Sunday, November 27, 2016

Gemba, It’s Not A Monster Sent to Destroy Tokyo



Gemba is Japanese for "the real place." It is where the work is and often where the problems are. In my engineering practice, I need to see how a product or process is performed and speak with the operators directly. I try to avoid the managers since they often don’t know the real story. I try to practice this as a Salesforce Administrator as well. In my current role, most of the sales force is remote which makes it challenging. Conversely, I have looked at roles where I might be remote, making the practice of Gemba difficult as well.

The issues I struggle with is how to do the “Gemba Walk” remotely. There are several tools which make it easier as compared to monitoring a process. The first is the ability login in as a user. Using this access, I can at least see what the users are seeing.

One thing that has not worked has been relying on emails and phone conversations alone. I use the language of Salesforce and often the users don’t have the same lexicon as me, which leads to confusion on my part. It also results in me solving the wrong problem.

I am learning that I need to have them walk me through the steps that they follow while I am in my instance of Salesforce so that I can see what they are doing. I do this as a System Administrator so that I can determine if it is an access issue or a something else. If I can see it and they can’t it is usually a permissions problem. If I can’t see it, then I need to dig in a little more.

So while I can’t always be at Gemba, I can get a sense of the real action going on…

Sunday, November 20, 2016

The Word On The Street

Well, I have a job! It's a contract job helping a small business revamp their Salesforce Organization (~35 users). Being an Administrator is everything I hoped it would be. Right now I am doing mostly process mapping, and planning improvements.

I have done some user support issues. I will say that while the certification helps with addressing the problems, but nothing beats experience. To be a contractor I had to start an LLC (KGForce, LLC). That has been a lot of work; nothing too hard, just time consuming. Once I catch up with all the paperwork, it should be smooth sailing. I do have an accountant who is helping with a lot of the tax paperwork, and I went through an online provider for the filing documents.

I have a website that is in-progress, and I am going to write another six sigma article for Linked In. I will use that platform for business marketing and the blog for career updates. I will link the blog to the website and post both the Linked In and blog entries on the there. For now, I suppose if the blog hurts the business, I may have to rethink the approach, or I may blog about more business issues and fewer career issues. It is a good outlet for my creativity.

Fun times ahead! For those that celebrate, Happy Thanksgiving...gobble, gobble...

Sunday, October 30, 2016

Belt Mean No Need Rope Hold Up Pants



As I progress in my Salesforce career, I have found a lot of use for my Six Sigma training (see my LinkedIn article). Throughout the years I have been part of various training programs but have not had a chance to get either a green or black belt. I have been exploring contract jobs and have gotten a 3-month gig starting in November.

As part of this exploration, I learned that I needed to start an LLC (KGForce, LLC) in order to get paid. I am in the process of creating a website (no content yet), though I will still blog here and link to the website. I am generating content for the website and I have decided to highlight my six sigma approach to setting up Salesforce organizations. Discussing this approach raises the issue of belts and certifications.
From a training and certification perspective, I expect that Salesforce certifications will be more influential in getting contracts than a Six Sigma belt. In reading about the belt process, there are a lot of certification programs. The best ones all have projects associated with them. This suggests that experience is more valuable than education.

I have found in the interview process, that this is also true. I got the most interest in my resume once I became certified. However, beyond certification, recruiters and hiring managers wanted to know about my experience. So I will work on both Salesforce projects and certifications. The six sigma belts will have to wait. I have created a training roadmap based on what I think is a mix of logical progression and quality of training materials available.



I have tried to stay with the declarative aspects of Salesforce. I get the sense that they are driving users towards this via increasing functionality with the declarative features. I think marketing automation will be a good area to focus on and the training plan reflects that. Eventually, I’ll get a belt or too, but for right now I’ll have to let my experience to the talking.

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Where are People Coming From?



The intent of the web-to-lead form is to collect data on where my traffic is coming from and if people think it’s useful for my job search. Well, I have three respondents out of probably 40 visits (I have a web tracker that gives me traffic numbers, but not sources in a way that is useful for me). They all agree that the blog is useful for finding a job.

The other goal of the web-to-lead form is to showcase my ability to create dashboards and reports from the data collected. With three data points, it’s not as impressive as one might hope. I created a pie chart (below) and it’s clear that there is some other source for people finding my blog. LinkedIn is not a big driver and nobody that I sent my resume to has responded to the survey.



I’ll play around with the dashboards and reports some more and see if I can show something that is cool. Hopefully, I’ll get some more data in the near future. Feel free to help with that.

Thursday, September 29, 2016

It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s a Superbadge – Security Specialist



I got my first Superbadge today. I can see why they call it super. It’s a combination of tasks and quizzes. The requirements are not always clear and it can take a while to figure out the specific setting they want for each profile. On balance, it was a good test of setting up login restrictions, roles, profiles, and sharing rules. I think if I had to do similar, it would go quicker, since now I know where to look.


Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Now What...

Now that I am a Salesforce Certified Administrator, what's next? Well, the first thing is to find a job as an Administrator. I'm checking out the job boards, networking, and exploring freelance opportunities. In between, I'm completing trails on Trailhead, working on Superbadges, and studying for my next certification (Platform App Builder). Oh, and finishing the roof on my barn before the first snow.

So far I have completed 17 trails (below). I plan to knock out all of the administrator trails and then hit the developer trails. The trails that are left aren't as related to what I plan to do, but they are fun to complete.