Solo Admins: Are You Spinning Plates?

 

balancing_many_things_800_11196A few weeks ago, I had the good fortune to be selected to speak at Southeast Dreamin’ in Atlanta.  The topic I chose was about moving from being a solo admin to creating a CoE (Center of Excellence).  I could not have been more pleased at how well the session went and the amazing questions that I got from the audience.  Since there seemed to be so much interest in the topic, I have opted to break down my talk into a few blog posts.

This first post is about understanding why solo admins are constantly in a state of spinning plates and how to to start to get ahead of the plate spinning activity and actually be effective in the role of solo admin.

  1. Lack of Understanding by Management on the role of Solo Admin

What were the original expectations of the role?  Yes, we know that roles tend to evolve over time but often the solo admin role is created off of the back of a small implementation, whereby the admin is responsible for creating new users, delivering some end user training and report building.  As the Salesforce needs grow, the solo admin tries to keep pace and starts taking on more functions.  Reviewing the expectations of the role against what the role currently encompasses is a good way to bring light to the additional duties and if there is a need, justify additional assistance if these are out of balance.  Salesforce also has document that recommends the amount of admins necessary to maintain Salesforce based on the number of users.  Consult with your AE or CSM to get additional up to date information.

When I started as a solo admin, I had a 450 license org for a few lines of business.  In the span of a year, I ended up with 1000+ licenses and 13 lines of business using the same org.  Ideally, it would be best to not get to the point where you drop all of the spinning plates.. which leads me to my next point.

2. Not Quantifying the Amount of Requests Received from Users

Requests come in from end users on a daily basis and these could be through email, chatter posts, phone calls and office fly bys.  Are you tracking all of these requests to adequately quantify your time and where most of it is being spent?  If you are not doing this now, begin immediately.  No, really.  Stop reading and go set this up!  You can finish reading the post later! There are a number of ways to track requests, I’ve used the Cases object and a special record type to record any requests from users.  I’ve heard of others using Chatter (less quantifiable), Ideas and the app exchange app, ChangeIt!  Feel free to leave others in the comments.  The reason why this is important is that it gives you justification for employing additional services, such as Premier Support, Managed Services or a consultancy partner.

3. Spending Time on Non Value Add Activities

Do end users call you for password resets? Do you feel like you spend all day doing things but not accomplishing anything?  By tracking what you’re doing (which you’ll be doing if you read #2 above..) you can see where your time is being spent.  Pluck out the items that bring the most value, such as project work or training and look to offload some of the more mundane tasks to other areas.  A solo admin is in their role because they are the heart and soul of the Salesforce org, so why have them spend time resetting passwords?  That is something that can either be offloaded to IT support or even Premier Support, as I have done in the past.  This all brings me to the fourth point.

4. Create a plan (and possibly a business case)!

Is your Salesforce org holding steady at around the same number of licensing or are you going to be adding functionality, business units or additional licenses?  Have you implemented a change management process and a fortnightly release cycle? (For non Brits, fortnightly is every two weeks!) All of these things will throw off any delicate balance you may have achieved with those spinning plates above.  If your org is holding steady with no changes, then you’ve won the admin jackpot!  But for the other 99.9% of the population, it’s essential to have a plan in place to manage current items in flight, items on the horizon and a block of time for production support.  By having data around production support items, it’s easier to identify the amount of time needed and balance it against the items in flight and on the horizon.  If the total of all 3 equals more than one person, you may need to use that plan to build out a business case.

5. OPTIONAL: Getting Assistance

 

If the outcome of the four steps above is that you need to take on additional assistance to be effective, don’t worry.  There are ways of doing this that will align nicely with your business case activities from step four.

Review the type of assistance needed and then align to a recommended approach.  Some of these include:

Production Support Assistance: Salesforce Premier Success offers a number of options with a 24/7 support line to assist with everything from password resets to actual development support such as writing apex code.

Project Level Implementation Support: Look to engage with a Salesforce Partner that can manage the requirements gathering, design, build and implementation of your Salesforce effort.  The Partner should also be ideally working with you in a knowledge transfer capacity so that you are aware and can manage the new functionality going forward.

Post Project Support: Most Partners can offer managed services support post implementation to support the functionality that was built as a result of the above implementation.

Hire Staff:  Sometimes it makes sense to onboard additional admins or begin to build a Center of Excellence.  More to come in the next post!

 

Forging the Trail from Solo Admin to Center of Excellence

First off, thank you to everyone that came to my talk at Southeast Dreamin’.  I had so many great pieces of feedback and people telling me how what I said really resonated with them.  This is why I do what I do, because of all of you!

I am posting the slides and the document that I used from Salesforce here.  I believe Chris has the unenviable task of going through and editing all of the videos!

Here are my slides from my talk. Solo Admin to CoE – SEDreamin v2

Here is the document I used from Salesforce. Best Practices for Salesforce Administrator Resourcing

 

The 5 Essentials You’ll Need for London’s Calling

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5. Comfortable shoes. The area between rooms, expo, space bar and the entrance isn’t large, but after many times of walking up and down the stairs after the fabulous keynotes and sessions, your feet may get tired.  Plus you may want to bust a move or two during the after party!

4. Comfortable clothing. You’ll be moving from room to room, up and down the stairs and presumably, busting that move that we talked about in reason #5.  You might as well be comfortable doing it.  If comfortable for you is fancy dress, as say..  the Hulk, who are we to judge?

3. Technology! As if we really had to tell you to bring tablets and phones.  But just in case, here is a reminder.  You’ll of course want to live tweet how much fun you’re having to those that weren’t lucky enough to get a ticket!

2. Chargers!  We’ll have the outlets, you bring the chargers or extra batteries for all of that technology you’re bringing.  I heard a rumor that there is gonna be some cool swag.  You’ll definitely want to tweet about that!

1. Enthusiasm! Hopefully you’ll be excited that it’s a Friday and you’re not at work.  In addition to that, you’ll be learning cool stuff, meeting new people and getting cool swag.  Also, you’ll get our amazing Keynotes from Peter Coffee and Erica Kuhl and if that wasn’t enough, the after party!  This is where we want to see those cool moves!

If this sounds all too good to be true and you don’t have a ticket for the hottest event in town, don’t fret.  Tickets are still available here.

Project Pitfalls: Fear of Going Live

Doubt & Fear

As I was talking to my mentor, she suggested a great idea to start blogging about some project pitfalls that I’ve
encountered.  As a project manager at Cloud Sherpas, I would like to say I have seen everything, but clients continue to amaze me with each and every new project I lead!  One of my favorite project scenarios is the one that I decided to begin this series with, Fear of Going Live.

Fear of Going Live, FoGL for short, is a condition that makes mature organizations become frightful of deploying their initial Salesforce solution.  Before anyone starts to panic, FoGL is not contagious or terminal!  There are proven non-drug therapies to treat and cure if it is caught early enough! Treatment can save an organization a considerable amount of money, time, headaches, and heart aches upon initial implementation.  I am going to quickly break down the symptoms of FoGL and then I will list out the treatment.  These are proven methods that have been tested and put through special clinical trials.  So basically, trust me!

Symptoms of FoGL:

If you’ve experienced FoGL in any way, some of these may sound familiar to you..

  • Requesting project extensions to elongate the QA or UAT test cycles
  • Bringing a significant amount of additional people into testing to ensure that absolutely NO DETAIL has been missed (this is usually seen when the client is doing a “lift & shift” from an old system to Salesforce – more to come on the perils of the lift & shift)
  • Not trusting earlier requirements/user stories and continuously raising defects that are essentially, new requirements
  • Believing that everything needs to absolutely perfect for go live because users will not user the system as they will not trust it
  • Not understanding that a Salesforce implementation should be an evolution out of basic requirements with room to scale

Causes of FoGL:

  • Lack of Change Management efforts, including change agents/champions and a proper communication plan
  • Not reviewing As Is processes to align with new To Be processes within Salesforce (retiring legacy processes)
  • Not bringing key business participation into the project early on so that the following occurs:
    • Poorly documented user stories without key business participation
    • Lack of input from key process owners
    • Validation of requirements and acceptance criteria from the business
    • Lift & Shift Syndrome

When helping clients or your own organization implement Salesforce, whether it’s Sales cloud or Service cloud, be aware of signs of FoGL.  Making sure that due diligence is performed from the beginning to ensure all requirements have been captured into actionable user stories that align with new To Be processes to achieve business objectives are key.  Do your part to stop FoGL and ensure a successful implementation.

Happy Go Lives make the Best Go Lives! (cheesy.. I know! )