Have you ever wondered how to completely ruin the HubSpot Salesforce integration before you even start using it? The answer is simple. Fail to configure the Inclusion List and Selective Sync effectively. In this article, we’ll discuss each at length and empower you to make the right decisions for your organization regarding the HubSpot Inclusion list and Selective Sync for the HubSpot Salesforce integration.
Before we dive into the Inclusion List and Selective Sync, here’s a quick recap on how and why HubSpot and Salesforce integrate.
Many teams are deeply entrenched in Salesforce as their primary CRM, and it would take a force majeure event to get them off of Salesforce entirely. Brand loyalty and being the first big player in the CRM space certainly has its benefits. Even though HubSpot has grown to be a leading CRM, these teams will not budge on using Salesforce. And that’s okay! Instead of using just HubSpot for marketing and CRM, these teams use HubSpot for marketing purposes and integrate it with Salesforce for sales, account management, and financial functions.
HubSpot and Salesforce have a native integration hosted in the HubSpot App Marketplace. HubSpot created and manages the integration, allowing the two platforms to connect without custom API development. The native HubSpot Salesforce integration is a bi-directional sync. In HubSpot Professional accounts, standard objects like Salesforce Leads, Contacts, Accounts, Opportunities, Tasks, and Cases map to HubSpot standard objects like Contacts, Companies, Deals, Activities, and Tickets. In HubSpot Enterprise accounts, custom objects can be synced between HubSpot and Salesforce.
The HubSpot Salesforce integration syncs:
Most teams want to limit the flow of data between HubSpot and Salesforce. As the HubSpot Salesforce integration syncs bi-directionally, two data sources can be limited: Salesforce to HubSpot and HubSpot to Salesforce.
There are two different methods of limiting data flow in the HubSpot Salesforce Integration. They are a HubSpot Inclusion List and Salesforce Selective Sync. The Inclusion List limits the data that flows from HubSpot to Salesforce AND syncs with Salesforce from HubSpot. Selective Sync limits the data that flows from Salesforce to HubSpot.
As we review these methods, remember that you can use one, both, or neither method in the HubSpot Salesforce integration. Neither are required, and they are not mutually exclusive. Now, let’s dive into these methods.
A HubSpot Inclusion List is an active list in HubSpot. This list limits the flow of data from HubSpot to Salesforce. Additionally, the Inclusion List prevents records from syncing with Salesforce.
Creating a HubSpot Inclusion List is as easy as creating an active list in HubSpot. Navigate to Contacts > Lists > Create List > Contact-based. Name your list. Select Active list and click Next. Define your criteria and click save. Remember when defining your criteria that only records meeting this criteria will be allowed to be created in Salesforce or sync data back to Salesforce.
A good place to start with criteria is to allow HubSpot Contacts with a Lifecycle Stage of Marketing Qualified Lead, Sales Qualified Lead, Opportunity, or Customer or Contacts with a known Salesforce Contact or Lead ID to sync between HubSpot and Salesforce.
You can find detailed instructions for implementing the HubSpot Inclusion List in Module 4 of the HubSpot Salesforce Integration Certification Course.
While some teams allow all data to flow from HubSpot to Salesforce, most teams want to prevent records from flowing from HubSpot to Salesforce until they are sales-ready. In this case, the team defines clear criteria for a marketing qualified lead (MQL) and builds automation in HubSpot to categorize Contacts as MQLs when they meet the defined criteria. Then, the filters on the Inclusion List allow that Contact to sync with Salesforce and create either a Lead or Contact based on the sync settings.
This benefits teams that want to keep from creating many leads that are not yet ready for sales outreach. It is also beneficial for marketing teams that plan to nurture relationships via marketing communications before allowing sales teams to access their inbound records.
Salesforce Selective Sync is a custom configuration of a Salesforce user profile, permission sets, and role in Salesforce that limits visibility and access to the HubSpot integration user.
A Salesforce Administrator configures Salesforce Selective Sync in the HubSpot Salesforce integration. Detailed instructions for implementing Selective Sync can be found in Module 4 of the HubSpot Salesforce Integration Certification Course.
Most teams do not limit the flow of data from Salesforce to HubSpot. But, in certain cases, limiting the data that HubSpot can access in Salesforce is absolutely necessary. The most common use case for Selective Sync is hiding protected data from HubSpot to maintain HIPAA compliance using the HubSpot Salesforce integration.
First, determine ownership for HubSpot and Salesforce. Meaning, who lives in which system? If your business development representatives (BDRs) live in Salesforce, send Contact data to Salesforce when the person is ready to engage with a BDR. If your BDRs live in HubSpot, keep Contact data in HubSpot until a Contact is ready to be introduced to an account executive (AE) in Salesforce. The AE will then create an Opportunity and work the Contact in Salesforce.
If BDRs are in HubSpot, wait until a Contact has Sales Qualified Lead (SQL) as their Lifecycle Stage to sync with Salesforce. If BDRs are in Salesforce, sync Contacts to Salesforce when they become MQLs. Manage this distinction using your HubSpot Inclusion List.
There are many options to control data flow between HubSpot and Salesforce. The best route for most teams is using the native HubSpot Salesforce integration. Here are a few options for managing the data sync between HubSpot and Salesforce:
A HubSpot Inclusion List is an active list in HubSpot. Create one active list and include all of the relevant criteria for your sync in that list. Do not build several active lists and then build an active list referencing those lists to use as your Inclusion List.
Here’s an example of what not to do. Create one active list for current clients, one active list for engaged leads, one active list for industry contacts, and one active list indicating if they’re a member of one of those lists used as the HubSpot Inclusion List. This isn’t the recommended approach because it makes it challenging to see who is syncing with Salesforce at a glance and why.
The best way to build a HubSpot Inclusion list is to create one active list with all of the relevant criteria for records to be created in Salesforce from HubSpot and stay in sync between HubSpot and Salesforce. The best practice for the Inclusion List criteria is the following: Lifecycle Stage is Marketing Qualified Lead, Sales Qualified Lead, Opportunity, or Customer OR Salesforce Contact ID is Known, OR Salesforce Lead ID is Known. This approach sends data to Salesforce when it’s ready for a BDR to engage with a Contact and keeps Contacts that came to HubSpot from Salesforce in sync.
If you’ve had the HubSpot Salesforce integration installed for a while, you may have experienced sync issues, missing data, and confusion around what’s syncing between HubSpot and Salesforce. One of the first ways to address these issues is to revisit the HubSpot Inclusion ist. Here are the steps to redoing your HubSpot Inclusion List.
In conclusion, the HubSpot Salesforce integration offers powerful tools to limit the flow of data between systems, ensuring accuracy and compliance. Whether through the use of a HubSpot Inclusion List or Salesforce Selective Sync, teams can tailor their data sync to meet their specific needs.
So, here's the deal. Understanding how to set up the HubSpot Inclusion List and Salesforce Selective Sync is super important if you don't want to mess up your HubSpot Salesforce integration. If you don't get these settings right, you might end up with data chaos - stuff missing or too much stuff in the wrong place!
But no worries! Our HubSpot Salesforce Integration Certification Course can prepare you for any scenario. You'll get to grips with setting up these features just right so you can make Salesforce and HubSpot work together. And hey, being the person who can make things run more smoothly? That'll definitely make you look good to the boss. So, why wait? Sign up today. It's time to get savvy with Salesforce and HubSpot!