Every life sciences leader agrees on one thing: Salesforce should be a game-changer for pharma. On paper, it offers a complete view of HCPs, faster patient engagement, compliant workflows, and insights that help commercial and medical teams move smarter.
But here is the paradox. Despite all that potential, a large percentage of Salesforce implementations in pharma fall flat. Some never take off, others become expensive shelfware, and a few even create compliance risks that no one anticipated.
So what is really going on?
As explored in detail at Newpage, it is rarely the platform itself that causes failure. The real challenge lies at the intersection of three forces: technology, regulation, and real-world pharma workflows. If those are not aligned from the start, even the best Salesforce build can turn into a burden instead of an asset.
Consider this. Regulations like HIPAA, GDPR, and GxP do not bend to meet rollout timelines. Field teams will not adopt a tool if it takes four clicks to log a call. And no matter how advanced the AI roadmap looks, if HCP data is messy, automation will only multiply the mess.
The question is not “Can Salesforce work in pharma?” The question is “How do you design Salesforce so it actually works in pharma?”
At Newpage, success depends on a few critical choices:
- Compliance must be baked into the architecture, not added at the last minute.
- Pharma workflows such as MedInfo, field medical, and pharmacovigilance must be designed into the build rather than copied from generic modules.
- ROI should be measured sprint by sprint, not after a year-long blueprint.
- User experience, especially for reps and medical teams, must be treated as seriously as backend integrations.
With Salesforce now pushing further into AI with AgentForce and copilots, the stakes are even higher. Automation is not a silver bullet. It only works if the foundation is strong. Otherwise, it magnifies blind spots.
For pharma and biotech leaders considering a Salesforce rollout, or wondering why the current instance is underperforming, this is the right moment to pause and rethink. What is needed is not just a CRM, but a compliance-aware, pharma-first digital platform that fits the way teams and regulators work.
The full breakdown of the most common pitfalls and a practical roadmap for success is available here: Why Most Salesforce Implementations in Pharma Fail.
It is time to expect more from CRM. The way it is built makes all the difference.
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