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Salesforce Spring ‘26 - Our Favourite New Features | Picklist Podcast Episode 3

255 views· 5 likes· 14:41· Feb 20, 2026

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Welcome to the Picklist podcast from Salesforce Ben! Each week we get together to talk about 3 topics that jumped out at us in the Salesforce ecosystem, and sometimes technology as a whole. Join Christine Marshall, Tim Combridge and Mariel Domingo as they discuss the upcoming Spring ‘26 launch. Specifically: - Message Component for Screen Flow - Editable Data Table - Custom Styling Screens for Screen Flow Join us every Friday for more podcast episodes. Follow us on our socials! 📱 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/saleforceben Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/salesforceben Twitter: https://mobile.twitter.com/salesforceben #salesforce #salesforceadmin #salesforceflow #salesforcedevelopers #salesforce2026 #technews #AutomationInSalesforce #flowbuilder #TechNewsPodcast #googleai #agentforce #cloudtechnology #picklist #podcast

About This Video

In this Spring ’26-themed Picklist Podcast episode, I sat down with Christine, Tim, and Mariel to pick out the Flow updates that actually matter in the real world—especially if you’re building for end users and you care about adoption. We start with the new Message component for Screen Flows, which I love as one of those small-but-genuinely-lovely enhancements. It gives you a clean, accessible way to surface tips, confirmations, warnings, or errors without the usual “display text hackery.” The big caveat: just because you can add messages everywhere doesn’t mean you should—governance and good training are what stop Flow screens from becoming noisy. Then we get into the (finally!) editable Data Table component for Screen Flows. It’s been a long time coming, and while it’s not perfect, it’s a massive leap forward because you can handle basic inline edits without installing a third-party package. We also talk about why it likely took so long—complexity, resourcing, and shifting priorities (hello, AI), plus the role third-party tools play in proving demand. Lastly, we dig into custom styling for Screen Flows—color pickers, borders, and more. I’m a big believer that “what it feels like to use a Flow” impacts adoption, but you’ve got to balance branding with accessibility and UX principles, or you’ll end up building something pretty… and painful.

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