuthn.
If you’re without your security key, you can still use other verification methods, such as Salesforce Authenticator or another method that
generates a verification code. If you need a temporary alternate method for multi-factor authentication (MFA), your admin can generate
a temporary verification code (not available for device activation).
You can cancel your security key registration at any time, and so can an admin.
Note: If you’re connecting Salesforce Authenticator so that you can use push notifications, use the App Registration:
Salesforce Authenticator setting instead. That setting enables both push notifications and one-time password
generation.
You can connect up to two authenticator apps to your Salesforce account for one-time password generation: Salesforce Authenticator
and one other authenticator app.
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6. In Salesforce, enter the code generated by the authenticator app in the Verification Code field.
The authenticator app generates a new verification code periodically. Enter the current code.
7. Click Connect.
To help keep your account secure, we send you an email notification whenever a new identity verification method is added to your
Salesforce account. You get the email whether you add the method or your Salesforce admin adds it on your behalf.
SEE ALSO:
Salesforce Help: Personalize Your Salesforce Experience
2. Enter the temporary code where prompted in the identity verification screen.
3. If you don’t need the code any more and it’s still valid, expire the code.
a. From your personal settings, enter Advanced User Details in the Quick Find box, then select Advanced User
Details. No results? Enter Personal Information in the Quick Find box, then select Personal Information.
b. Find Temporary Verification Code and click Expire Now.
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If your admin assigned you the Multi-Factor Authentication for API Logins permission, use the code Available in: All Editions
generated by an authenticator app, such as Salesforce Authenticator, for the security token value. Connect for Office not
Note: If you have the API only user permission, or your admin specifies login IP ranges for available in Database.com
your account, you can’t manually reset your security token. To reset your token, contact your
Connect Offline available in:
admin.
Salesforce Classic
1. From your personal settings, in the Quick Find box, enter Reset, and then select Reset My
Security Token. Connect Offline available in:
Professional, Enterprise,
2. Click Reset Security Token. The new security token is sent to the email address in your Performance, Unlimited,
Salesforce personal settings. and Developer Editions
You also receive a new security token email when you reset your password.
Tip: Before you access Salesforce from a new IP address, we recommend that you get your
security token from a trusted network using Reset My Security Token.
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2. In the password window, enter your password and security token, with the security token added Connect for Office not
available in: Database.com
to the end of your password. For example, mypasswordXXXXXXXXXX.
3. To test that you correctly entered your password and token, click Verify. Connect Offline available in:
4. Click OK. Salesforce Classic
Update Your Token in Connect Offline, Connect for Office, and Data Loader
After you received your new Salesforce security token, you can update your token in Connect Offline,
EDITIONS
Connect for Office, and Data Loader.
Your security token isn’t displayed in your settings or profile. Available in: both Salesforce
Classic and Lightning
If your admin assigned you the Multi-Factor Authentication for API Logins permission, use the code
Experience
generated by an authenticator app, such as Salesforce Authenticator, for the security token value.
A new security token is emailed to you when you reset your password. Or you can reset your token Available in: All Editions
separately. Connect for Office not
available in: Database.com
• When you log in, add the security token value to the end of your password, such as
mypasswordXXXXXXXXXX.
Connect Offline available in:
If you get an invalid password error when you log in, try logging in only with your password. Salesforce Classic
You can get this error if you use your security token to log in from an IP address that’s within a
Connect Offline available in:
trusted IP range set by your admin.
Professional, Enterprise,
Performance, Unlimited,
and Developer Editions
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If you clicked My Settings, look on the left side of the page and click a menu item under My Settings to display its sub-menu, then
click the item you want.
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To quickly find a page, type the first few characters of its name in the Quick Find box. As you type, pages that match your search
terms appear in the menu. For example, to find the Personal Information page, type pers in the Quick Find box.
Note: Accessing personal settings isn’t supported on Lightning Experience on iPad Safari. Available in: Lightning
We recommend that you use Lightning Experience on a desktop to access your personal Experience
settings. Available in: All editions
1. At the top of any Salesforce page, click your image. except Database.com.
2. Click Settings.
3. On the left side of the page, click a menu item to display its submenu, then click the item you want.
Tip: To quickly find a page, type the first few characters of its name in the Quick Find box. As you type, pages that match
your search terms appear in the menu. For example, to find the Personal Information page, type pers in the Quick Find
box.
Note: If you receive an error message regarding insufficient privileges when trying to access your personal settings, ask your
Salesforce admin to enable the Improved Setup User Interface option. If you’re an admin, from Setup, enter User Interface
in the Quick Find box, then select User Interface. Select Improved Setup User Interface, and click Save.
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Note: Depending on your org’s settings, if you change your email address, you can be prompted to confirm your identity. To
confirm your identity, make sure that you have access to your previously registered email account.
In Personal and Developer Editions, a Salesforce-specific tag line is added below your personal signature on all outbound emails.
Signatures aren’t added to emails that use Lightning email templates or email template builder templates. To include a signature, use
Sender merge fields in the template.
The signature field can include HTML links. To track the number of link clicks, add the <a> tag with the href attribute. The attribute
must start with http:// or https://.
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3. Click Save.
2. If you want to see a list of just the tabs for a specific app, select that app from the View Available in: All editions
drop-down list. except Database.com
3. Click Customize My Tabs.
4. In the Custom App drop-down list, select the app where you want the tab to appear.
For example, if you want the Ideas tab to appear in your Marketing app, select Marketing and the Ideas tab appears in that app
only.
5. To add or remove tabs and change their order, use the Add, Remove, Up, and Down arrows.
6. Click Save.
7. If you added a tab to an app you’re not actively using, open that app to see your new tab.
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• To add or remove related lists, select a related list and click the Add or Remove arrow.
Note: This setting may change if your administrator changes the page layout for a particular tab.
• To change the order of the related lists, select a related list title in the Selected List box, and click the Up or Down arrow.
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3. Click Save.
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Duration The meeting duration plus the buffer time is the total time needed for a meeting. The total time
affects which meeting slots are shown to users when you send them a scheduling link. It also
determines which slots are inserted when you select Next 3 Available Times or Email Meeting
Times in the dynamic activity composer.
Buffer Time How much time you want between meetings. Use this time to wrap up or prepare for the next
meeting.
Description An overview of your meeting. For example, enter “Discuss how our product can meet your needs.”
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Available in: Essentials, Group, Professional, Enterprise, Performance, Unlimited, Contact Manager, and Developer Editions
You can update all fields on your profile, except the Manager field. Only your Salesforce admin can update the Manager field.
Personalize the Navigation Bar in Lightning Experience Available in: both Salesforce
Customize an app’s navigation bar so that the user interface suits the unique way you work. Classic and Lightning
You can add and reorder items, and rename or remove items you’ve added. Experience
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Note: Temporary tabs open when you open an item that doesn’t have a parent object already in the navigation bar. For
example, if you open a contract record or contract list, it opens under Contracts if Contracts is available in the navigation bar.
If Contracts isn’t available, the record or list opens as a temporary tab.
The asterisk to the left of the item name indicates that it’s a temporary tab. The temporary tab is removed from the navigation bar
when you close it, log out of Salesforce, or switch to a different app.
SEE ALSO:
Personalized Navigation Considerations
Personalize the Navigation Menu for Lightning Console Apps
Customize a Lightning App Navigation Menu in the Salesforce Mobile App
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• Check what’s in your apps. Users can’t remove the items you include in the navigation bar, and they can’t personalize the navigation
bar when it contains more than 50 items. For example, if you include 32 items in an app’s navigation bar, users can add 18 more
personal items.
• Items that you add to an app’s navigation bar are added to the end of users’ personalized navigation bars in the order that you added
them.
• When you remove an item from an app, that item remains in your users’ personalized navigation bars, and users can then delete it.
• If you don’t want your users to personalize the navigation bar for a specific app, disable personalization. From Setup in Lightning
Experience, go to the App Manager. For the desired app, select App Options. Select Disable end user personalization of nav
items in this app.
• If you don’t want your users to personalize the navigation bar for any app, disable personalization. From Setup, enter User
Interface in the Quick Find box, then select User Interface. Select Disable Navigation Bar Personalization in Lightning
Experience. Salesforce recommends disabling navigation personalization by app instead of for the entire org.
• Control if temporary tabs are created when users access items outside of the app. From Setup in Lightning Experience, go to the
App Manager. Edit the desired app. On the App Options page, select Disable temporary tabs for items outside of this app.
• The tab’s dropdown menu includes an option to create an item. For example, create an account by selecting + New Account from
the Account tab’s dropdown menu. However, the New action doesn’t appear if:
– Users don’t have the create permission for the object
– The New action isn’t part of the search layout for the object’s list view
Tip: To avoid opening temporary tabs, add the appropriate parent objects to the navigation bar. For example, to prevent a contract
list or record from opening as a temporary tab, add Contracts to the navigation bar.
SEE ALSO:
Personalize the Navigation Bar in Lightning Experience
SEE ALSO:
Personalize the Navigation Bar in Lightning Experience
Favorites Considerations
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Favorites Considerations
Keep these considerations in mind when working with favorites.
EDITIONS
• Favorites support these types of content. You can have up to 200 favorites.
Available in: Lightning
– Record home for standard and custom objects, including Visualforce overrides of these
Experience
record views.
– Lists Available in: Essentials,
Contact Manager, Group,
– Dashboards
Professional, Enterprise,
– Reports Performance, Unlimited,
– Report and dashboard folders and Developer Editions
– Chatter groups
Note: You can’t favorite list views on the Reports, Dashboards, Files, and Notes tabs. You also can’t favorite Visualforce overrides
of list views and individual Chatter posts.
• You can’t favorite things in setup pages, but you can still access your favorites from these areas.
• Salesforce admins can’t edit or share favorites. Only individual users can manage favorites.
• You can add favorites only for specific versions of Knowledge articles. Favorites follow these rules for Knowledge articles.
– If the newest version is published, the favorite points to it.
– If the favorite currently points to an older, published version, and the newest version is a draft, the favorite continues to point
to the published version.
– If no published version exists, the favorite points to the latest draft version.
– If no published or draft version exists, the favorite points to the latest archived version.
– If the favorite is translated, the favorite points to the user’s primary language, regardless of the language preference of the user
who marked it as a favorite. If the favorite isn’t available in the user’s primary language, it points to the article’s primary language.
– A knowledge article can have only one favorite version. If the article is already marked as a favorite and a user tries to mark
another article version as the favorite, an error occurs, and the first version remains the favorite.
SEE ALSO:
Create Shortcuts to Salesforce Pages with Favorites
2. If you have access to multiple apps, select the app whose tabs you want to customize from the Available in: All editions
Custom Apps drop-down list. except Database.com
By default, you’ll see the tabs for the selected custom app that are set for your profile.
Note: The first tab that displays when you select an app may change if your administrator
changes the app’s default landing tab.
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3. If desired, add each tab you want to display and change the display order of the tabs you’ve selected.
4. Save your changes.
Available in: Essentials, Group, Professional, Enterprise, Performance, Unlimited, Contact Manager, and Developer Editions
4. Create a thumbnail image by dragging the dotted lines across the photo.
If the photo is for your profile and you’re a member of any Experience Cloud sites, you can select Show my photo on publicly
accessible pages. This option makes the photo visible to guest users viewing publicly accessible sites or pages that don’t
require login.
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Available in: Essentials, Group, Professional, Enterprise, Performance, Unlimited, Contact Manager, and Developer Editions
If someone can see a record that you own, then they can follow that record. People can follow only the records that they can see.
1. To follow a person or a record, click Follow on a person’s profile or a record page.
2. To follow the person or record from the menu, click What I Follow. If the Follow button has a in front of it, you have more
options. Click the button to see options for following the person or record and for adding it to a new or existing stream.
You can find streams in Lightning Experience on the Chatter home page.In Salesforce Classic, you can see the people and records
that you follow and the people who are following you. View the Following list on your profile, and filter the results by user or by an
object type.
When you follow people, you see their posts, comments, and likes in your feed. You can follow a maximum combined total of 500 people,
topics, and records. To see how many items you’re following, view the Following list on your profile.
To stop following a person from your profile, mouse over the follower, then, in the hover, mouse over the Following label. In Salesforce
Classic, click . In Lightning Experience, select Unfollow. When you stop following a person, their past posts continue to appear in
your What I Follow feed. But you don’t see any future updates from them.
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Follow Records
Follow records to see updates in your feed, including field changes, posts, tasks, and comments.
USER PERMISSIONS
Available in: Salesforce Classic and Lightning Experience To view a record:
• Read on the record
Available in: Essentials, Group, Professional, Enterprise, Performance, Unlimited, Contact
Manager, and Developer Editions
The field changes that you see in your feed depend on the fields that your administrator has configured for feed tracking. Updates to
encrypted custom fields don't appear in feeds.
To follow a record, click Follow on the record page. If the Follow button has a in front of it, you have more options. Click the button
to see options for following the record and for adding it to a new or existing stream. To follow the record from the menu, click What I
Follow.
Note: You can find streams in Lightning Experience on the Chatter page.
1. To automatically follow the records that you create, here’s what you do:
1. Click your profile avatar at the top of the page, and select Settings.
2. Enter My Feeds in the Quick Find box, and select My Feeds.
3. Select Automatically follow records I create.
You can auto-follow the records that you create, but you can’t auto-follow tasks, events, or dashboards.
When you follow a record, you see updates to the record in your feed. When you create a child record, the owner of the parent record
becomes the owner of the child record by default. But, despite your Automatically follow setting, you don’t automatically follow the
child record. Follow the child record explicitly, even when you’re the owner of the parent record.
You can follow a maximum combined total of 500 people, topics, and records. To see how many items you’re following, view the
Following list on your profile. In Lightning Experience, only the people who you follow and who are following you appear on your profile.
To stop following a record on the record page, mouse over the Following label. In Salesforce Classic, click . In Lightning Experience,
what you see depends on whether streams are enabled. If streams are enabled, click Following and deselect What I Follow. If streams
aren’t enabled, when you mouse over Following, you see Unfollow. Click Unfollow.
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Available in: Essentials, Group, Professional, Enterprise, Performance, Unlimited, Contact Manager, and Developer Editions
Schedule and Track Your Tasks and Events Available in: Salesforce
If you have Lightning Sync or Einstein Activity Capture installed, your Outlook or Google events Classic (not available in all
sync with Salesforce. Those synced events appear in the Calendar section. orgs)
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The Requested Meetings subtab lists meetings you requested but haven’t confirmed. The tab displays a maximum of 100 requested
meetings.
Hover over the chart to see the closed and committed opportunity amounts for different dates. If you hover over a date when an
opportunity was closed or set to a probability over 70%, a blue dot appears. Click the dot to see a window with more opportunity details.
The performance chart isn’t refreshed automatically. Click to make sure you have the most up-to-date view of your sales performance.
Note: The performance chart isn’t compatible with custom fiscal years. If your org has custom fiscal years enabled, your admin
can create custom reports and dashboards to display on the Home page.
SEE ALSO:
Lightning Experience Home Permissions and Settings
View Important Updates with the Assistant
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Up to 10 updates are shown at a time. Updates about leads appear before updates about opportunities. Opportunity updates are arranged
in order of close date.
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• If you have Einstein Activity Capture enabled, you won’t see the updates about opportunities with no open activity or no activity in
30 days.
• The Assistant doesn’t show tasks due today or overdue tasks that aren’t tied to an opportunity. The Today’s Tasks component is an
alternative that’s available on the Home page, and it shows a list of your tasks due today.
• If you don’t have access to activities on opportunities or if the opportunity pipeline is off, you instead see recommendations for
opportunities that have close dates over the next 90 days.
Buttons for different actions (such as New Task) automatically appear under most Salesforce configurations, but you may need to make
some updates if you’ve customized global actions or publisher layouts.
Actions need to exist as global actions in order to appear in the Assistant. From Setup, enter Global Actions in the Quick
Find box, then select Global Actions. Make sure the following actions are available. The Label can be anything, but we recommend
something simple, like New Task, New Event, or Email.
To display actions, they also need to be included in the related global publisher layouts. From Setup, enter Publisher Layouts
in the Quick Find box, then select Publisher Layouts. Select the relevant publisher layout, and make sure the actions are included
under the Mobile & Lightning Actions section.
SEE ALSO:
Lightning Experience Home Permissions and Settings
Track Your Sales Performance
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USER PERMISSIONS
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That action takes you to the list view, filtered by the view you selected.
For example, if you select New This Week on the Contacts tab, the list view shows you the new contacts that were added this week.
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• Select a list view from the dropdown menu. Pin a list with to set it as your default (1).
• Edit, delete, or create a list view using the List View Controls menu (2).
• Create records directly from a list view (3).
• View a list in different ways. Visualize list view data using charts with and refine which records are displayed using filters with
(4).
• Depending on the object, you can switch between the standard table view , the Kanban view , tile view , and split view
(5).
• Search a list view for the data you need (6).
• Edit a field directly from a list view with in the list view header or next to a record detail.
• Edit or delete a record by selecting the dropdown next to it.
Modify and create list views from your record home page with List View Controls . To change and reorder the columns displayed in
a list view, select Select Fields to Display. Fields correspond to columns in the final list view.
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Note: The Recently Viewed list view is the default pinned list for all objects.
Accounts
Campaigns
Cases
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Contacts
Leads
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Opportunities
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A icon indicates a pinned list. To pin a different list, select a different list view and pin it instead.
Note: Pinned lists are per user and don’t sync between browsers.
When creating record list views in Experience Cloud sites using Experience Builder, picking a default list view value other than
Default overrides the user’s pinned list. To let users set their own pinned lists, leave the list view as Default. Otherwise, users
see whatever list view was set as the default, even if they have a pinned list.
If you clear your browser's cache, the pin list returns to the default view.
• Depending on the object you view, certain fields aren’t searchable, but you can still filter or sort
on those fields. Want to see which fields aren’t searchable? Place your cursor in the list view search box and a tool tip shows you the
list of unsearchable fields. If you aren’t getting the search results that you expect, check the tooltip.
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• Generally, formula fields, lookup fields, derived fields, and non-text fields such as number and currency aren’t searchable.
• You can’t search in list view for external objects.
• You can’t use filter criteria on Person Account records.
• Search doesn’t find partial strings in a field label unless the string is at the beginning of the label or the string follows a space. This
rule applies to strings of words and numbers. For example:
– A search for the word commun finds Edge Communications, but a search for the string dge or cation doesn’t.
– A search for the number 12 finds Leads Report 12 but not Leads Report-12.
• Your admin can configure translated values for data labels and picklist values with Translation Workbench. If your org uses a non-English
UI, search the list view using the English term. Don’t use the non-English term. For example, your admin configures the English word
low to be translated to the French word basse. In the French UI, the list view shows basse, but if you search for “basse”, no records
are found. To find the record, search for “low”.
• Searching a recently viewed list doesn’t show results in the recently viewed order.
• Alphabet shortcuts aren’t available in Lightning Experience, but you can find the same results with a search for the letter.
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• Custom objects
• Documents
• Leads
• Opportunities
• Permission sets
• Price books
• Profiles
• Products
• Solutions
Printable View isn’t available for Events, Tasks, the Recently Viewed lists, or for related lists. Search results, selected records, and related
list quick filters aren’t used when generating the printable view.
Note: If the Printable View button doesn’t appear on a supported object, try disabling and re-enabling the printable view button.
In Lightning Experience, from the object management settings for the supported object, go to List View Button Layout. In Salesforce
Classic, from the object management settings for the supported object, go to Search Layouts, and then open the List View layout.
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SEE ALSO:
Trailhead: Work with List Views
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3. Enter a unique view name. The API and managed packages use this unique name.
The unique name must be unused in both public and private list views. Private list views are only searchable if you have access to
them.
4. Specify your filter criteria. If you want more filter fields, click Add Filter Logic... and then Add Row. You can have up to 10 fields in
your filter criteria.
Usually, you filter by additional fields. For example, this image shows a list view that displays only active accounts in the org whose
Billing City is equal to “San Francisco.”
Entering illogical filter criteria, such as someDate <= null, can cause unexpected behavior in a list view. When you use a list
view in a more strict context, such as with a Visualforce standard list controller, illogical filter criteria can cause errors.
When you select a long text area field, the list view displays up to 255 characters.
6. Click Save. The view appears in the View dropdown list so you can access it later.
Example: Here’s what your list view can look like when you’re done:
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You can change the number of records displayed per page using the dropdown on the lower-left corner of the list view.
As a Salesforce admin or a user with the “Manage Public List View” permission, you can hide the list view, so only you can see it. Click
Edit next to the list view name. Select Visible to certain groups of users. Choose the type of group or role from the dropdown list,
select the group or role from the list, then click Add.
Enterprise, Unlimited, Performance, and Developer Edition users can give access to a public group or role, including all users below that
role.
List views are visible to your Experience Cloud site users with Customer Community Plus, Partner Community, Lightning Platform Starter,
and Lightning Platform Plus licenses, if the Visible to all users setting is enabled for views of objects in site user profiles. To make list
views visible only to your Salesforce users, select Visible to certain groups of users. Then share the view with the All Internal Users
group or a selected set of internal groups and roles.
When implementing an Experience Cloud site, create custom views that contain only relevant information for site users. Then make
those views visible to site users by sharing them with the All Customer Portal Users group, or a set of site groups and roles.
When you enable digital experiences, list views shared with the Roles and Internal Subordinates sharing group are automatically shared
with the Roles, Internal, and Portal Subordinates group instead. If you don’t want external users to access these list views, update your
sharing settings.
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Depending on the type of field you selected, you can either select a value or enter one of your own. Filters support values only
between the minimum and maximum for a signed 32-bit integer, or between -2,147,483,648 and 2,147,483,648. A value outside
of this range disables that filter.
c. Click Done.
Note: Entering illogical filter criteria, such as someDate <= null, can cause unexpected behavior in a list view. When
you use a list view in a more strict context, such as with a Visualforce standard list controller, illogical filter criteria can cause
errors.
8. To add logic that further refines which records appear in your list view, click Filter Logic. To reference filters in your logic statement,
use the number assigned to each filter.
Important: Include every filter number in your logic statement. You can’t have filters that aren’t referenced in the logic
statement.
Operand Definition
AND Finds records that match both values.
1 AND 2
Let’s say a rep wants to see all opportunities created in July 2015 or later, that are either in late stages of negotiation or have high
probability to close, or both. Here are the filters.
a. Last Modified Date greater or equal 7/1/2015
b. Stage contains Proposal/Price Quote, Negotiation/Review
c. Probability greater or equal 50
Then the rep adds the logic statement: 1 AND (2 OR 3)
NOT doesn’t work with parenthetical expressions. For example, the expression 1 AND NOT (2 AND 3) evaluates as 1 AND
(NOT 2 AND 3). In the filter results, no records are returned when you’d expect to see some records.
9. Click Save. The view appears in the list view dropdown list so you can access it later. Pin a list view if you want it to load as the default
list for that object.
10. Optionally, choose and order the columns in your list view.
a. From the List View Controls menu, Select Fields to Display.
b. Use the arrows to add, remove, and reorder your visible fields.
c. Click Save.
In list views, you see only the data that you have access to. You see records that you own or have read or write access to, and records
shared with you. List views also include records owned by or shared with users in roles below you in the role hierarchy. You can see only
the fields that are visible according to your page layout and field-level security settings.
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To share a list view, select Sharing Settings from the List View Controls menu. From there, you can search through the roles in your
org to find the groups you want to share your list view with.
When you enable digital experiences, list views shared with the Roles and Internal Subordinates sharing group are automatically shared
with the Roles, Internal, and Portal Subordinates group instead. If you don’t want external users to access these list views, update your
sharing settings.
SEE ALSO:
Filter Reports by Values
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Example: Your sales team wants to compare accounts by number of employees to focus prospecting efforts on large corporations.
One of the reps creates a horizontal bar chart by selecting Sum as the aggregate type, Employees as the aggregate field, and
Account Name as the grouping field. The chart shows the number of employees at each account by account name.
Note: You can’t edit standard or preconfigured charts. You can only edit charts that you create. You can’t delete list view charts.
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Note: If you see Clone in the controls instead of Edit List Filters, you don’t have permission USER PERMISSIONS
to edit this list view. To clone a list view, select Clone, save the list view under a different
To edit list views:
name, and select sharing settings. Then edit the filters for the cloned list view, if needed.
• Read on the type of
2. Edit, remove, or add filters to view only the records that meet your filter criteria. You have record included in the list
AND Create and
different options depending on the field you want to filter and the operator you choose.
Customize List Views
3. From the Filter by dropdown menu, select an operator. For example, choose equals, starts To create, edit, or delete
with, or excludes. public list views:
4. For Value, make a selection or enter a value, then click Done. • Read on the type of
record included in the list
Filters support values only between the minimum and maximum for a signed 32-bit integer,
AND Create and
or between -2,147,483,648 and 2,147,483,648. A value outside of this range disables that filter. Customize List Views
AND Manage Public List
5. Adjust your filter logic if needed. The filter logic statement can’t reference a filter number that
Views
doesn’t exist.
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Note: NOT doesn’t work with parenthetical expressions. For example, the expression 1 AND NOT (2 AND 3) evaluates
as 1 AND (NOT 2 AND 3). In the filter results, no records are returned when you’d expect to see some records.
6. To apply the edited filters and update the current list view, click Save.
If you want to create a list view based on the filter changes you’ve made, click Save As instead.
Anyone with access to the list sees the results of your saved changes.
Example: You want to display a set of opportunities on a board rather than in a grid, but the list view includes records with
different record types. The Opportunities board can only display list views with records of a single record type. To make the view
displayable on a board, edit the filters on your list view. On the Filters panel, select Add Filter. Choose Opportunity Record Type
and the equals operator, then input the value of the record type you want. Your edited list view can now be displayed on the
board.
SEE ALSO:
Filter Operators Reference
Relative Date Filter Reference
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• Related list buttons (1) are in the upper-right corner of each related list card. If there are multiple buttons, use the pull-down menu
to access them. In some related lists, you can select multiple records and perform mass actions.
• Each item in a related list card includes a link (2) that opens the related record.
• Record-specific actions (3) are in the pull-down menu next to each related record.
• When related list cards are in a wide region on the page, each card displays up to six records. In a narrow region, related list cards
display up to three records. To see the full list of related records, select View All (4).
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Selecting View All opens the full related list. From there, you can add quick filters to the related list with . Related list quick filters act
similarly to list view filters except they aren’t saved, persist only throughout your current session, and can’t be shared. In some related
lists, you can also see the filters applied by your Salesforce administrator in the filter panel. Only your administrator can remove or change
these filters.
Note: Quick filters aren’t supported in all related lists. Unsupported lists include, but aren’t limited to, the Activity History, Open
Activities, Assets, File, Other Related People, and Attachments related lists. Quick filters also aren’t available for formula fields. For
Enterprise Territory Management users, quick filters are available only for Accounts and only in the Assigned Territories and Users
in Assigned Territories related lists.
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The related lists you can view and use, and how the lists appear, depend on:
• Your user permissions
• User interface and page layout customizations made by your Salesforce administrator
• Personal customizations you can make
A manual page refresh is sometimes required in order for your related lists to show the latest changes. A manual page refresh is needed
if:
• You create, update, or delete a related record with an Apex controller.
• You create, update, or delete a related record with a flow.
• Another user creates, updates, or deletes a related record.
• Emails are sent but not showing up in the related list.
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Lightning Experience
• View items you’ve recently searched for when you click in the search box (1).
• In the header, access your favorite pages by clicking the dropdown beside the star icon (2).
• In the navigation bar, see your recently accessed records for any item by selecting the dropdown next to the item name (3).
• From the home page, click the name of a recent item in the Recent Records component (4).
Salesforce Classic
The Recent Items section of the Salesforce sidebar lists up to 10 items that you’ve most recently added, edited, or viewed. To open an
item’s detail or edit page, click its link. To view more information about an item, hover your mouse over the link. If you don’t see any
information, your admin didn’t enable this feature.
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SEE ALSO:
Set Up a Kanban View
Considerations for Using Kanban Views
USER PERMISSIONS
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3. Group your records into columns representing the progress you want to track.
In Group By, select a field such as Stage or Opportunity Owner.
Kanban views don’t show records without a value in the selected Group By field.
4. Click Save.
SEE ALSO:
Create or Clone a List View in Lightning Experience
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4. Show or hide the details panel by clicking . You can edit key fields inline, without leaving the kanban view. If your Salesforce
admin has configured key fields and guidance for the step, the panel includes that information.
In a kanban view of opportunities, hover over an alert for a tip on moving the deal ahead, such as creating a task.
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SEE ALSO:
Considerations for Using Kanban Views
Contracts
• You can’t activate a contract in a kanban view.
• Kanban views don’t show columns for the standard contract status of Activated.
• You can’t group contracts by the Owner Expiration Notice field in a kanban view.
Knowledge
• You can only group Knowledge articles by owner in a kanban view. Grouping by the other standard knowledge fields isn’t supported.
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Leads
• You can’t convert a lead in a kanban view.
• Converted leads are hidden in kanban views.
Opportunities
• You can’t group opportunities by the Forecast Category field.
• Kanban cards on opportunities show alerts for overdue tasks, no open activities, and no activity in the last 30 days.
• When opportunities have no overdue tasks and Einstein Activity Capture is enabled, the alerts on Opportunity Kanban aren’t shown.
• Closed Lost opportunities are hidden in kanban views.
SEE ALSO:
Work in a Kanban View
• Kanban views show up to 200 cards. Kanban cards show up to four fields. Available in: Essentials,
• The fields at the top of the details panel in kanban views are the first four fields defined in the Group, Professional,
Enterprise, Performance,
compact layout.
Unlimited, and Developer
• Users can move cards in kanban views even if their access to the field used for column grouping Editions
is read-only.
• In the kanban details panel, users can't change a record’s record type or owner, regardless of
whether the path includes those fields.
• Suppose that the selected Group By and Summarize By fields are in a page layout assigned to a record type that the user can’t access.
The kanban view doesn’t show records assigned to that record type.
Subtabs
A subtab is created for a record type if both of the following conditions apply:
• The Group By and Summarize By fields are included in a page layout assigned to a record type that the user can access.
• At least one record is assigned to the record type.
Column Summaries
Users can’t create column summaries from rollup summary or formula fields.
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All Objects
SEE ALSO:
Work in a Kanban View
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List Views
• List views can’t be sorted by encrypted fields.
• List views don’t automatically refresh after inline edits.
• Your current locale determines a list view’s sort order.
• If you have more than 2 million Salesforce users, you can’t sort list views for the Users object.
• Text fields are sorted one character at a time, so text fields containing numbers can appear out of order. For example, Unit 1,000
comes before Unit 999 because 1 is before 9.
• Checkboxes appear only on lists with mass actions or inline editing. To enable inline editing, edit your list view filters so the list
contains only one record type.
• Sometimes all the results for a set of filters are too large to calculate and display in a reasonable time period. Use more filters and
more restrictive criteria so there are fewer records to check.
• Some list views support caching, which can show stale data in certain situations. To get the most up-to-date data, refresh the page.
• Creating list views, editing existing list views, and searching within list views aren’t supported when accessing Experience Cloud
from a mobile browser.
• Long text area fields, such as Description, aren’t supported as list view filter criteria or as columns in the list view.
Related Lists
• Some related lists support caching, which can show stale data in certain situations. To get the most up-to-date data, refresh the
page.
• Your Salesforce admin controls the initial sort order of related lists, but your preferences override theirs. If you sort the related list on
a different field or in a different order, your sort order is preserved the next time you view the list.
• When you go to certain related lists from a bookmark or shared URL, if you haven’t viewed the list before, you’re redirected to the
record detail page. To see the entire list, click View All again.
• If you can’t drag documents to add them to Files or Notes & Attachments related lists, ask your Salesforce admin to update the
related list type in the Lightning App Builder.
• To add quick filters on the Account Record Type field in Account related lists, enter field values manually. Account Record Type field
values aren’t available for selection in a dropdown list for related list quick filters.
• Long text area fields, such as Description, aren’t supported as filter criteria or as columns in the related list.
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• Editing a record’s field in a list view isn’t available. Instead, users can open the record, and then tap the Edit action.
• Selecting multiple records in list views isn’t supported.
• Mass actions, which are used to apply an action to multiple records at the same time, aren’t available.
• List views aren’t automatically updated. To see a new record, refresh the list by pulling down on the page.
• Kanban and split view aren’t supported.
• Some filter functionality for list views is limited on the Salesforce mobile app, including:
– You can’t see or change existing list view filters, but to further narrow records, you can apply additional filters. These filters affect
only your view in the mobile app and don’t impact list view data for other users.
– Each filter in the mobile app supports only one operator. These operators can’t be changed.
– Filters on checkbox, email, phone, picklist, text area, and URL field types use the equals operator. Filters on most other text field
types use the contains operator.
– To filter a list view by an address, you filter on individual address components. Most address field filters use the contains operator,
but Street field filters use the equals operator.
• The Notes and Attachments related list isn’t fully supported. There are several issues, including:
– Attachments added in the full Salesforce site aren’t guaranteed to open in the app, even if they appear in the related list. We
recommend using Files instead. Documents that are uploaded to the Files tab in the full site are then viewable.
– You can’t add or delete notes or attachments from the related list. But you can create a note and relate it to a record, using the
Note ( ) action in the action bar. This action isn’t available for all objects, depending on how your Salesforce admin configures
Notes.
– Notes and attachments on child records don’t appear on the parent record’s related list.
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• If a related list is sorted by a text area field, it doesn’t display any records.
SEE ALSO:
Considerations for Inline Editing in a List View in Lightning Experience
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1. Click the tab for the kind of record you want to create. To create an account while you create Available in: All editions
a contact, lead, or opportunity, click the icon next to the Account field in the Quick Create
form you’re using. USER PERMISSIONS
2. Enter values in the fields. Fields with a red bar ( ) are required fields. To create records:
Salesforce Help includes field definitions for most objects. Search the help for the object name • Create on the object for
+ “fields”. For example, if you’re creating or editing an account record, look up “Account Fields” the kind of record you’re
in Salesforce Help. creating
3. Click Save.
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Update Records
Many Salesforce objects offer the convenience of inline editing for records. Updating custom object
EDITIONS
records is similar to updating standard object records. Whether you can access and change a custom
object record, depends on your permissions. Available in: both Salesforce
Not all fields on all objects can be edited inline. To find out whether a field supports inline editing, Classic (not available in all
hover over it, and look for a pencil icon ( ). orgs) and Lightning
Experience
1. Find and open the record you want to edit.
2. Click Edit. Available in: All editions
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If other people make inline edits to the same fields on a record simultaneously, only the most recent edit is saved.
Important: Where possible, we changed noninclusive terms to align with our company Available in: Lightning
value of Equality. We maintained certain terms to avoid any effect on customer Experience
implementations. Available in: All editions
General
Not all fields on records in a list view or multiline layout view can be inline edited. To find out whether a field supports inline editing,
hover over it and look for the pencil . Non-editable cells have a lock . When making inline edits in a list view, required fields can’t
be left blank.
• If a list view or multiline view contains more than one record type, it can’t be inline edited. To enable inline editing, edit your list
view filters so it contains only one record type.
• Inline edit doesn’t apply to components in the small region.
• You can inline edit in Recently Viewed or Team list views that are predefined to contain only one record type. You can also edit tasks
on the tasks object home page even though they’re not in a list view.
• You can't inline edit in split view.
• If Enable Automated Account Fields in Account Settings is enabled, you can't inline edit Account Name .
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• Fields added to a Dynamic Forms-based Lightning page. Only fields that are added to the page layout are inline editable.
Opportunity • – Amount
– Expected Revenue
– Forecast Category
– Probability
– Quantity
Task • Name
• Private
Delete Records
For some kinds of objects, deleting one record affects other, related records.
EDITIONS
Before you delete a record, check whether there are related records. For example, if you delete an
account or contact, all associated assets are also deleted. Available in: both Salesforce
Classic (not available in all
1. Find and open the record you want to delete.
orgs) and Lightning
2. Click Delete. Experience
USER PERMISSIONS
To delete records:
• Delete on the object for
the kind of record you’re
deleting
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Recycle Bin
All users can view and restore records in their own Recycle Bin. If you have admin permissions, you
EDITIONS
can access and manage your own Recycle Bin and the org Recycle Bin, including permanently
deleting records. Available in: both Salesforce
Classic (not available in all
View and Restore Your Recycle Bin in Lightning Experience orgs) and Lightning
Access your deleted records in the Lightning Experience Recycle Bin. The Recycle Bin is a list Experience
view that allows you to sort and filter to find the records you need. Available in: Group,
Manage the Recycle Bin in Lightning Experience Essentials, Professional,
As an admin, you have access to your own Recycle Bin and the Salesforce org’s Recycle Bin. You Enterprise, Performance,
Unlimited, and Developer
can view, restore, and permanently delete records in the Org Recycle Bin and your own Recycle
Editions
Bin. Use list view functionality to sort and filter to find the records you need.
View, Restore, and Manage the Recycle Bin in Salesforce Classic
The Recycle Bin contains items that were deleted. Salesforce admins can see all deleted data across the entire org. The Recycle Bin
is available in the left sidebar on the Home page.
Considerations for Restoring Records from the Recycle Bin
Know what happens to a record’s associations when you restore it from the Recycle Bin.
USER PERMISSIONS
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3. Select the items you want to restore or permanently delete, and click Restore (2) or Delete (3).
4. To permanently delete all items in the org recycle bin, click Empty Org Recycle Bin (4).
A window displays confirming that you want to empty the Recycle Bin.
Note: You can have only one empty process running at a time. The processing time varies depending on the number of
records there are in your org’s Recycle Bin. From Setup, in the Quick Find box, enter View Setup Audit Trail, and
then select View Setup Audit Trail to check the status of completed empty processes.
SEE ALSO:
Considerations for Restoring Records from the Recycle Bin
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Note: Records in the Recycle Bin don’t count against your org’s storage usage. However, USER PERMISSIONS
Salesforce uses your storage limit to determine the maximum number of records allowed in
To view and recover your
your Recycle Bin. Your Recycle Bin can contain 25 times your MB storage capacity as records. deleted records:
For example, an org with a storage allocation of 2,000MB (2GB) can have 50,000 records in • Read on the records in
the Recycle Bin: 25 x 2,000 = 50,000 records. the Recycle Bin
To view and recover records
Search for Items in the Recycle Bin deleted by other users:
• Modify All Data
1. Choose My Recycle Bin or All Recycle Bin. My Recycle Bin searches for matches only in the
items you deleted. To recover deleted public
tags:
2. Enter your search terms. Search terms are treated as separate words with an implied AND • Tag Manager
between them. For example, searching for bob jones returns items with bob and jones together
To purge the Recycle Bin:
but not bob smith whose email address is [email protected]. An implied wildcard is appended
• Modify All Data
to your search terms so searching for bob returns any bob or bobby. Searches look for matches
in the field displayed in the Name column of the Recycle Bin such as lead Name, Case
Number, Contract Number, or Product Name.
Note: Some search features, including stemming and synonyms, are not available in the Recycle Bin search.
3. Click Search.
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• Tags
• An article's categories, publication state, and assignments
Note: Salesforce only restores lookup relationships that have not been replaced. For example, if an asset is related to a different
product prior to the original product record being undeleted, that asset-product relationship is not restored.
Note: Salesforce restores only lookup relationships that have not been replaced. For example, if an asset is related to a different
product prior to the original product record being restored, that asset-product relationship is not restored.
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Currency
In most Salesforce editions, the format and currency type you can use for currency fields, such as Quota or Annual Revenue, are determined
by the Currency Locale setting for your company. In Group, Professional, Enterprise, Unlimited, and Performance Edition orgs that use
multiple currencies, the format and currency type are determined by the Currency field in the record you’re creating or editing.
Tip: In Salesforce Classic, when you enter a monetary amount (or any other type of number), you can use the shortcuts k, m, or
b to indicate thousands, millions, or billions. For example, when you enter 50k it appears as 50,000. Uppercase shortcuts are
also supported. In Lightning Experience, you can use the same shortcuts, in addition to t to indicate trillions. However, these
shortcuts do not work for filter criteria.
Phone Numbers
When you enter phone numbers in various phone fields, Salesforce preserves whatever phone number format you enter. However, if
your Locale is set to English (United States) or English (Canada), 10-digit phone numbers and 11-digit numbers that start with “1” are
formatted as (800) 555-1212 when you save the record.
Tip:
• If you do not want the parentheses-space-hyphen formatting ((800) 555-1212) for a 10- or 11-digit number, enter a
“+” before the number. For example: +49 8178 94 07-0.
• If your 10- and 11-digit phone numbers have Salesforce’s automatic format, you might need to enter the parentheses when
specifying filter conditions. For example: Phone starts with (415).
Print Records
You can print Salesforce records from most detail pages.
The Printable View action is supported on Lightning Experience for desktop only. It isn’t supported on mobile devices.
• In Salesforce Classic, click Printable View in the upper right corner of most detail pages.
• In console apps for Salesforce Classic, click the print icon to open a record's printable view.
• In Lightning Experience, click Printable View in the action menu .
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Printable View is available for a select set of objects. For more information, see Print List Views. If you previously customized the
Salesforce Mobile and Lightning Experience Actions section of a page layout, you have to add Printable View to that section manually
for it to appear.
Clone Records
Create a record by making a copy of a similar record. When you clone certain records, you can also
EDITIONS
clone related records.
1. Open a record, and select the Clone or Clone with Related action.
Clone action available in
Only fields from the record’s page layout are cloned. Clone with Related isn’t available in the
Lightning Experience,
Salesforce mobile app. If the record type of the cloned record isn’t available in your profile or
Salesforce Classic (not
permission sets, but other record types are available, choose the type you want. Otherwise,
available in all orgs), and the
your default record type is applied. Salesforce mobile app in:
2. If you selected Clone with Related, select the related records that you want to carry over to the Contact Manager, Group,
new record. Click Next. Professional, Enterprise,
Performance, Unlimited,
Note: The related records that you select can’t total more than 999. Related records are and Developer Editions
cloned in batches of up to 200. For example, if you clone a record with 500 related records,
it’s cloned in three batches. Validation rules, Apex triggers, and workflow are applied Clone with Related action
separately to each batch. If a related record includes a custom field configured to contain available in Lightning
Experience in: Professional,
a unique value, you must delete the value before cloning the record.
Enterprise, Performance,
3. Enter or change other information in the new record. Unlimited, and Developer
If the record you’re cloning or a related record contains a field you don’t have access to, the Editions
field in the new record is blank. If the record you’re cloning contains a field you have read-only
access to, the field in the new record is blank. However, if a related record contains a field you USER PERMISSIONS
have read-only access to, the field value is copied into the new record.
To clone a record with or
4. Save the new record.
without related records:
• Create on the object
SEE ALSO: AND
Considerations for Cloning Opportunities Read on the record
Considerations for Cloning Products you’re cloning
Field Handling for Cloning Campaigns with Related Records
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3. To notify the new owner, select the Send Notification Email checkbox.
USER PERMISSIONS
The “From” email address displayed in the notification is your return email address set in your To transfer single records:
email settings. • Transfer Record
For cases in Professional, Enterprise, Unlimited, Performance, and Developer Edition organizations,
the Case Assigned Template setting specified in Support Settings determines the
email text. For other records, the email text is generated automatically and cannot be customized.
4. Depending on your user permissions and the type of object you’re transferring, you can select which related items to transfer.
5. Save your changes.
If your organization-wide default sharing for an object is set to Private, you see an error after changing the owner of a record for that
object. The error occurs because you no longer have access to the record. This error is safe to ignore.
SEE ALSO:
Considerations for Changing a Record’s Owner
Available in: Salesforce Classic (not available in all orgs on page 10) and Lightning Experience
Available in: Essentials, Group, Professional, Enterprise Performance, Unlimited, Developer, and Contact Manager Editions
Note: Automatic triggers that change record ownership can affect which object details users see. In some cases, a user can enter
information that is then immediately hidden from them if an automatic trigger changes the object's owner.
Important: Workflow rules that update owners don’t also transfer associated items. To ensure transfer, click Change next to the
owner’s name in a record and make your transfer selections.
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Custom object • Open activities that are owned by the original record owner (Salesforce Classic only)
• Attachments and notes in Salesforce Classic
Lead • Attachments and notes in Salesforce Classic are transferred. Files in Lightning aren’t.
• Open activities that are owned by the original record owner (except when you change
lead ownership using the Assign using active assignment rule checkbox)
Opportunity • Open activities that are owned by the current opportunity owner are transferred. Closed
activities aren’t transferred.
• When you transfer ownership of a related account, you have the option to transfer open
opportunities owned by others. This option transfers ownership of all of those
opportunities, regardless of your access to them.
• Opportunity team members only when the Keep Opportunity Team option is selected.
When opportunity teams are transferred, opportunity splits, opportunity product splits,
custom field values, and any notes on splits are preserved and split percentages are
assigned to the new owner.
• Attachments and notes in Salesforce Classic are transferred. Files in Lightning aren’t.
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Note: You can't transfer events to which you’ve been invited and don't own.
SEE ALSO:
Change a Record’s Owner
Admins can enable or disable topics for most objects, including custom objects.
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Note: All topic names are public and appear in search results, but the visibility of records Available in: Essentials,
that have topics isn’t affected. Group, Professional,
Enterprise, Performance,
• In the topic editor, start typing your text. As you type, you can pick a topic from the list of Unlimited, and Developer
suggestions or keep typing to create your own unique topic. Press Enter to add the topic to the Editions
record.
Closing square brackets ( ] ) aren’t supported in topic names. Other punctuation, symbols, and
USER PERMISSIONS
separators are supported.
To add new topics to a
record
• Read and Edit on the
record
AND
Create Topics
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If your administrator enabled feed-based layouts, click Add Topics in the sidebar of the feed view.
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2. In the topic editor, start typing your text. As you type, you can pick a topic from the list of suggestions, or keep typing to create your
own unique topic. To add more than one topic, type a comma after each topic.
Commas ( , ) and closing square brackets ( ] ) automatically end a topic. Other punctuation, symbols, and separators are supported
in topic names.
Records can have up to 100 topics.
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Tag Records
Use tags to group records from various objects by a common theme. Add tags in a search criteria
EDITIONS
to find information faster and more intuitively.
1. In Salesforce Classic, Chatter must be enabled to access the Records tab of the topic detail page. Available in: Salesforce
On the top right corner of the record detail page, click Add Tags or Edit Tags. Classic (not available in all
orgs)
2. In the Personal Tags or Public Tags text boxes, enter comma-separated lists of
the tags that you want to associate with the record. Available in: all editions
Tags can only contain letters, numbers, spaces, dashes, and underscores, and must contain at except Database.com
least one letter or number. Enter up to 10 new tags that have already been defined when
displayed as auto-complete suggestions. The list of suggestions changes to show only those USER PERMISSIONS
tags that match the prefix you’ve entered.
To edit tags on a record:
There are limits on the number of personal and public tags you can create and apply to records.
• Read on the record
If you exceed the number of tags, any new tags you add aren’t save. Go to the Tags page and
delete infrequently used tags. To rename or delete public
tags:
Example: For example, you could tag contacts and leads you met at a conference with the • Tag Manager
phrase User Conference 2011. You can then search for the User Conference 2011 tag and click
that tag in search results to retrieve those records.
USER PERMISSIONS
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Local names do not affect the user’s language settings. Depending on your page layout settings, they can both be displayed on the
detail or edit page.
Note: When viewed from a report, empty local name fields display different values depending on whether the report is standard
or custom. If the local name field is empty:
• Standard reports display the value from the standard name field. So if First Name (Local) is empty, the value for
First Name is displayed.
• Custom reports display an empty value. So if First Name (Local) is empty, the field is displayed empty.
Run a Report
Reports give you access to the data your organization has accumulated over time, enabling you to make informed decisions.
Sort Report Results
Sort a report by the data in a particular column by clicking that column’s heading. Clicking a column header sorts data according to
that column’s ascending order: text is sorted from A to Z, numerical data is sorted from lowest to highest, and time/date data is
sorted from earliest to latest.
Filter Your Report
Does your report give you more data than you need? Use filters to pare down your report until it only shows the data that you want.
Create Filters that Use Special Picklist Values
Use special picklist values for your search criteria. These special picklists have values of either True or False.
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Run a Report
Reports give you access to the data your organization has accumulated over time, enabling you to
EDITIONS
make informed decisions.
To run a report, find it on the Reports tab and click the report name. Most reports run automatically Available in: both Salesforce
when you click the name. Classic (not available in all
orgs) and Lightning
1. Click the Reports tab.
Experience
2. Find the report you want to run and click the report name.
Available in: Essentials,
If you’re already viewing a report, click Run Report to run it. Group, Professional,
Enterprise, Performance,
Unlimited, and Developer
Editions
USER PERMISSIONS
To run reports:
• Run Reports
To schedule reports:
• Schedule Reports
To create, edit, and delete
reports:
• Create and Customize
Reports
AND
Report Builder
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USER PERMISSIONS
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2. Click Edit.
3. Select the Filters tab. USER PERMISSIONS
4. Click Add Filter and select a Field Filter from the list. In our account filter example, you’d select To create, edit, and delete
Industry. Which filters are available in your organization depends on the fields that your reports:
administrator set up for account records. • Create and Customize
Reports
5. Select an operator for the filter and type the filter value in the next field. In our account filter
AND
example, you’d select equals and type Banking.
Report Builder
6. Click Apply.
Now your report shows Banking industry Accounts in California, Arizona, and Nevada with an annual To create custom list views:
revenue above $1,000,000.00. • Read on the type of
record included in the list
To create, edit, or delete
Filter Your Report (Salesforce Classic)
public list views:
Use filters to pare down your report until it only shows the data that you want. • Manage Public List
Views
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Note: If you are creating filter criteria for a report or list view, the lookup icon automatically The available fields vary
displays when you choose to filter on one of the special picklists. Click the lookup icon to according to which
choose the value True or False. Alternatively, you can manually enter True or Salesforce Edition you have.
False in the filter criteria.
These are the available fields and their values:
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Accounts, leads, and opportunities: True The account is a partner account, or the lead or opportunity
Partner Account owner is a partner user.
Activities: All-day True Applies only to events, not tasks. The event is marked as an all
day event.
Activities: Closed True Applies only to tasks, not events. The task has been closed, that
is, the task Status field has a “Closed” value.
Activities: Event Invitation True Applies only to events, not tasks. The event is the meeting invite
(Only for reports) sent to another user for a multi-person event.
False The event is the original multi-person event assigned to the event
host.
Campaigns: Active True Campaign is active and can be chosen from various campaign
picklists.
Cases: Closed True The case is closed, that is, the case Status field has a “Closed”
value.
Cases: Escalated True Case has been automatically escalated via your org’s escalation
rule.
Cases: New Self-Service True Case has a new comment added by a Self-Service user.
Comment
False Case does not have a new Self-Service comment.
Cases: Open True The case is open, that is, the case Status has a value that is
(Only for reports) not equivalent to “Closed.”
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Contacts: Do Not Call True The contact cannot be included in a call recipient list.
Contacts: Email Opt Out True The contact cannot be included in a mass email recipient list.
Contacts: Fax Opt Out True The contact cannot be included in a fax recipient list.
Contacts: Self-Service Active True The contact is enabled to log in to your Self-Service portal.
(Only for reports) False The contact is not enabled for Self-Service.
Leads: Do Not Call True The lead cannot be included in a call recipient list.
Leads: Email Opt Out True The lead cannot be included in a mass email recipient list.
Leads: Fax Opt Out True The lead cannot be included in a mass fax recipient list.
Leads: Unread True The lead has not yet been viewed or edited by the owner since
it was assigned to that user.
False The lead has been viewed or edited at least once by the owner
since it was assigned.
Opportunities: Closed True The opportunity is closed, that is, the Stage field has a value
of the type Closed/Won or Closed/Lost.
Opportunities: Has Products True Products have been added to the opportunity.
Opportunities: Primary True The partner for the opportunity has been marked as the primary
(Only for Partner Opportunities report) partner.
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Opportunities: Private True The opportunity owner has checked the Private box on the
opportunity edit page.
Opportunities: Won True The opportunity is closed and won, that is, the Stage field has
a value of the type Closed/Won.
False The opportunity has not been won. The Stage field may have
a value of the type Open or Closed/Lost.
Products: Active True Product is active and can be added to opportunities in Enterprise,
Unlimited, and Performance Edition orgs.
Product: Has Quantity Schedule True Product has a default quantity schedule.
Product: Has Revenue Schedule True Product has a default revenue schedule.
Solutions: Reviewed True The solution has been reviewed, that is, the solution Status
field has a “Reviewed” value.
Solutions Out of Date True The translated solution has not been updated to match the
master solution with which it is associated.
False The translated solution has been updated to match the master
solution with which it is associated.
Users: Offline User True User has access to use Connect Offline.
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Note: The special picklists you can view are only those that are visible in your page layout and field-level security settings.
Operator Uses
equals Use for an exact match. For example, “Created equals today.”
less than Use for results that are less than the value you enter. For example, “Quota less than 20000” returns records
where the quota field ranges from 0 to 19,999.99.
greater than Use when you want results that exceed the value you enter. For example, “Quota greater than 20000” returns
records where the quota amount begins at 20,000.01.
less or equal Use for results that match or are less than the value that you enter.
greater or equal Use for results that match or exceed the value that you enter.
not equal to Shows results that don’t have the value that you enter. This operator is useful for eliminating empty fields. For
example, “Email not equal to <blank>.”
Note: If evaluating more than one value, none of the specified values can exist on the record. For
example, if you specify not equal to A & C, only records where the value is neither A nor C are
returned.
contains Use for fields that include your search string, but sometimes also include other information. For example,
“Account contains California” finds California Travel, California Pro Shop, and Surf California. Keep in mind that
if you enter a short search string, it can match a longer word. For example, “Account contains pro” finds California
Pro Shop and Promotions Corporation. This operator isn’t case-sensitive except when it's used in roll-up summary
(RSF) field filters. For example, you have this filter criteria for an RSF field: Opportunity name contains widgets.
The query that creates the RSF field value only returns records with a name value that contains widgets. Records
with name values that contain Widgets or WIDGETS aren’t included.
does not contain Eliminates records that don’t contain the value you enter. For example, “Mailing Address Line 2 does not contain
P. O. Box.”
Note: When specifying filter criteria on roll-up summary fields, does not contain uses “or”
logic on comma-separated values. On list views, reports, and dashboards, does not contain
uses “and” logic.
This operator isn’t case-sensitive except when it's used in roll-up summary (RSF) field filters.
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Operator Uses
starts with Use when you know what your value starts with, but not the exact text. This operator is a narrower search term
than “contains.” For example, if you enter “Account starts with California,” you find California Travel and California
Pro Shop, but not Surf California.
includes Available when you choose a multi-select picklist as the selected field. Use this operator to find records that
include one or more of the values that you enter.
For example, if you enter “Interests includes hockey, football, baseball,” you find records that have only hockey
selected, and records that have two or three of the values entered. Results don’t include partial matches of
values.
excludes Available when you choose a multi-select picklist as the selected field. Use this operator to find records that
don’t contain any values that match the ones entered.
For example, if you enter “Interests exclude wine, golf,” your report lists records that contain any other values
from that picklist, including values that are blank. Results don’t include partial matches of values.
Enter values on separate lines.
between Available for dashboard filters only. Use to filter on ranges of values. For each range, the filter returns results
that are greater than or equal to the minimum value and less than the maximum value.
For example, if you enter “Number of Employees from 100 through 500,” your results include accounts with
100 employees up to those with 499 employees. Accounts with 500 employees aren’t included in the results.
within Available when you create list views based on a geolocation custom field. Shows results that are within the
specified radius from a fixed latitude and longitude. For example, if you enter “Warehouse location within 50
miles 37.775° –122.418°,” your list view includes all warehouses within a 50–mile radius of San Francisco,
California.
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To edit and delete dashboards you didn’t create in public Legacy Folder Sharing
folders: Run Reports, Manage Dashboards AND View All Data
Enhanced Folder Sharing
Manage Dashboards in Public Folders
Create a dashboard to show data from your report with a visual component, for example a pie chart.
Let’s say you have a report that shows Banking industry Accounts in California, Arizona, and Nevada with an annual revenue above
$1,000,000.00. Now you want to visualize this report for your team with a pie chart. Here’s how you do that.
1. In Lightning Experience, click the Dashboards tab. Or, in Salesforce Classic, click the Reports tab.
2. Click New Dashboard.
3. In Lightning Experience, click + Component. Then, select a report, and display it as a donut chart. Or, in Salesforce Classic, click the
pie chart icon in the Components tab and drag it to one of the columns in the layout. Then, click the Data Sources tab and expand
the report list, find your report, and drag and drop it on the pie chart.
4. Add a title for your chart.
5. Click Save.
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Field Description
Body Text of the note. Can hold up to 32 KB of data.
Private Checkbox to indicate that note is only accessible to the owner and
administrators. For administrators to view private notes, they need
the “View All Data” permission; to edit them, they need the “Modify
All Data” permission.
Attachment Fields
Field Description
Description Description of the uploaded file. Maximum of 500 characters.
Share With Connections Checkbox to indicate that the attachment is shared with
connections when the parent record is shared. This checkbox is
only available if Salesforce to Salesforce is enabled, the parent
record is shared, and the attachment is public.
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• Chatter External users see the built-in Lightning Blue theme only.
• Even if you haven’t selected the option to override themes in the App Manager, your app’s brand image and color always override
the Lightning Lite and Lightning Blue themes.
• For optimum visibility, we use an accessible version of your brand colors. To use your own colors in links and branded buttons.
select the Override accessibility brand color checkbox. You can’t override accessible brand colors in the Global Navigation
Divider and status and flow components.
Warning: Selecting the Override accessibility brand color checkbox can cause accessibility issues in some areas of
the UI. This can make text harder to read.
SEE ALSO:
Create Lightning Apps
I only want my users to have access to certain features. Can I disable some of the
features offered in the Lightning Extension?
Yes. To disable features, from Setup, in the Quick Find box, enter Lightning Extension, and then select Lightning Extension.
From there, you can control access to individual features, or access to the extension itself. Changes can take up to 24 hours to take effect.
SEE ALSO:
External Link: Download the Lightning Extension from the Chrome Web Store
Component Customization (Beta) FAQ
Link Grabber (Beta) FAQ
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SEE ALSO:
Try New Features with the Lightning Extension for Chrome
External Link: Download the Lightning Extension from the Chrome Web Store
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SEE ALSO:
Try New Features with the Lightning Extension for Chrome
External Link: Download the Lightning Extension from the Chrome Web Store
267
INDEX
A K
Apps Keyboard shortcuts
opening 132 in Salesforce Classic 85
Assistant
Lightning Experience S
198 Salesforce administrator
assistant 198 can’t see features 150
Setup
user 179, 185, 196
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