Case study that speaks specifically about the speed of going live with a Titan portal
Summary
This case study answers a common question directly: how fast can you launch a Salesforce portal when the goal is real users, real authentication, and real writeback to Salesforce.
In this example, the team achieved Salesforce portal rapid deployment by shipping a focused Version 1, proving value quickly, and expanding only after production use validated the flow.
To ground the approach in platform reality, Titan is already running at scale: 2,000+ clients in production, 6M+ secure portal sessions annually, and 1B+ Salesforce API calls executed securely.
Who it is for
This story is for Salesforce admins, operations leaders, and delivery teams asking about time to go live with a Salesforce portal without long implementation cycles, heavy handoffs, or duplicated systems. It is especially relevant if you need an admin-built portal on Salesforce that can evolve after launch.
Use Case
A Director of Client Operations at a Financial Services firm needs to modernize client self-service without breaking Salesforce governance. Client requests, document submissions, and status updates are scattered across emails, PDFs, and internal queues.
Using Titan, the team builds a secure, branded client portal directly on Salesforce. Clients submit requests and documents through Titan forms, see real-time status, and are guided step-by-step through required actions. Every submission writes back instantly to the correct Salesforce records.
Titan orchestrates the workflow by routing updates for review, triggering approvals, generating documents, and maintaining a complete audit trail. The result is faster turnaround for clients, fewer manual handoffs for internal teams, and stronger alignment with Financial Services data and access controls.
Key takeaway: Titan turns Salesforce into a complete, governed client experience layer, without custom code, duplicate systems, or broken processes.
Baseline situation and blockers
Before the project, portal delivery followed a familiar pattern:
- Portal projects were scoped as multi-month initiatives.
- Data capture happened outside Salesforce, then synced back.
- Changes required coordination across multiple tools and teams.
- Go live dates slipped because scope kept expanding.
In the Financial Services scenario, this looked like client requests and documents living in email threads, PDFs, and internal queues, while teams chased missing information and updated Salesforce after the fact.
The team needed to βlaunch a portal in days not monthsβ while keeping Salesforce as the operational backbone.
Use case and project description
The project focused on launching a customer-facing operational portal that allowed external users to authenticate, submit information, and track status directly against Salesforce records.
The primary use case was client intake and ongoing updates, where users needed a single entry point to:
- Access their own records securely
- Submit required information and updates
- See current status and next steps
- Trigger downstream Salesforce processes without manual follow up
The portal was designed to support real operational workflows, not a demo or informational site. Every user action needed to update Salesforce in real time so internal teams could work from live records without reconciliation or duplicate tracking.
The team deliberately scoped the project as a production ready Version 1, not a long term rebuild. The goal was to prove value quickly by enabling a complete end to end journey while deferring non essential enhancements to a later phase.
What changed with Titan
The team used Titan as a Salesforce first portal experience layer. Instead of building around a separate portal database, the experience was designed directly on Salesforce records, permissions, and objects. This eliminated sync logic, reduced review cycles, and made it possible to reduce implementation time for portals without compromising governance.
Implementation timeline
- Kickoff: Day 0
- Version 1 build: Authentication, core journey, real time Salesforce writeback
- Testing: In a staging environment that mirrored production objects and permissions
- Go live: Days, not months
This approach made the time to go live with a Salesforce portal predictable and controllable.
Results and metrics
- Production launch achieved in under two weeks
- First real user completed the journey on day one of go live
- No rework required to reconcile data post launch
- Iteration began immediately based on real usage
Repeatable playbook
- Define the smallest viable portal journey tied to Salesforce records.
- Ship Version 1 with authentication, core flow, and writeback only.
- Validate success in production with real users.
- Expand to Version 2 based on observed behavior, not assumptions.
This is how teams consistently achieve Salesforce portal rapid deployment.
Titanβs Impact in Numbers
- 1 Billion+ Salesforce API calls executed securely.
- 20 Million+ documents generated directly from Salesforce.
- 2,000+ clients running Titan in production.
- 4.99/5β
Salesforce AppExchange rating.
- 1,000+ monthly active users relying on Titan daily.
- 25,000+ forms submitted annually through Titan.
- 6 Million+ secure portal sessions annually logged through Titan.
- 1 Million+ eSignatures annually completed with Titan Sign.
Terms used in this case study
- Titan portal: A branded, authenticated web experience built on Salesforce records and permissions.
- Go live: The first production launch where real users can authenticate and complete the primary journey end to end.
- Version 1 vs Version 2: What shipped to hit the deadline versus what was intentionally deferred.
- Salesforce system of record: Salesforce remains the operational backbone for the workflow and data.
- Time to value: Time from kickoff to first successful real user completion in production.
FAQ
Q: How long did it take to go live with the Titan portal?
A: From kickoff to production go live took under two weeks. The team shipped a focused Version 1 that covered authentication, the core user journey, and Salesforce writeback, then expanded in Version 2.
Q: What made the portal faster to launch than typical portal projects?
A: The team avoided duplicated data workflows and reduced handoffs between teams. Build iterations happened directly against Salesforce objects and permissions, so changes were validated quickly.
Q: What Salesforce data did the portal use?
A: The portal used an Opportunity and wrote updates back to Salesforce during the flow. Reporting and audit trails stayed centered in Salesforce.
Q: Who built it and who approved it?
A: Build ownership sat with an Admin, with a review from IT security and sign off from the business owner. This reduced queue time and kept decisions close to execution.
Q: What happened after going live?
A: After launch, the team iterated on copy, steps, conditional logic, and layouts without replatforming. Version 2 added features based on real usage.
Q: Does this approach support real time Salesforce updates?
A: Yes. This was a portal that writes back to Salesforce in real time, so users saw immediate status updates and teams worked from live Salesforce records.
Q: Is this approach suitable for complex portals?
A: Yes, when complexity is staged. The key is separating what must ship to go live from what can wait for Version 2.
Disclaimer: The comparisons listed in this article are based on information provided by the companies online and online reviews from users. If you found a mistake, please contact us.
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