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Speed up the development of your company’s online hub with Salesforce Lightning Bolt

Enterprises and medium-sized businesses aiming to develop a personalized community hub for their users, partners, and employees just received a powerful new tool from customer relations management (CRM) giant Salesforce.com.

Today the San Fransisco-based company announced Salesforce Lightning Bolt, a framework for its signature platform that will accelerate a business’s ability to create and deploy personalized, industry-specific home pages that can be accessed from any device.

“With Lightning Bolt, companies can jumpstart the creation of a new community, next-generation portal, or customer-facing website that seamlessly integrates with Salesforce CRM in a fraction of the time and with far less investment than was required before,” Mike Micucci, senior vice president of product management for community cloud wrote in a Sept. 8 blog post.

As the name implies, Lightning Bolt builds on Salesforce Lightning, a 2015 release that updated Salesforce’s Community Cloud user interface, and specifically its Lightning Template feature, which according to Micucci has been used to create nearly 1000 custom communities for users, partners, and employees since its release last year.

The key difference between Lightning Bolts and Lightning Templates is that third-party Salesforce developers can now use what the company calls “Lightning Components” to create solutions with pre-built business logic and workflow, such as e-commerce capabilities, recommendation engines, and case management, with what Micucci promises is “drag and drop ease.”

Naturally, the platform is also integrated with Salesforce’s signature CRM software, he noted.

To show off Lightning Bolt’s capabilities, more than 10 partners, including Accenture, Cognizant, and Deloitte, have announced Bolt-based solutions for industry-specific communities, including:

Salesforce plans to make Lightning Bolt generally available as part of its Community Cloud license in October, which is when customers will be able to start deploying Salesforce Bolt solutions as well.

Third-party developers, meanwhile, can start creating Salesforce Bolt solutions now and will be able to start distributing them on the company’s AppExchange sometime in early 2017.

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