
Andrew Hanna
Serpent Team

Manual change sets seem harmless, just a few clicks to move metadata between orgs. But when releases repeat weekly or across multiple clients, those clicks turn into hours of untracked cost.
Most Salesforce teams underestimate how much time, coordination, and rework manual deployments consume. What looks like a “simple” release process often hides thousands of dollars in lost productivity each quarter.
Even efficient teams lose hours every sprint to manual steps:
| Task | Average Time | Per Release |
|---|---|---|
| Building & validating change set | 3–4 hours | 3 hrs |
| Tracking dependencies | 1–2 hours | 1.5 hrs |
| Fixing post-deployment errors | 2–3 hours | 2.5 hrs |
| Coordination & re-approval | 1–2 hours | 1.5 hrs |
| Total | 8–10 hours | per release cycle |
Multiply that by 3–4 releases a month, and a five-person team easily burns 30–40 hours monthly on repetitive manual work.
Let’s quantify it.
Formula:Cost = (Hours Lost × Avg Hourly Rate × Releases per Month)
For a team of five, averaging $60/hour and four releases per month:(8 hours × $60 × 4 releases × 5 people) = $9,600 / month
That’s over
$100,000 annually, just maintaining
change sets and fixing drift.
And that
doesn’t include the opportunity cost: slower feature delivery, missed SLAs, and
extra QA cycles.
Every failed deployment carries ripple effects:
With pre-deployment checks, environment comparison, and one-click
rollback, 80 % of that waste disappears.
A broken deployment becomes a 2-minute
correction, not a 2-day setback.
Automation isn’t an expense, it’s a multiplier.
When you remove the manual layers from releases, you:
Example:
A Salesforce consultancy moved from manual
change sets to Serpent’s task-based deployments.
For a real-team example, see the Syntilio case study: how a Salesforce ISV made the switch.
When leadership sees deployment as a predictable, low-risk process, releases shift
from bottlenecks to accelerators.
Automation
doesn’t just save time, it compounds productivity.
Serpent’s approach replaces spreadsheets and manual checklists with a
task-based GitFlow that links work
items, metadata, and orgs.
Teams using Serpent
routinely report:

Andrew Hanna

Serpent Team

Tekunda Team

Tekunda Team

Tekunda Team

Andrew Hanna