![]() By the end of 2013, I had completed all the certifications I could get without doing the programming ones and I was happy with that. Still, I was thankful I didn’t need to learn to write it. Working with and learning about FinancialForce PSA really helped me understand how to build dynamic and flexible solutions there are many settings built into the app that are referred to by the code and this approach ultimately influenced the way I design solutions today. …To often codeĪs I became familiar with the limitations and capabilities of coded solutions and started to prove myself in the art of consultancy, I found I was writing more specs for code than I was for config. After I’d completed a few more projects, it became easier to identify situations where the code had its place and working with some great offshore developers helped, since I found that writing specs for them were also a great way to organise your head and learn about what is possible. I’d do anything I could to avoid having to design a coded solution. Apex and Visualforce was something completely alien to me – “No way, not touching that!”- and I found that mentality influenced my design style. From no code to sometimes code…įast-forward to 2008 when I first started working with Salesforce. At the end of the first year at uni, I had achieved an A in my Visual Basic module but still decided to leave it behind. My lecturer was much stronger than the A-Level IT teacher had been and she spent time with me to build some cute little programmes. Then when I got to university and they announced that we would be learning VB again, I put my head in my hands, but, as time went by, I started to become more confident. I used to cry with frustration and I made a conscious decision that coding wasn’t for me. ![]() ![]() ![]() I went as far as to say that there was “absolutely no way” I would even attempt to do it.Īt Sixth Form, Visual Basic was a key part of my A-Level ICT and I hated it. When I started working at Bluewolf, I scoffed at the thought of jumping up the triangle and reaching Certified Technical Architect. You Don’t Have to Code to Become a Certified Technical Architectįor the last month or so I’ve been thinking a lot about using downtime at work to improve my skills and standing as a Salesforce professional. Learn Salesforce with Gemma – Homework and Recordings.Learn about Salesforce, single motherhood and my life with breast cancer
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