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Salesforce donations platform

Salesforce Donations Platform

Achieve Success Now with Salesforce for Nonprofits and the Salesforce donations platform: “The ability to use Salesforce to gain a full view and understanding of the multiple ways that people come to us – that is what ultimately spoke to how we wanted to achieve our mission” Jeffrey Klein, COO How Nonprofits Harness Salesforce for Fundraising: Success Story: Atlanta Mission’s Digital Fundraising Transformation: Atlanta Mission, with over 80 years of experience in homelessness eradication, transformed its fundraising strategy: Embracing Salesforce for Nonprofits empowers organizations to navigate challenges, engage donors effectively, and drive impactful fundraising initiatives. The result has been savings of nearly $10,000 annually. “The tech stack that we’ve implemented through Salesforce has enabled us to know our donors better and to respond relationally to their concerns, needs, and interests. As a result, since the implementation of our new systems, we’ve seen revenue growth in our digital channels of 26% year over year.” James Barrell and Bonnie Beauchamp, Atlanta Mission team members Like2 Related Posts 50 Advantages of Salesforce Sales Cloud According to the Salesforce 2017 State of Service report, 85% of executives with service oversight identify customer service as a Read more How Travel Companies Are Using Big Data and Analytics In today’s hyper-competitive business world, travel and hospitality consumers have more choices than ever before. With hundreds of hotel chains Read more Integration of Salesforce Sales Cloud to Google Analytics 360 Announced In November 2017, Google unveiled a groundbreaking partnership with Salesforce, outlining their commitment to develop innovative integrations between Google Analytics Read more Best CPQ for Salesforce Many businesses, once they select the best Salesforce CPQ tool for their business, turn to an implementation partner like Tectonic Read more

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Ethical and Responsible AI

Ethical and Responsible AI

Responsible AI and ethical AI are closely connected, with each offering complementary yet distinct principles for the development and use of AI systems. Organizations that aim for success must integrate both frameworks, as they are mutually reinforcing. Responsible AI emphasizes accountability, transparency, and adherence to regulations. Ethical AI—sometimes called AI ethics—focuses on broader moral values like fairness, privacy, and societal impact. In recent discussions, the significance of both has come to the forefront, encouraging organizations to explore the unique advantages of integrating these frameworks. While Responsible AI provides the practical tools for implementation, ethical AI offers the guiding principles. Without clear ethical grounding, responsible AI initiatives can lack purpose, while ethical aspirations cannot be realized without concrete actions. Moreover, ethical AI concerns often shape the regulatory frameworks responsible AI must comply with, showing how deeply interwoven they are. By combining ethical and responsible AI, organizations can build systems that are not only compliant with legal requirements but also aligned with human values, minimizing potential harm. The Need for Ethical AI Ethical AI is about ensuring that AI systems adhere to values and moral expectations. These principles evolve over time and can vary by culture or region. Nonetheless, core principles—like fairness, transparency, and harm reduction—remain consistent across geographies. Many organizations have recognized the importance of ethical AI and have taken initial steps to create ethical frameworks. This is essential, as AI technologies have the potential to disrupt societal norms, potentially necessitating an updated social contract—the implicit understanding of how society functions. Ethical AI helps drive discussions about this evolving social contract, establishing boundaries for acceptable AI use. In fact, many ethical AI frameworks have influenced regulatory efforts, though some regulations are being developed alongside or ahead of these ethical standards. Shaping this landscape requires collaboration among diverse stakeholders: consumers, activists, researchers, lawmakers, and technologists. Power dynamics also play a role, with certain groups exerting more influence over how ethical AI takes shape. Ethical AI vs. Responsible AI Ethical AI is aspirational, considering AI’s long-term impact on society. Many ethical issues have emerged, especially with the rise of generative AI. For instance, machine learning bias—when AI outputs are skewed due to flawed or biased training data—can perpetuate inequalities in high-stakes areas like loan approvals or law enforcement. Other concerns, like AI hallucinations and deepfakes, further underscore the potential risks to human values like safety and equality. Responsible AI, on the other hand, bridges ethical concerns with business realities. It addresses issues like data security, transparency, and regulatory compliance. Responsible AI offers practical methods to embed ethical aspirations into each phase of the AI lifecycle—from development to deployment and beyond. The relationship between the two is akin to a company’s vision versus its operational strategy. Ethical AI defines the high-level values, while responsible AI offers the actionable steps needed to implement those values. Challenges in Practice For modern organizations, efficiency and consistency are key, and standardized processes are the norm. This applies to AI development as well. Ethical AI, while often discussed in the context of broader societal impacts, must be integrated into existing business processes through responsible AI frameworks. These frameworks often include user-friendly checklists, evaluation guides, and templates to help operationalize ethical principles across the organization. Implementing Responsible AI To fully embed ethical AI within responsible AI frameworks, organizations should focus on the following areas: By effectively combining ethical and responsible AI, organizations can create AI systems that are not only technically and legally sound but also morally aligned and socially responsible. Content edited October 2024. Like Related Posts Salesforce OEM AppExchange Expanding its reach beyond CRM, Salesforce.com has launched a new service called AppExchange OEM Edition, aimed at non-CRM service providers. Read more Salesforce Jigsaw Salesforce.com, a prominent figure in cloud computing, has finalized a deal to acquire Jigsaw, a wiki-style business contact database, for Read more Service Cloud with AI-Driven Intelligence Salesforce Enhances Service Cloud with AI-Driven Intelligence Engine Data science and analytics are rapidly becoming standard features in enterprise applications, Read more Health Cloud Brings Healthcare Transformation Following swiftly after last week’s successful launch of Financial Services Cloud, Salesforce has announced the second installment in its series Read more

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Salesforce Success Story

Case Study: Manufacturing – Sales/ Service/Revenue/Commerce/Experience Clouds

After doing their initial Sales Cloud implementation and SAP integration over 12 years ago, this company was only leveraging Salesforce in a basic capacity, being a predominantly SAP and Microsoft shop. Fast forward to about a year ago, with a change in leadership, Salesforce became the desired platform to build and expand on. With the need to support multiple lines of business, provide more accurate forecasting and quoting and close the gap between sales and supply chain there was a lot to tackle both immediately and long term.

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Salesforce Success Story

Case Study: Grants Management-Public Sector Utility-Salesforce Public Sector Solutions and Experience Cloud

Leading provider of branded, designed solutions (laminate) for commercial and residential customers worldwide.  The company has been surfacing spaces for 110 years. Client struggled with no real ability to see a 360 degree view of the business.

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Salesforce's Get Ready for AI Report

Salesforce’s Get Ready for AI Report

Welcome to the future of business – Get Ready for AI is for analytics and data leaders. The tools for those who are interested in positioning themselves for AI success. From strategy to governance, you’ll learn what’s top-of-mind with other thought leaders, and see what actions you can take to be a more effective leader in a rapidly changing technology and business environment.  Salesforce’s Get Ready for AI Report This insight introduces four topics that are essential for data leaders beginning their AI journey: Access the full report here. Salesforce’s Get Ready for AI Report Data is at the center of any AI initiative, and organizations that are leading the way are focused on ensuring their data sources are current, authoritative, and complete. From talent, to strategy, to infrastructure, organizations that are prioritizing data across every business unit are ready to ride the AI wave. Positioning themselves for a significant competitive advantage over their peers. Salesforce’s Get Ready for AI Report As with any digital transformation, success depends on an enterprise-wide commitment. Data leaders are in a unique position to help guide their organizations through this transition, and achieve the benefits that AI can deliver. Like1 Related Posts Salesforce OEM AppExchange Expanding its reach beyond CRM, Salesforce.com has launched a new service called AppExchange OEM Edition, aimed at non-CRM service providers. Read more The Salesforce Story In Marc Benioff’s own words How did salesforce.com grow from a start up in a rented apartment into the world’s Read more Salesforce Jigsaw Salesforce.com, a prominent figure in cloud computing, has finalized a deal to acquire Jigsaw, a wiki-style business contact database, for Read more Service Cloud with AI-Driven Intelligence Salesforce Enhances Service Cloud with AI-Driven Intelligence Engine Data science and analytics are rapidly becoming standard features in enterprise applications, Read more

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Data Cloud and Snowflake Bidrectional Data Sharing

Data Cloud and Snowflake Bidrectional Data Sharing

Salesforce Data Cloud and Snowflake are excited to announce that bidirectional data sharing between Snowflake, the Data Cloud company, and Salesforce Data Cloud is now generally available. In September, we introduced the ability for organizations to leverage Salesforce data directly in Snowflake via zero-ETL data sharing, enabling unified customer and business data, accelerating decision-making, and streamlining business processes. Today, we’re thrilled to share that customers can now also share Snowflake data into the Salesforce Data Cloud, using the same zero-ETL innovation to reduce friction and quickly surface powerful insights across sales, service, marketing, and commerce applications. Data Cloud and Snowflake Bidrectional Data Sharing. Data Cloud and Snowflake Bidrectional Data Sharing Enterprises generate valuable customer data within Salesforce applications, while increasingly relying on Snowflake as their preferred data platform for storing, modeling, and analyzing their full data estate. This integration between Salesforce and Snowflake minimizes friction, data latency, scale limitations, and data engineering costs associated with using these two leading platforms. The Snowflake Marketplace also offers customers the opportunity to acquire new data sets to enhance or fill gaps in their existing business data, driving innovation. By combining enterprise data and third-party data from Snowflake Marketplace with valuable customer data from Salesforce applications, organizations can unify their data and build powerful AI solutions to surface rich insights, driving superior and differentiated customer experiences. “Zero-ETL data sharing between Salesforce Data Cloud and Snowflake is game-changing. It has opened up new frontiers of data collaboration. We’re excited to see how customers are powering their customer data analytics and developing innovative AI solutions with near real-time data from Salesforce and Snowflake, generating incredible business value. Now that this integration is generally available, this kind of innovation will be broadly accessible,” says Christian Kleinerman, SVP of Product, Snowflake. Power Personalized Experiences with Salesforce and Snowflake Data sharing between Salesforce Data Cloud and Snowflake brings together holistic insights, empowering multiple customer-facing departments within any organization to create a truly robust customer 360. As Snowflake’s Chief Marketing Officer, Denise Persson, often states, a true, enterprise-wide customer 360 is the beating heart of a modern, customer-facing organization. The applicability of this integration spans various industries and unlocks new growth opportunities. For example: The bidirectional integration enables data sharing across business systems, Salesforce clouds, and operational systems, facilitating data set analysis and future action planning. This brings actionable insights and drives actions, unleashing a new level of customer experience and business productivity. Like Related Posts Salesforce OEM AppExchange Expanding its reach beyond CRM, Salesforce.com has launched a new service called AppExchange OEM Edition, aimed at non-CRM service providers. Read more The Salesforce Story In Marc Benioff’s own words How did salesforce.com grow from a start up in a rented apartment into the world’s Read more Salesforce Jigsaw Salesforce.com, a prominent figure in cloud computing, has finalized a deal to acquire Jigsaw, a wiki-style business contact database, for Read more Service Cloud with AI-Driven Intelligence Salesforce Enhances Service Cloud with AI-Driven Intelligence Engine Data science and analytics are rapidly becoming standard features in enterprise applications, Read more

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