For best results you should shoot a colour reference like the Colour Checker Passport with the actual camera or in the actual lighting environment.
This colour reference is then used in the RAW converter to translate photon counts per pixel under the colour filter on top of the recording chip into actual physical colours.
From that reference point it is possible to choose an output profile like AdobeRGB or ProPhotoRGB or sRGB depending on what you intend to use the files for.
If you intend to print in a colour managed lab you should choose AdobeRGB same is if you later Convert to a CMYK gamut like ISO coated V2 ECI.
If you publish on the Web (PC, Mac, Android, Windos, iOS, Smartphone, Tablet, SmartTV) you should choose the sRGB ECI colour profile to output.
Find the current versions of the profiles here:
http://www.eci.org/en/downloadsNote that later conversion is always lossy (AdobeRGB ist "bigger" so it is coarser too, sRGB is smaller so it is denser). If you need both, better do two output renderings in your RAW converter.