3 Ways to Unlock Reporting With Einstein Activity Capture
By Tom Bassett
April 10, 2024
Einstein Activity Capture is a function to automatically capture activities from Gmail or Outlook against account, contact, lead, opportunity, contract, and quote records.
This feature is powered by Salesforce Einstein and available with Sales Cloud in: Essentials, Professional, Enterprise, Performance, and Unlimited editions. It’s supported only in Lightning Experience which means it won’t work with Salesforce Classic (but who’s still using classic!).
What Is Einstein Activity Capture?
Einstein Activity Capture (EAC) is part of the Sales Cloud family.
It uses the power of AI to automatically log events and emails against their respective Salesforce records and can also sync contacts from Gmail or Outlook.
It’s the successor to Lightning Sync that syncs events and contacts to Salesforce from Gmail or Outlook and hasn’t been available to new customers since Winter ’21.
The nature of Einstein Activity Capture is both its upside and its downfall.
Due to its AI-powered nature, it can log emails, events, and contacts automatically without the need for any manual intervention from sales reps. It supports Google and Microsoft Outlook and a number of different authentication options.
One drawback is that the data resides in AWS – as a result, it’s outside your Salesforce org. This could cause a compliance issue and also means you can’t report natively on emails as they are not stored within Salesforce.
3 Ways to Report on EAC
1. Activities Dashboard
Enter stage left, the Activities Dashboard! This is powered by CRM Analytics and brings together the streamed records stored in AWS with your Salesforce records for a fuller picture.
This is provided at no extra cost, but you need a paid license to be able to edit the default settings. In the background, this uses datasets and joins – adjusting for your own requirements isn’t for the faint-hearted!
Salesforce users can access this dashboard from within Salesforce without having to switch to another system.
Next up we have Einstein Activity Metrics. You are required to have at least one paid license in the org to unlock this feature.
Once enabled, the system creates some special roll-up objects in the background that then allow you to see metrics such as [Last Mail Date] and [Last Call Date].
You can then use Formula Fields to expose these values in Page Layouts, Dynamic Forms, Record Highlights, Reports, Dashboards, and other tools such as Flow.
Personally, I would opt for Activity Metrics with Activity 360 Reporting to get the insights I need.
Although this requires at least one paid license, this is a small price to pay for customizable reports and dashboards in Salesforce without having to switch over to analytics (which I am not as comfortable in).
What feature(s) would you use to unlock reporting with Einstein Activity Capture? Let us know in the comments.
The Author
Tom Bassett
30x Trailhead Certified, 11x Accredited Professional, 2x Slack Certified with 6+ years experience. Passionate about helping other Trailblazers as a Forum Ambassador, Salesforce Ben Expert Author, FlowFest Judge/Speaker, Co-Leader of the London Architect Community Group, Podcast Host, Dreamforce Speaker and Community Speaker. Based in London working as a Solution Architect.
There is a limit to the standard reports (not CRMA) in that they will only work in orgs that have up to approximately 4 million records.
Larger companies that have more records are not able to use these standard reports and will have to use CRMA.
Thank you for the reporting hints here. Personally, I'm not in love with EAC when it comes to tracking how people in a given org are utilizing it. Sure, you can enable 10 users and get them connected via Outlook or Gmail. But there seems to be no easy answer to questions like: Are people really using EAC? And can we tell, for example, how many emails a user has logged since becoming EAC-enabled?
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