Salesforce Database Customization.

Society for the Arts, Religion and Contemporary Culture
New York, NY, USA
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Society for the Arts, Religion and Contemporary Culture
New York, NY, USA

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Posted March 8th

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Salesforce Database Customization.

Project details

What we need

A customized Salesforce database application for tracking data including:

  • A customized set of Salesforce objects, with single-record editing of data and field history tracking (at most 15 object types).
  • A customized set of views, to allow table-based editing of data (at most 15 views).
  • A customized set of reports, to pull together data from multiple object types (at most 15 reports).
  • Migration of the current data into Salesforce (at most 1 spreadsheet or 1 existing database). If the data is not in digital form, a process for data migration.
  • Training for the organization's staff on how to use the customized Salesforce application and how to administer the application.
  • "Hand-off" documentation on the object schemas and any custom code written.
What we have in place
How this will help
This project will save us $24,000 , allowing us to

Project plan

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About the org

Society for the Arts, Religion and Contemporary Culture
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Posted by
Erling H.

President

Our mission

The Society for the Arts, Religion and Contemporary Culture fosters dialogue across a diverse range of perspectives by exploring the complex relationship between religion and the arts through projects, performances, and conversations.

What we do

The Society's purpose and program are based on the belief that the roles of the arts and religion are decisive. They reflect the struggle to conserve and to recover depth and wholeness, to reaffirm personal responsibility in the face of dehumanization, to define the ground for human freedom and creativity in a culture which tends increasingly to impose impersonal tyrannies over mind and spirit. Religion in isolation from the arts is starved of concrete embodiment of its insights into the fullness of human life. Art gives religion the eyes to see ourselves in all our dimensions, the ears to hear the voice of our inner lives and the instruments with which to communicate with each other. At the same time, the past suggests that the arts realize their potential most fully within that transcendent, unifying vision which is the heart of religion.

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