Twelve months out — not sixty days. Renewal strategy, pricing benchmarks, co-term consolidation, and the timeline discipline that turns Salesforce's renewal pressure into the buyer's leverage.
Salesforce renewals are not procurement events. They are the single largest annual leverage moment in the relationship between buyer and vendor, and they are routinely surrendered. Across 500+ engagements the most common pattern observed at the buyer side is the same: an account executive opens conversations 90 days out with a list of expansion priorities and an uplift quote, the buyer's team reacts inside that window, and the deal closes within two percentage points of the vendor's first proposal.
The structural problem is timing. Salesforce's renewal motion is built around fiscal-quarter close pressure that operates against the vendor, not the buyer — but only when the buyer has independent timeline control. A buyer who begins renewal strategy 12 months out controls the calendar. A buyer who engages in the final quarter is negotiating against their own renewal deadline.
Renewal advisory exists to recover that timeline. We engage 9–12 months ahead of the renewal date, establish independent buyer-side benchmarks before the account team makes its first move, and run the entire renewal cycle against a written strategy memo rather than against Salesforce's calendar.
| Lever | Renewal impact | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Shelfware return at renewal | 10–25% spend recovered | Utilization data must be defensible at user level. |
| Edition right-sizing (UE → EE) | 20–40% per affected user | Often the largest single lever on a renewal. |
| Price-cap language (5–7% YoY) | Future-year protection | Eliminates uplift surprise at next renewal cycle. |
| Co-term consolidation | 4–8% discount uplift | Single anchor renewal date strengthens leverage. |
| Multi-year extension (3-year) | 8–18% rate reduction | Buyer accepts term length in exchange for pricing. |
| Add-on rationalization | 5–15% reduction | Inbox, CPQ, Maps, and analytics add-ons often unused. |
| Fiscal Q4 timing | 5–12% incremental | Largest single timing lever in the Salesforce calendar. |
If your Salesforce account executive has not opened renewal conversations by T-9 months, that is not a courtesy — it is timing leverage being constructed against you. Engage independent advisory before the vendor opens the conversation.
End-to-end review of the current contract: order forms, true-up history, edition mix, add-ons, and the effective price-per-user paid across every cloud.
User-level utilization for the trailing 12 months. Shelfware quantified by edition and by cloud. Defensible at the table.
Per-user pricing benchmarks for your edition and product mix, drawn from comparable agreements in our internal database.
Written renewal strategy: target discount, ramp structure, price-cap language, co-term recommendation, and counter-offer sequencing.
Real-time advisory on every revised quote. Weekly checkpoint with procurement and the executive sponsor through close.
Documented final terms, savings against the vendor's initial quote, and forward-look to the next renewal cycle.
We engage 12 months before renewal. The buyers who control the calendar control the price.