Quick answer
Route-planning shortcutVisit planning software for Salesforce should help reps choose accounts, organize the day, and create the visits without leaving the CRM. The strongest option is not the one with the fanciest map. It is the one that removes planning admin and keeps the resulting activity usable in Salesforce. If you are comparing route planning at the category level first, see the main Salesforce route planning page.
What changes operationally?
Reps select accounts, optimize the day, and create Events from one workflow instead of hopping between three tools.
Who benefits most?
Sales teams, merchandisers, and field managers already working in Salesforce and tired of calendar admin.
What is the pricing logic?
Request a 30-day trial, then subscribe at €30/user/month excluding tax per licensed user.
What is the concrete gain?
More visits planned with less admin, cleaner Event data, and better visibility for managers inside Salesforce.
Tourvia brings filters, route context, and planned stops into one Salesforce Lightning workspace. Click the screen to expand.
Why teams replace the manual planning stack
The workflow loses time when account selection, route sequencing, and Event creation happen in different places and require a handoff back to Salesforce.
Less bouncing between list views, Google Maps, and manual calendar work before the day can even start.
Better visibility into planned coverage, recurring visit discipline, and what is actually happening in the field.
Cleaner Event data, fewer side spreadsheets, and less pressure to stitch together a workflow from unrelated tools.
What visit planning inside Salesforce actually means
Visit planning is not just route optimization. It is the full job of deciding who should be visited, when those visits should happen, in what order the day should run, and how that plan becomes real Salesforce activity.
The workflow requires three connected steps:
- Account selection: identify which accounts deserve a visit based on territory, recency, opportunity stage, account type, or custom CRM fields
- Day planning: build a route that is realistic for the rep, not just mathematically short
- Event creation: turn the plan into usable Salesforce Events with the right account, contact, address, and time slots
If one of those steps happens outside Salesforce, the team must manage an additional handoff. The route may exist while the calendar, reporting, and follow-up remain disconnected.
Why the usual process breaks down
Without a proper workflow, reps bounce between list views, spreadsheets, Google Maps, and the Salesforce calendar. None of those tools is wrong on its own. The problem is the handoff between them.
- Review accounts in Salesforce reports or list views
- Guess which accounts should make the cut this week
- Open an external map to estimate travel
- Come back to Salesforce and create Events one by one
- Re-enter details that already existed in the CRM
That is where time disappears. It also creates weak data. If Event creation is slow, reps postpone it, simplify it, or skip part of it. Managers then see activity records that are incomplete, late, or uneven across the team.
What a better workflow looks like
A good Salesforce-native workflow should reduce clicks, reduce re-entry, and keep the planning logic attached to the CRM records that drive the day.
Why bulk Event creation matters
A key gain is the removal of repetitive calendar administration. If every visit still has to be created manually, the map does not remove that work.
Bulk Event creation changes that. Instead of building each calendar entry by hand, the rep validates the route and creates the visit plan in one move.
What should be created automatically
- Event Subject: Visit type and account name
- Related Account: Automatically linked to the Salesforce Account record
- Contact: Primary contact from the Account
- Start/End Time: Calculated by the optimization algorithm based on travel time and visit duration
- Location: Account's address
Why this matters for data quality
When Event creation becomes fast, reps are much more likely to keep the calendar accurate. That leads to cleaner activity history, better manager visibility, and fewer debates later about what was actually planned versus what was actually done.
How teams choose the right accounts
Visit planning gets weak fast when account selection relies on habit. The map can be beautiful and the route can be short, but the day still underperforms if the wrong accounts were chosen.
That is why filtering matters. It keeps visit planning tied to commercial priorities instead of whatever a rep happens to remember.
Common filter strategies
- Recency-based: "Accounts not visited in the last 30/60/90 days", ensuring even coverage
- Value-based: "High-potential accounts" or "Open opportunities > €10K", prioritizing revenue
- Territory-based: "Accounts in my assigned region", keeping reps in their zone
- Type-based: "Prospects only" or "Existing clients for renewal", aligned with campaign goals
Saved filter combinations
Saved combinations make the workflow repeatable. A team can keep presets such as "monthly client check-ins" or "prospects in my area this week" without rebuilding the same selection logic every morning.
How managers keep visibility after planning
Who gets value first
The relevant fit is a team with recurring visit planning, an operational Salesforce workflow, and measurable handoff or calendar work.
| Team profile | Why it fits | Evaluation trigger |
|---|---|---|
| Field sales teams with recurring account rounds | Coverage discipline, account prioritization, and bulk Event creation matter every week. | Managers want more visits, better territory follow-through, and less rep admin. |
| Merchandising, retail, or distribution teams | The day depends on stop density, repeat visits, and fast replanning inside the same CRM workflow. | Planning time is eating into selling time and route quality varies too much by rep. |
| Salesforce-driven teams considering broader rollout | The CRM is already the system of record, so keeping planning and execution native reduces rollout friction. | Buyers want a clearer path from AppExchange test to subscription without rebuilding process elsewhere. |
If planning is occasional, the team is tiny, or execution mostly happens outside Salesforce, the problem may be lighter than Tourvia is designed to solve. That is useful to say plainly, because the real win is when native planning and CRM follow-through matter together.
Where Tourvia fits
Tourvia is a native Salesforce managed package built for teams that want route planning and field execution to stay inside Salesforce, not next to it.
For visit planning specifically, it covers the core workflow:
- Interactive map with all Account locations and smart clustering
- Flexible and saved filters on any Salesforce field
- Constraint-aware route optimization
- One-click bulk Salesforce Event creation
- Route history with distance, duration and stops
- GPS-based nearby accounts for spontaneous visits
- Export to Google Maps, Waze or CSV
- Mobile interface adapted to field use
Pricing
You can start with a 30-day trial request, then subscribe at €30 per licensed user per month excluding tax. Your Salesforce admin installs and configures the package using the documentation.
A better fit for teams that already run the field from Salesforce
The resulting Events, visits and reports remain available in Salesforce.
→ See pricing
→ Salesforce route planning
→ Why native integration matters
The evaluation may concern the whole planning process, not only the route calculation.
Frequently asked questions
Yes. After optimizing a route, one click creates all Salesforce Events with the correct account, contact, calculated time slot and address. No manual data entry required.
Yes. Tourvia is designed for the Salesforce Mobile App. GPS geolocation, nearby accounts, and field actions can stay accessible on mobile depending on your setup.
Yes. Filters let you display accounts by last visit date, for example "not visited in the last 30 days." Because visits are recorded in Salesforce, tracking stays up to date.
Tourvia handles typical daily visit plans effectively. Select your accounts on the map, set your time constraints, and the optimizer calculates the best visiting sequence.
Validate the workflow with your Salesforce records
Closing checkWant visit planning to stay inside Salesforce from selection to calendar?
Request a 30-day trial, test the workflow on your own accounts, then decide if the paid route-planning scope makes sense for your rollout.