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Seamless Customer Advocacy Workflow Drives Success | Asha May

Seamless Customer Advocacy Workflow Drives Success | Asha May

In this insightful video, customer marketing and advocacy expert Asha May walks us through how she achieved a truly seamless customer advocacy workflow by leveraging ReferenceEdge, the 100% Salesforce-native advocacy platform from Point of Reference. From simplifying processes to automating deeply integrated workflows, she shows how your advocacy program can move from tactical to strategic.

Why This Matters

Organizations often struggle with:

  • pulling advocates into a central system
  • keeping reference information current and actionable
  • enabling sales, marketing and customer success teams to self-serve references
  • tracking and proving the revenue impact of advocacy efforts
    Asha’s example demonstrates how a streamlined platform plus intentional process can solve these challenges.

Key Takeaways

1. Centralize advocate data

A big win with ReferenceEdge is that advocate profiles, content (case studies, video testimonials, logos) and reference requests all live in one place. No more scattered spreadsheets or one-off workflows.

2. Embed into sales-workflow

Because the platform is native to Salesforce, sales teams don’t need to navigate to a separate tool—reference requests, nominations and advocate searches happen where they already work. This drives adoption and speeds response.

3. Measure impact and avoid advocate fatigue

Dashboards provide visibility into how many deals were influenced by advocacy, how often advocates are used, and where bottlenecks exist. Also, tracking usage helps prevent over-using your most persuasive advocates.

4. Change management is critical

A seamless workflow isn’t just about the tech—it’s about enabling change: internal education, leadership buy-in, workflow adjustments, and continuous process iteration. Asha emphasizes that program success depends on both people and systems.

Implementation Tips

  • Start small with core workflows: Get nominations, reference requests and advocate data in the system first.
  • Train the tool where users live: Embed the platform in Salesforce so that users don’t perceive it as an “extra” system.
  • Use metrics to tell the story: Show leadership how advocacy drives revenue or accelerates deals.
  • Manage advocate supply and demand: Ensure you have enough advocates, track usage, and avoid burning out your top advocates.
  • Iterate the process: Advocacy workflows evolve—review quarterly, refine your processes and update training.

Benefits You’ll See

By aligning people, process and technology, you can expect:

  • Faster reference fulfilment and deal-acceleration
  • Higher adoption of your advocacy program across sales, marketing and CS
  • Better visibility into ROI of advocacy and references
  • More engaged advocates who feel part of a managed program rather than ad-hoc requests
  • Reduced administrative burden on advocacy teams (fewer spreadsheets, less manual work)

Why ReferenceEdge (via Point of Reference) Works

  • 100% Salesforce-native: Because it lives inside the CRM it reduces tool-switch friction.
  • Designed for advocacy: Built for customer reference & advocacy workflows rather than generic CRM add-ons.
  • Metrics & dashboards: Enables you to link advocacy efforts directly to revenue and program health.
  • Support & best-practice advisory: As one user said, implementation was smooth and payback was fast.

Conclusion

If your advocacy program feels scattered—disparate advocates, manual workflows, difficult measurement—then Asha May’s approach offers a model worth following. Centralize your advocate data, embed the workflow in the tools your teams use, track everything, and treat change management as equally important to the technology. When done right, your advocacy program becomes a strategic engine, not just marketing support.

As this infographic illustrates, a mature advocacy program is responsible for continuously identifying advocates, maintaining accurate advocacy data, protecting customer relationships, and aligning with top company goals to accelerate growth.

The infographic contains six key components. Here's a description of each for you to translate into your own talking points.

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1. The Customer Journey: From Customer to Discoverable Advocate

Every advocate starts as a customer.

The journey begins when account teams, customer success managers, support teams, and services organizations create positive experiences that build trust and confidence.

As customers achieve success, some become enthusiastic supporters of the company, its products, and its people. These customers are identified as potential advocates and introduced to the advocacy team.

The advocacy team interviews these individuals, learns about their experiences, captures important details about their interests and expertise, and creates a searchable advocate profile.

The result is a discoverable advocate: someone who can be found, matched, and engaged when the business needs credible customer voices.

Without this process, valuable customer relationships remain hidden inside co-workers’ heads or team spreadsheets, unavailable to the broader organization.

2. Many Teams. One Goal.

Great advocates are rarely discovered by the advocacy team alone. It’s really just too much to ask of any one part of the organization. Every customer touchpoint plays a part in cultivating and retaining advocates.

Customer success managers see customer enthusiasm firsthand. Account teams hear success stories during business reviews. Support teams witness customer loyalty. Product teams interact with passionate users who influence future direction.

A successful advocacy program creates a systematic way for all customer-facing teams to identify and nominate potential advocates, as well as a means for customers to self-identify..

Think of it as building a talent pipeline.

The broader the participation across the organization, the stronger and more diverse the advocate community becomes.

This collective effort ensures the advocacy database reflects the full spectrum of customer success stories across industries, products, geographies, and use cases.

3. The Advocacy Team: Stewards of the Bedrock Data

The advocacy team serves as the steward of the organization's advocacy data.

Their responsibilities fall into three primary areas.

First, they recruit continuously. Advocates change jobs, priorities shift, and customer enthusiasm naturally evolves over time. Maintaining a healthy advocacy community requires constant replenishment.

Second, they keep information current. Customer stories, product deployments, business outcomes, and willingness to participate all change. Outdated advocacy data quickly becomes unreliable.

Third, they measure and report value. Advocacy programs must demonstrate their contribution to business outcomes such as customer acquisition, retention, and expansion.

Beyond maintaining records, the advocacy team actively shapes the composition of the database to align with company growth objectives. This is essential if the program is to be seen by executives as a strategic lever vs. a low-level function an intern can run. 

If the company’s strategic direction includes expanding into healthcare, launching a new product, selling through a new channel, entering Asia, or targeting a specific buyer persona, the advocacy team ensures the advocate population evolves accordingly.

In many ways, they function as portfolio managers for one of the company's most valuable assets: customer credibility.

4. Advocates Power the Enterprise

Most organizations initially think of advocacy as a sales resource.

Sales certainly benefits from customer references, but advocacy creates value far beyond the sales organization.

  • Demand generation teams use advocates to improve campaign performance.
  • Public relations teams rely on customer voices to strengthen media stories.
  • Product marketing teams use customer experiences to validate positioning and messaging.
  • Investor relations teams use customer success stories to reinforce market confidence.
  • Digital teams create customer-driven content that resonates more strongly than vendor-created content.
  • Executives benefit from authentic customer perspectives during strategic discussions, presentations, and industry events.

The common thread is credibility.

Advocates provide something no marketing budget can purchase directly: authentic proof from real customers.

5. Integrated Program Components

Most mature advocacy programs include additional components that extend value for both advocates and the business.

  • Customer advisory boards create structured executive engagement.
  • Communities connect customers with peers and facilitate knowledge sharing.
  • Peer review programs generate public validation through platforms such as G2 and Gartner Peer Insights.
  • Recognition and rewards programs encourage participation and acknowledge contributions.
  • Customer content programs transform customer experiences into videos, case studies, webinars, podcasts, and other assets.

These activities are connected mechanisms that strengthen relationships, increase engagement, and create additional opportunities for customers to contribute.

Together, they help transform advocacy from a transactional activity into an ongoing customer experience.

6. Business Outcomes

The ultimate purpose of customer advocacy is not activity.

It is business impact.

  • A well-managed advocacy program helps organizations acquire new customers by providing trusted proof during buying decisions.
  • It helps retain existing customers by creating stronger relationships and deeper engagement.
  • It helps expand existing accounts by supporting cross-sell and upsell initiatives with relevant customer stories and peer validation.
  • Just as importantly, the program ensures advocates are neither overused nor underused, both of which can erode goodwill.

In Summary

Advocates are valuable assets. The advocacy team's job is to make sure those assets are available when needed, protected from burnout, and aligned with the organization's most important priorities.

When done well, customer advocacy transforms customer success into measurable business value. It is an enterprise capability built on trusted relationships, reliable data, and authentic customer voices.