Monday 4 June 2012

Salesforce Certification

In one of my earlier blog posts in April, I set up a mobile application that allowed readers to take a survey on their phone.  At the time I said that I might even take notice of the responses, and I've written this post because I decided I would!  Big thanks to those that tried the app out and gave me feedback.

One area that cropped up a few times was Salesforce certification, and this is also an topic that has garnered a lot of interest when I've blogged or tweeted about it in the past.

Why Get Certified

There are many good reasons to get certified.  A few that I'm aware of are as follows:



  • Enhance your career prospects One of the ways in which Salesforce Cloud Alliance partners are measured is on the number and type of certifications their staff hold, and as the partner level increases through Silver, Gold to Platinum, the number and types of certifications required increases.  For example, Platinum Partners are required to have at least one Technical Architect on staff (which is why I had to complete this exam at pretty short notice at the beginning of the year!).  
    Thus having the appropriate certifications will definitely make you a more interesting candidate and most partners that I am aware of seem to be permanently recruiting these days.  Here at BrightGen,
    we are always interested in the right people.

  • Gain Credibility with Customers In my experience, while this isn't something that customers are particularly aware of initially, it is generally well received when you list your certifications and explain the study and effort that you've had to put in to gain them, and your opinion carries more weight.  Obviously this can vary - for example, one prospect didn't seem to be particularly excited about my extensive list of certifications, but when they handed me their business card, mentioning a PhD and membership of a number of chartered institutes, I began to understand why.

  • Validation Its a great feeling when you see the "Congratulations" message after submitting the exam. Moreover, you have demonstrated the appropriate level of knowledge and ability to earn that certification, which means that you must know something about it!  You can take comfort from that when you find yourself struggling or doubting your decisions.
  • Special Events This is something specific to partners rather than all certified professionals so doesn't apply to everyone.  Events such as Spark the Social Enterprise give excellent opportunities to network with your peers and gain access to key Salesforce experts.  
  • Because its there This was the motivation for me for the advanced admin and advanced developer exams.  Once I'd got those that were required from partnership perspective, I decided that I didn't want to stop until I'd got them all.  As I had the original Consultant certification which was discontinued in March 2012, I heaped additional pressure on myself to get all eight while that was still possible.

Resources

There’s a wealth of information on the internet regarding Salesforce Certification.  As is usually the case with these things, not all of it is useful!  My favourites are:
  • Salesforce.com Certification Facebook Page
    This is where the latest news will break regarding assignment windows and exam status.  They also have regular ‘office hours’ Q&A sessions with their certified experts, which can have really useful information.
  • LinkedIn
    There are a number of useful study and discussion groups on LinkedIn.  The Salesforce.com Certification team also post information and respond to questions, so its well worth following them.
  • Force Certified
    The grandaddy of them all.  Great work by John Coppedge.

Studying

The starting point for me with any exam is the Study Guide.  This gives you details of the purpose and format of the exam, and then a point by point summary of the areas that you will be tested on and how much they count towards the overall mark.  

What happens next really depends on how you like to study - if you find videos the best way, the premier online training catalog has great material, including knowledge check questions throughout to see if any of it is sticking.  If you don’t have access to that, there’s a huge amount on the Salesforce channel on youtube.  

Personally, I’m a big fan of the written word, so I’ll usually head to the online help and go straight to the Printable Tip Sheets and User Guides section.  This is a collection of short documents that take you through setting up and using various aspects of the system.  Its basically the same information as can be found elsewhere in the help, but each document is standalone and takes you through planning, configuration, rollout and day to day use.  I find that reading through these documents while actually setting up and configuring a developer org really helps things stick in my mind.  I also tend to scribble my own highly distilled notes at the same time, then write these up into a short ‘pass notes’ style document that I use to refresh my memory in the run up to the exam.

The Exam

After all the hard work and studying is done, it’s exam time.  I’ve been taking the online proctored versions since they became available, as I much prefer sitting in my own house to travelling to my nearest testing centre in London.  The slight downside to this is that the setup is all my problem.  Clearing everything out of my study and setting the webcam up always takes longer than I expect, so if you are going this route make sure you allow plenty of time.  Also make sure that your webcam and microphone are working well in advance, so that you don’t find yourself rooting through boxes in the attic for your old microphone 10 minutes before the exam is due to start, which is exactly what happened to me the first time!

For most of the exams, the format is similar - a set number of multiple choice questions to be completed in a time limit.  The number of questions, time limit and passing grade differs, but all three increase as you move up the certification food chain.

Below are my tips when taking the exam:
  • Make sure your webcam is set up exactly as required.  I’ve not had any issues with this, but I know people that have and by all accounts it’s pretty annoying and distracting to have the exam freeze and need to call the US.
  • Read the question carefully.  Its really easy to miss the “not”, “doesn’t” or “excluding” and thus end up giving the perfect wrong answer.
  • If you don’t know the correct answer, try to derive it by excluding the wrong answers.  As Sherlock Holmes said: “When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.
  • If you don’t know the answer and can’t derive it, mark it for review and move on.  A lot of the time it will come to you when you are thinking about another question.  Very occasionally a later question will be asked in such a way that it will guide you towards the correct answer for an earlier question.
  • If you have access to a pencil and paper, note down how confident you are in the answer.  Based on the passing grade for the exam, it gives a good indication of the pass/fail likelihood.  If you’ve got a high level of confidence in most of the answers, you don’t need to sweat that there are a couple of guesses in there.  Of course the reverse is also true - if they are all guesses its going to be a bumpy ride.
    I give mine a percentage rating:
    • 100% - definitely correct, in my mind anyway
    • 75% - pretty sure it’s correct, but wouldn’t hurt to check later
    • 50% - I’ve narrowed it down to a couple, one of which is definitely the answer
    • 25% - one sounds more plausible than the others
    • 0% - total guess

Share the Love

After you’ve taken the exam, share your experience with the wider community.  Even if you didn’t pass, you may be able to serve as an example for others!

Once you have your certification, you may become the subject matter expert for that area within your company.  Organize some presentations or study group sessions to pass on your knowledge to your colleagues.  This is something I’ve done a fair bit of at BrightGen, and it really works.  Start out with a general heads up about the topic, then capture feedback at the end of each session about what the attendees would like to cover next time and before long you’ll have a team of certified experts and a rich library of collateral.

Write a blog post on your certification journey.  Try to put your personal spin on it, rather than just repeating topic areas from the Study Guide. Was it harder or easier than you thought?  Were there areas that cropped up a lot so you really need to know those in depth? How did you prepare for it, and if you did it again would you try a different approach?

Don’t Game the System

Once you start sharing information, you are likely to start receiving requests to share dumps or sample questions.  Don’t.  You’ve put all that hard work into it, why should someone else get an easy ride?

Don’t try to game the system yourself either.  While having the credential might get through the door for a job, you’ll quickly be found out if you haven’t earned it.   I can’t think of anything worse than being presented to a customer as an expert in the field and then being unmasked as a chancer.  The Salesforce community is also tightly knit, so if you do this the word is likely to spread.

The Sales and Service cloud certifications were withdrawn in April 2012 and have just returned to beta, due to reports of the question and answer set being publicly available.  This is a poster child for the damage that gaming the system can do. Many innocent parties who studied hard for the exam suddenly had their booking cancelled due to a few guilty ones who wanted to cheat their way to success.  In some ways this can be viewed as a backhanded compliment - if the credential wasn’t worth having, people would be trying to cheat their way through, and if it was easy to achieve they wouldn’t need to cheat.


Cloudstock Slide Deck


I had this blog post written a few weeks ago, but then an opportunity to present at Cloudstock came up so it had to go on hold so that I didn't pre-empt my talk. My slide deck from that session is available for download here.

14 comments:

  1. Really great article Bob.

    I would like to reinforce your mention NOT to share dumps or exam questions (I ignore similar requests on a regular basis). Salesforce recently had to take down an exam because they discovered a copy had been leaked. This meant that other test takers couldn't get certified, lose-lose for everyone.

    Thanks for sharing and the mention!

    Cheers,

    John

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  2. great article! it was a nice read as I plan to take the admin exam and I'm already force.com certified developer. more power to your blog.

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  3. oh this is a very good article and it give's me right direction for certification .....great

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    Replies
    1. Pretty impressed by the variety of attentiveness on this website. You have a ton of amazing information here. I am sure I will check out this blog another time

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  5. Hi Bob
    Took the exam for Service Cloud Consultant today. Didnt passed in the exam. I covered all the topics mentioned in the study guide lines. I think I am a fresher and didnt have the experience which owe to failure in the exam. In my experience its very tough as compared to ADM201 and DEV401.
    Can u suggest me few more resources for the beginners to pass this exam. I already did the premier online course by Salesforce.
    Thanks
    Chandan

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  6. I just failed the Salesforce Administrator exam recently. Any study tips or helpful guides would be greatly appreciated. You can e-mail me at my personal e-mail address at andrewbishup@gmail.com. Thank you all for your support.

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  7. Hello Bob
    I will like to know how to study for the Service cloud Exam. Is there any manual guide like 201/401. I am looking for structure resources like a book or manual that speaks to Service cloud.

    Thanks

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