Salesforce software asset management (SAM) is the continuous discipline of managing your Salesforce subscription — reconciling active versus licensed users, right-sizing editions and permission sets, and tracking API and integration usage — so the estate stays optimised between renewals rather than being cleaned up only when a true-forward looms. This directory lists the firms that manage Salesforce estates, each with balanced pros and cons, in neutral order.
Last reviewed: 5 June 2026 · Reviewed quarterly · A directory, not a ranking
SaaS SAM is different from on-premises SAM: there is nothing to scan on your own servers, because the entitlement and the usage both live in Salesforce. The asset being managed is the subscription itself — named users by cloud and edition, permission-set licences, feature licences, sandboxes and API allocations. Good Salesforce SAM keeps three numbers reconciled continuously: licensed users (what you pay for), provisioned users (what is assigned), and active users (what is actually used). The gap between provisioned and active is where waste accumulates, and the gap between active and licensed is where a renewal true-forward comes from.
The recurring SAM tasks are deprovisioning inactive and duplicate accounts, downgrading users assigned a richer licence than their role uses, reclaiming permission-set and feature licences, and watching integration/API users that quietly multiply as systems connect to Salesforce. Done well, this turns the renewal from a defensive scramble into a planned negotiation, because you arrive with a clean, defensible position.
A Salesforce SAM engagement is usually ongoing rather than one-off: a baseline reconciliation, then a managed cadence of monitoring and clean-up tied to your renewal cycle. Independent firms take no Salesforce resale margin, so the optimization advice is not pulling against a sales target. SAM feeds directly into Salesforce renewals and is the proactive counterpart to Salesforce audit defense.
Listed in neutral alphabetical order with balanced pros and cons — a directory, not a ranking.
Vendor- and tool-agnostic licensing boutique working across Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, Salesforce and IBM. Engagements run buyer-side, from compliance position through negotiation and ongoing optimization.
ServiceNow-centric licensing and estate-reconciliation practice that also covers Salesforce, Oracle, Microsoft, SAP, IBM and Adobe. Reconciles entitlement against actual consumption ahead of renewals and reviews.
Buyer-side independent licensing advisory with one of the broadest multi-vendor footprints, covering Oracle, Microsoft, SAP, IBM, Broadcom, Salesforce, ServiceNow and Workday.
DEMO — listings are compiled from public information and labelled demo until the verified registry is live. Firms are listed alphabetically, never ranked. Independence is shown as a pro; a reseller, Big-Four or vendor-side audit relationship is shown as a con — each a factual trade-off for you to weigh.
Indicative only — the levers that shape the number, not a promise of any specific result.
The figures below are indicative and illustrate where value typically sits in Salesforce SAM. They are not quotes, not guarantees, and no specific outcome figures are published until the verified registry is live.
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Usage reviews, true-forward and the firms →
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Managed SAM for Microsoft estates →
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Direct answers to the questions Salesforce buyers ask most.
Traditional SAM reconciles software installed on your infrastructure against entitlements. SaaS SAM has nothing to scan locally — both the entitlement and the usage sit inside Salesforce — so the work is API-driven reconciliation of licensed, provisioned and active users, plus permission-set and integration tracking, run continuously rather than at audit time.
The usual sources of recovery are inactive and duplicate user accounts, users holding a higher-cost licence than their role uses, unused permission-set and feature licences, and surplus integration users. Reclaiming these before renewal keeps the committed baseline aligned to genuine need.
Yes. Because a renewal true-forward converts any overage into a larger subscription, arriving at renewal with a clean, continuously reconciled position means you negotiate from need rather than from Salesforce’s read of unmanaged growth.
Often, yes — several firms listed here cover both ongoing Salesforce SAM and reactive defense. They are described with the same balanced pros and cons either way; the directory recommends none of them over another.
No. This is a directory, not a ranking. Firms are listed in neutral alphabetical order with balanced pros and cons so you can weigh them yourself.
Yes. Browsing the directory and the matching service are free for buyers. We publish no prices or fees and take no money from software publishers.
Continuous reconciliation keeps the renewal true-forward small. Tell us your situation and we route your brief to firms covering Salesforce SAM. The directory and matching are free for buyers — no markup, no referral pressure, no firm is recommended over another.