
For years, Hubbl has been quietly building one of the most comprehensive datasets in the Salesforce ecosystem. Our platform has scanned thousands of orgs and analyzed millions of metadata items. This work has produced a benchmark library that covers security, architecture, governance, process performance, adoption trends, and overall platform health.
Today, we are excited to formally introduce Hubbl Signals, the research arm of Hubbl that turns this intelligence into actionable insights for the entire ecosystem.
Salesforce teams, COEs, architects, and partners often operate without a clear sense of how their org compares to others. We hear the same questions again and again:
The ecosystem needs clear, data-backed answers. Hubbl Signals provides them.
Hubbl Signals will publish ongoing research on the topics that matter most right now and the trends that are emerging fastest. Using anonymized insights from Hubbl’s dataset, Signals will highlight patterns in:
Hubbl Signals is designed to function as an early insight system that helps leaders make better decisions, faster.
To bring these insights directly to the community, we are launching a recurring series called Predictive Pulse. Each short episode focuses on a timely topic supported by real benchmark data.
In this first installment, we highlight a fast-emerging trend with significant implications for how Salesforce teams design, secure, and scale their environments heading into 2025.
Predictive Pulse will grow as the ecosystem evolves. Whenever new patterns surface in the data, this is where you will see them first.
If Episode 1 raised questions about security, governance, or readiness, we invite you to join us for a live session that explores these issues in greater depth.
This webinar will cover:
Hubbl Signals and Predictive Pulse mark the beginning of a new era of visibility for Salesforce teams. Our goal is to provide the clarity, context, and foresight that the ecosystem has been missing and needs now more than ever.
More insights are coming soon. Stay tuned.