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Salesforce Data Architect Certification Guide

Salesforce Data Architect Certification Guide

By : Aaron Allport
5 (4)
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Salesforce Data Architect Certification Guide

Salesforce Data Architect Certification Guide

5 (4)
By: Aaron Allport

Overview of this book

The Salesforce Data Architect is a prerequisite exam for the Application Architect half of the Salesforce Certified Technical Architect credential. This book offers complete, up-to-date coverage of the Salesforce Data Architect exam so you can take it with confidence. The book is written in a clear, succinct way with self-assessment and practice exam questions, covering all the topics necessary to help you pass the exam with ease. You’ll understand the theory around Salesforce data modeling, database design, master data management (MDM), Salesforce data management (SDM), and data governance. Additionally, performance considerations associated with large data volumes will be covered. You’ll also get to grips with data migration and understand the supporting theory needed to achieve Salesforce Data Architect certification. By the end of this Salesforce book, you'll have covered everything you need to know to pass the Salesforce Data Architect certification exam and have a handy, on-the-job desktop reference guide to re-visit the concepts.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Salesforce Data Architect Theory
9
Section 2: Salesforce Data Architect Design
15
Section 3: Applying What We've Learned – Practice Questions and Revision Aids

Putting it all together

Let’s put what we’ve learned throughout this chapter together using a practical example from the Account and Contact concepts we have covered in this chapter.

Let’s imagine that there’s a fictitious bank that deals with both individuals and businesses (and therefore the people that work for that business). The fictitious bank has sales teams that deal with corporate clients, personal bankers that deal with non-corporate banking clients, and certain customer individuals who can be privy to the dealings of more than one company, such as a legal professional. Let’s imagine how the Account and Contact parts of the data model can be visualized:

Figure 8.7 – An example data model

Figure 8.7 – An example data model

Here, we can see how several different relationship types between Accounts and Contacts can be achieved using the Person Accounts feature and three join objects. Our fictitious bank can deal with businesses using...

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