Salesforce Administrator

F1
Biggin Hill
3 weeks ago
Create job alert

Formula 1 covers a huge range of disciplines across a wide array of industry sectors, drawing the very best from our teams of technicians, engineers and media rights specialists and encouraging the creativity of experts in the fields of digital and traditional media, marketing and communications. From timekeeping, to software development, broadcast engineering and content creation, we are truly the 11th Formula 1 team.We are recruiting for a Salesforce Administrator who would be based at our Media and Technology Centre in Biggin Hill. Do you have what it takes to be part of the world’s greatest sport and entertainment spectacle?Main Duties & Responsibilities: * System Administration: Configure and maintain Salesforce applications, including user profiles, permissions, dashboards, reports and flows. * User Support & Training: Provide support to users by troubleshooting issues, guiding them on best practices, and produce training documentation to improve platform proficiency. * Customization & Development: Work with cross-functional teams to understand requirements and implement customizations (such as custom fields, objects, and page layouts) and develop automation processes using Salesforce Flows. * Data Management: Oversee data integrity, cleansing, and migration to ensure accurate and up-to-date records within Salesforce. * Security & Compliance: Ensure that security controls, including user permissions and access levels, are properly configured to comply with company policies and industry standards. * Release Management: Assist in the implementation of new Salesforce releases, ensuring smooth transitions with minimal disruptions to business operations. * Quality Checking: Cross check Developers work for upcoming releases, write test scripts for User-testing to ensure all releases into production have no errors. * Reporting & Analytics: Develop, manage, and optimize reports and dashboards to provide actionable insights to leadership and business teams. * Collaboration: Work closely with business stakeholders, developers, and project managers to align Salesforce functionality with organizational goals and workflows.About You: * Experience in a Salesforce Administrator role or similar * Strong knowledge of Salesforce features, including profiles/permission sets/permission set groups, reports, dashboards and Flow * Experience working in multiple salesforce clouds * Salesforce Administrator and Other Salesforce Certifications * An excellent problem-solver * A detail-oriented and methodical person who takes pride in their work * A strong communicator with skills and ability to work collaboratively with multiple teams of different technical ability * Not afraid to make mistakes, quick to rectify and learn from them. * A person who will challenge decisions, not simply accept the direction given and stay humble * Someone who constantly seeks improvementsDivision:Technical

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Salesforce Administrator

Salesforce Developer

Sales Coordinator

Salesforce Project Manager

Salesforce Enterprise Architect (Basé à London)

MS Dynamics Developer

Get the latest insights and jobs direct. Sign up for our newsletter.

By subscribing you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Data Science Jobs for Non‑Technical Professionals: Where Do You Fit In?

Beyond Jupyter Notebooks Ask most people what a data‑science career looks like and they’ll picture Python wizards optimising XGBoost hyper‑parameters. The truth? Britain’s data‑driven firms need storytellers, strategists, ethicists and project leaders every bit as much as they need statisticians. The Open Data Institute’s UK Data Skills Gap 2024 places demand for non‑technical data talent at 42 % of all data‑science vacancies—roles focused on turning model outputs into business value and trustworthy decisions. This guide highlights the fastest‑growing non‑coding roles, the transferable skills many professionals already have, and a 90‑day action plan to land a data‑science job—no pandas required.

McKinsey & Company Data‑Science Jobs in 2025: Your Complete UK Guide to Turning Data into Impact

When CEOs need to unlock billion‑pound efficiencies or launch AI‑first products, they often call McKinsey & Company. What many graduates don’t realise is that behind every famous strategy deck sits a global network of data scientists, engineers and AI practitioners—unified under QuantumBlack, AI by McKinsey. From optimising Formula One pit stops to reducing NHS wait times, McKinsey’s analytics teams turn messy data into operational gold. With the launch of the McKinsey AI Studio in late 2024 and sustained demand for GenAI strategy, the firm is growing its UK analytics headcount faster than ever. The McKinsey careers portal lists 350+ open analytics roles worldwide, over 120 in the UK, spanning data science, machine‑learning engineering, data engineering, product management and AI consulting. Whether you love Python notebooks, Airflow DAGs, or white‑boarding an LLM governance roadmap for a FTSE 100 board, this guide details how to land a McKinsey data‑science job in 2025.

Data Science vs. Data Mining vs. Business Intelligence Jobs: Which Path Should You Choose?

Data Science has evolved into one of the most popular and transformative professions of the 21st century. Yet as the demand for data-related roles expands, other fields—such as Data Mining and Business Intelligence (BI)—are also thriving. With so many data-centric career options available, it can be challenging to determine where your skills and interests best align. If you’re browsing Data Science jobs on www.datascience-jobs.co.uk, you’ve no doubt seen numerous listings that mention machine learning, analytics, or business intelligence. But how does Data Science really differ from Data Mining or Business Intelligence? And which path should you follow? This article demystifies these three interrelated yet distinct fields. We’ll define the core aims of Data Science, Data Mining, and Business Intelligence, highlight where their responsibilities overlap, explore salary ranges, and provide real-world examples of each role in action. By the end, you’ll have a clearer sense of which profession could be your ideal fit—and how to position yourself for success in this ever-evolving data landscape.