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This is where the Salesforce Architecture Program resources can help.These resources fall into five categories: Fundamentals, Diagrams, Decision Guides, the Well-Architected Framework, and the Architecture Blog. This post walks through each one and how you can use it to prepare for the CTA Review Board.
Fundamentals cover the basic principles of Salesforce architecture and architecting on Salesforce. They go “under the hood” of platform functionality to a level of depth where you encounter elements you cannot change, but which explain why certain features work the way they do. Understanding this foundation helps you design in alignment with the architecture and identify the impact of suboptimal choices that affect scalability, maintainability, and performance in the long run.
Like many resources and activities during the CTA journey, you’ll likely revisit these multiple times as your experience deepens. A topic that felt straightforward before your first mock board may take on new importance after your third, prompting deeper exploration.
Discovering what you don’t know, while sometimes challenging and frustrating, is often a sign of growth and an indication that you’re on the right track.
The Salesforce Architecture Center Fundamentals section goes under the hood of the platform, from multitenant architecture to sharing models and integration patterns. Develop the mental model you need to design with the platform, not against it.
Architects know how diagrams can help speed up understanding and improve communication. This becomes especially important during the CTA board, where 45 minutes goes fast and the right diagram can make or break your presentation.
The Salesforce Architecture Center contains two main diagram galleries:
The Reference Architecture Gallery recently received a refresh that introduced Agentforce components, product updates, current architectural patterns, enhanced accessibility, and streamlined examples. While only certain diagram types will be directly applicable to your CTA Review Board presentation, the gallery is still a valuable resource. It helps illustrate how products work together with both Salesforce and non-Salesforce solutions. It also shows how those can come together in an implementation architecture, such as the Data 360 Customer Zero implementation architecture.
Because the data model is a critical part of your CTA solution presentation, the Data Model Gallery provides a strong starting point for Review Board preparation. It also helps reinforce concepts across domains like data, security, solution architecture, and integration.
During your CTA journey, you can review data models at two different levels of detail:
These data models, which you can extend as needed, are crucial because they form the foundation of your solution.
Architects often gravitate toward “it depends” as an answer because context is key when making architectural decisions. Choosing the right tool often starts with identifying the right context parameters. Decision guides are designed to help you do exactly that by analyzing tradeoffs and choosing the right Salesforce tools for your solutions. The refreshed decision guide format makes them even easier to navigate and introduces a more consistent structure across guides. This applies both to existing guides that continue to evolve and to newer topics, such as Data 360 provisioning or Data 360 operability.
CTA Review Board presentations require a balance of quick decision-making and strong, well-grounded justifications. Decision guides are the perfect tool to strengthen both skills by helping you:
The refreshed Salesforce Decision Guide format is designed to get you to the right answer faster, with clearer structure, explicit decision points, and dedicated nonfunctional considerations.
The Salesforce Well-Architected Framework provides prescriptive guidance and examples of patterns and anti-patterns that illustrate what healthy architectures and solutions look like. It draws on knowledge from product teams and implementation experts throughout Salesforce and the broader ecosystem.
A common trap during the CTA journey is per-requirement solutions. You may solve each requirement well, but it becomes easy to lose sight of how the pieces fit together, resulting in a solution that is technically defensible at the component level but architecturally fragile as a whole.
Consider a candidate who addresses each requirement soundly in isolation: a Lightning Web Component used for requirement A and a screen flow for requirement B. Both choices may be defensible on their own. Without considering how those elements support the same business process, the overall experience can feel fragmented. Transitions may lack clarity, and the solution can start to resemble a collection of disconnected features rather than a cohesive system. That’s the per-requirement trap. The Well-Architected Framework helps keep you honest.
The Salesforce Architecture Program extends beyond foundational architectural principles and guidance through resources like the Salesforce Architecture Blog. These resources provide you with thought leadership, implementation insights, and best practices for architects, by architects.
Taking a step back from technical deep-dive research into Salesforce features and evaluating them through an architectural lens can be challenging. Posts on the Salesforce Architecture Blog help you with that challenge, for example:
Reading about architectural thinking helps. Finding opportunities to practice is harder.
Bridging theory and practice is a crucial step in an architect’s professional development, but opportunities to practice architectural thinking in a hands-on, low-risk environment are not always easy to find. Collaborative settings, such as Think Like an Architect livestreams or community meetups and events, provide the perfect training ground for architects. They create opportunities to see experienced practitioners in action, join the conversation, and practice architectural reasoning, solutioning, and trade-off justification.
Formulating architectural justifications is not an easy task. Even highly capable architects can struggle through their CTA mock Review Boards, not because they lack knowledge or experience, but because their communication lacks clarity. Your solution might be a work of art, but if you can’t communicate it, your stakeholders will not buy it. The same is true for CTA Review Board judges evaluating your presentation.
Honing communication skills is also essential for CTA candidates. Not only is communication a domain in the CTA exam outline, but passing any of the other domains is difficult without strong communication skills. The Talk Like an Architect blog series breaks down communication into its core building blocks and explores how architects can communicate effectively across different styles and audiences.
Beyond the blog, resources like Architect Insights videos and events such as Think Like an Architect offer equally valuable perspectives to sharpen your thinking and deepen your readiness for the CTA exam.
Architecture only works when people understand it. The Talk Like an Architect series breaks down communication into its building blocks, from knowing your audience to telling your story, and shows you how to bring a room with you.
This post is not intended to be just another reading list. Instead, it is meant to provide practical, actionable ways to incorporate these resources into your CTA journey.
The journey to CTA is long, but the benefits of consistent preparation compound over time. Every mock, every gap identified, and every resource revisited builds on the last. Your next mock is the right place to start. Pick one resource from each section above and make it part of your prep before you step into your presentation.
Every experienced CTA was once exactly where you are now. Stay consistent, trust your preparation, and keep moving forward.
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