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Today on the Salesforce Admins Podcast, we talk to David Simpson, Salesforce Administrator at the 1916 Company. Join us as we chat about how he landed his first Salesforce Admin role and what advice he has for folks who are new to the ecosystem.
You should subscribe for the full episode, but here are a few takeaways from our conversation with David Simpson.
If you didn’t catch David’s presentation about resolving Flow errors at Dreamforce, be sure to check out our earlier episode with him. Another thing that came up was his career pivot, and it was so interesting that I had to bring him back to talk about it.
David started out as an accountant before eventually becoming a financial systems analyst. He had to run a lot of reports and quickly discovered that the thing he was actually interested in was the Salesforce platform.
Soon enough, David became the part-time admin for his organization, but he quickly realized that if he wanted to just focus on Salesforce, he would need to find a new job.
While David bulked up his credentials, he started looking for full-time Salesforce Admin roles to apply to. One piece of advice he has is to take a closer look at the job description and be clear about what you want.
“It’s not uncommon now for admins to have developer skills or maybe dip their toe into the architect side of things,” he says, “but I focused mainly on positions that were only looking for admin-related work.”
David also was really specific about finding an organization that was already committed to Salesforce. He looked for green flags like job postings with specifics on certifications or Superbadges. Finally, it was important to him to join a Salesforce team as opposed to try to cut his teeth as a solo admin.
David’s advice for people new to the ecosystem is to get curious. Back when he was a part-time admin, he was laser-focused on opportunities because that was what his organization was asking him to do.
“I should have given myself the benefit of the doubt,” he says, “and taken a little bit more risk in learning new things.” Reflecting now, he sees where he could have taken the initiative to try automations or enhance integrations and become a better admin in the process.
There are a lot more great tips from David about his pivot into a Salesforce Admin career, so be sure to listen to the full episode. And don’t forget to subscribe to the Salesforce Admins Podcast to catch us every Thursday.
Mike:
So, David, welcome back to the podcast.
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
So, he suggested that I become another admin with the company, and that I would learn about the general inner workings of Salesforce and be a point of contact for cleaning up that data, for troubleshooting issues and just all the things that come with being a junior level admin. So, he gave me a system administrator license. He recommended that I go into Trailhead to just learn the basics of being a Salesforce admin, the Salesforce ecosystem, custom objects. All those general items that you learn as an admin, and then I just kind of fell in love with it. It was such an interesting pivot from doing spreadsheets and reconciliations. I was able to kind of do problem solving and be an environment that I wasn’t too familiar in, but I was also able to see how Salesforce works and how we can get this data to be reportable data.
So, the automation behind it or validation rules, just even something simple like setting up a page layout. It was all very interesting and new to me, so I just latched onto it a hundred percent, and then I further got sold on the whole experience after about a year or so, being a Salesforce admin, I went to my first Dreamforce in 2018 and I got my Salesforce administrator certification, and at that point, that kind of signaled to me that this is what I want to do full time. So, from that point on, it’s all history. I went and unfortunately, the company I was with didn’t have the resources for a full-time admin, so I did go to another company, but since then I have been an awesome admin just doing it every day. Custom objects, flows, you name it, admin work-wise, I do it.
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
I used actual project and real-world experience, but something else that was a little kind of ace up the sleeve for my interview process was that I did have finance and accounting background. The job that ultimately hired me, while I did not do finance and accounting work for them, I was able to be a point of contact to help bridge the gap between the finance team and the Salesforce team. If they needed to pull financial data from Salesforce, I would be a person that they could go to, and I could confidently answer that because of my background.
So, when it comes to jumping from one career to a Salesforce career, I definitely recommend that people do lean into what they’ve done in the past and show how they can enhance a new job’s day-to-day by focusing on those areas of expertise, but just in a Salesforce context. That’s what really helped me because yes, I did unfortunately have a handful of interviews where I didn’t get the job, and I think that ultimately came down to just pure raw Salesforce experience. But the job that did hire me, it was because I had a great rapport with their CFO, and I was able to talk the talk with finance as well as bridge that gap to the Salesforce side of things.
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Additionally, I was looking to see what kind of qualifications and credentials they were looking for from an education side of things. If there was nothing about a Salesforce certification, then I erred on the side of caution and didn’t apply there. I wanted a company that was fully bought into the Salesforce ecosystem, and that can be illustrated in a job posting by seeing that they’re asking for the proper credentials. An extra little bonus, which was much more rare, was seeing your certain Trailhead status, or you have certain super badges. It’s very rare for a job to ask for those sorts of things, but that’s how you know you’re working with a company that knows the Salesforce ecosystem and knows what they want.
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
And most of the time they said no. But every once in a while they’d say yes, and then I get to show off my screen flow that I worked really hard on. So, nowadays, yes, I do have my dev org. I’ll bring up Trailhead every now and then, or I did back then when I was in the job hunt, but really, I like to showcase the dev org whenever possible because it is something that I’m actively developing in. Even now that I have a job and I’m in a job I love, I still whatever I do at my normal job, if I say, “Oh, that’s pretty interesting,” I go and I rebuild it in the dev org. But of course, without confidential information.
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
It was just essentially getting a feel for the Salesforce ecosystem that was there. And then from that point, once I was left my own devices, I just continued to do some more digging. I looked, okay, they’re using cases. How are they using cases? Where is the queue that stuff that we get asked to do comes in? What does their account object look like? Because the account object is always one of the busiest objects in the Salesforce ecosystem. How many validation rules do they have? I was really just trying to take the little experience that I had from my previous job and then look at those same areas in this new job. So, essentially just getting a feel for the org.
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
That company was actually where I learned how to build flows. The Salesforce architect there, Nick, he sat down with me one day for two hours and he said, “Okay, we’re going to build a screen flow and this needs to be triggered from a button and it needs to grab all these records. Let’s see you build it.” And then he walked me through it step by step, and it was just such an incredible experience, and I’m super grateful for it because now I use flows every single day in my job and I talk about flows. I talked about it at Dreamforce that just recently ended. I have a YouTube channel where I talk about flows. So, it was just such a good experience and I’m forever grateful for them.
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Or, “Why doesn’t this process work the way as intended? Can you let me try this automation?” I eventually got those skill sets over the years, especially with automation, but it took a little bit longer than expected because I was just afraid to take that leap very early on, and I should have given myself the benefit of the doubt that I could have figured it out that early on, and I think that would’ve made me a stronger admin from the get-go.
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
The post How Do I Transition Into a Salesforce Admin Career? appeared first on Salesforce Admins.
By Mike Gerholdt4.7
201201 ratings
Today on the Salesforce Admins Podcast, we talk to David Simpson, Salesforce Administrator at the 1916 Company. Join us as we chat about how he landed his first Salesforce Admin role and what advice he has for folks who are new to the ecosystem.
You should subscribe for the full episode, but here are a few takeaways from our conversation with David Simpson.
If you didn’t catch David’s presentation about resolving Flow errors at Dreamforce, be sure to check out our earlier episode with him. Another thing that came up was his career pivot, and it was so interesting that I had to bring him back to talk about it.
David started out as an accountant before eventually becoming a financial systems analyst. He had to run a lot of reports and quickly discovered that the thing he was actually interested in was the Salesforce platform.
Soon enough, David became the part-time admin for his organization, but he quickly realized that if he wanted to just focus on Salesforce, he would need to find a new job.
While David bulked up his credentials, he started looking for full-time Salesforce Admin roles to apply to. One piece of advice he has is to take a closer look at the job description and be clear about what you want.
“It’s not uncommon now for admins to have developer skills or maybe dip their toe into the architect side of things,” he says, “but I focused mainly on positions that were only looking for admin-related work.”
David also was really specific about finding an organization that was already committed to Salesforce. He looked for green flags like job postings with specifics on certifications or Superbadges. Finally, it was important to him to join a Salesforce team as opposed to try to cut his teeth as a solo admin.
David’s advice for people new to the ecosystem is to get curious. Back when he was a part-time admin, he was laser-focused on opportunities because that was what his organization was asking him to do.
“I should have given myself the benefit of the doubt,” he says, “and taken a little bit more risk in learning new things.” Reflecting now, he sees where he could have taken the initiative to try automations or enhance integrations and become a better admin in the process.
There are a lot more great tips from David about his pivot into a Salesforce Admin career, so be sure to listen to the full episode. And don’t forget to subscribe to the Salesforce Admins Podcast to catch us every Thursday.
Mike:
So, David, welcome back to the podcast.
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
So, he suggested that I become another admin with the company, and that I would learn about the general inner workings of Salesforce and be a point of contact for cleaning up that data, for troubleshooting issues and just all the things that come with being a junior level admin. So, he gave me a system administrator license. He recommended that I go into Trailhead to just learn the basics of being a Salesforce admin, the Salesforce ecosystem, custom objects. All those general items that you learn as an admin, and then I just kind of fell in love with it. It was such an interesting pivot from doing spreadsheets and reconciliations. I was able to kind of do problem solving and be an environment that I wasn’t too familiar in, but I was also able to see how Salesforce works and how we can get this data to be reportable data.
So, the automation behind it or validation rules, just even something simple like setting up a page layout. It was all very interesting and new to me, so I just latched onto it a hundred percent, and then I further got sold on the whole experience after about a year or so, being a Salesforce admin, I went to my first Dreamforce in 2018 and I got my Salesforce administrator certification, and at that point, that kind of signaled to me that this is what I want to do full time. So, from that point on, it’s all history. I went and unfortunately, the company I was with didn’t have the resources for a full-time admin, so I did go to another company, but since then I have been an awesome admin just doing it every day. Custom objects, flows, you name it, admin work-wise, I do it.
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
I used actual project and real-world experience, but something else that was a little kind of ace up the sleeve for my interview process was that I did have finance and accounting background. The job that ultimately hired me, while I did not do finance and accounting work for them, I was able to be a point of contact to help bridge the gap between the finance team and the Salesforce team. If they needed to pull financial data from Salesforce, I would be a person that they could go to, and I could confidently answer that because of my background.
So, when it comes to jumping from one career to a Salesforce career, I definitely recommend that people do lean into what they’ve done in the past and show how they can enhance a new job’s day-to-day by focusing on those areas of expertise, but just in a Salesforce context. That’s what really helped me because yes, I did unfortunately have a handful of interviews where I didn’t get the job, and I think that ultimately came down to just pure raw Salesforce experience. But the job that did hire me, it was because I had a great rapport with their CFO, and I was able to talk the talk with finance as well as bridge that gap to the Salesforce side of things.
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Additionally, I was looking to see what kind of qualifications and credentials they were looking for from an education side of things. If there was nothing about a Salesforce certification, then I erred on the side of caution and didn’t apply there. I wanted a company that was fully bought into the Salesforce ecosystem, and that can be illustrated in a job posting by seeing that they’re asking for the proper credentials. An extra little bonus, which was much more rare, was seeing your certain Trailhead status, or you have certain super badges. It’s very rare for a job to ask for those sorts of things, but that’s how you know you’re working with a company that knows the Salesforce ecosystem and knows what they want.
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
And most of the time they said no. But every once in a while they’d say yes, and then I get to show off my screen flow that I worked really hard on. So, nowadays, yes, I do have my dev org. I’ll bring up Trailhead every now and then, or I did back then when I was in the job hunt, but really, I like to showcase the dev org whenever possible because it is something that I’m actively developing in. Even now that I have a job and I’m in a job I love, I still whatever I do at my normal job, if I say, “Oh, that’s pretty interesting,” I go and I rebuild it in the dev org. But of course, without confidential information.
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
It was just essentially getting a feel for the Salesforce ecosystem that was there. And then from that point, once I was left my own devices, I just continued to do some more digging. I looked, okay, they’re using cases. How are they using cases? Where is the queue that stuff that we get asked to do comes in? What does their account object look like? Because the account object is always one of the busiest objects in the Salesforce ecosystem. How many validation rules do they have? I was really just trying to take the little experience that I had from my previous job and then look at those same areas in this new job. So, essentially just getting a feel for the org.
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
That company was actually where I learned how to build flows. The Salesforce architect there, Nick, he sat down with me one day for two hours and he said, “Okay, we’re going to build a screen flow and this needs to be triggered from a button and it needs to grab all these records. Let’s see you build it.” And then he walked me through it step by step, and it was just such an incredible experience, and I’m super grateful for it because now I use flows every single day in my job and I talk about flows. I talked about it at Dreamforce that just recently ended. I have a YouTube channel where I talk about flows. So, it was just such a good experience and I’m forever grateful for them.
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Or, “Why doesn’t this process work the way as intended? Can you let me try this automation?” I eventually got those skill sets over the years, especially with automation, but it took a little bit longer than expected because I was just afraid to take that leap very early on, and I should have given myself the benefit of the doubt that I could have figured it out that early on, and I think that would’ve made me a stronger admin from the get-go.
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
David Simpson:
Mike:
The post How Do I Transition Into a Salesforce Admin Career? appeared first on Salesforce Admins.

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