Smithery Logo
MCPsSkillsDocsPricing
Login
Smithery Logo

Accelerating the Agent Economy

Resources

DocumentationPrivacy PolicySystem Status

Company

PricingAboutBlog

Connect

© 2026 Smithery. All rights reserved.

    dangt85

    salesforce-well-architected-framework

    dangt85/salesforce-well-architected-framework
    Productivity
    1 installs

    About

    SKILL.md

    Install

    Install via Skills CLI

    or add to your agent
    • Claude Code
      Claude Code
    • Codex
      Codex
    • OpenClaw
      OpenClaw
    • Cursor
      Cursor
    • Amp
      Amp
    • GitHub Copilot
      GitHub Copilot
    • Gemini CLI
      Gemini CLI
    • Kilo Code
      Kilo Code
    • Junie
      Junie
    • Replit
      Replit
    • Windsurf
      Windsurf
    • Cline
      Cline
    • Continue
      Continue
    • OpenCode
      OpenCode
    • OpenHands
      OpenHands
    • Roo Code
      Roo Code
    • Augment
      Augment
    • Goose
      Goose
    • Trae
      Trae
    • Zencoder
      Zencoder
    • Antigravity
      Antigravity
    ├─
    ├─
    └─

    About

    This skill should be used when the user asks to "design a package", "architect a solution", "check well architected", "validate against well architected framework", "review architecture", or mentions...

    SKILL.md

    Salesforce Well Architected Framework

    Overview

    The Salesforce Well Architected Framework provides architectural principles and best practices for building high-quality, scalable, and maintainable solutions on the Salesforce platform. When designing managed packages, apply all five pillars to ensure enterprise-grade solutions.

    This skill guides architectural decisions for Salesforce managed packages using the five foundational pillars. Use this framework during initial design, architecture reviews, and validation phases to ensure solutions meet enterprise standards.

    The Five Pillars

    1. Trusted

    Build secure, reliable solutions that protect customer data and maintain platform integrity.

    Core Principles:

    • Security by design
    • Data privacy and protection
    • Compliance with regulations
    • Reliable error handling
    • Robust testing coverage

    Key Considerations for Managed Packages:

    • Implement CRUD/FLS checks in all Apex code
    • Use with sharing appropriately for sharing rules enforcement
    • Validate all user inputs to prevent injection attacks
    • Encrypt sensitive data at rest and in transit
    • Implement comprehensive logging without exposing sensitive data
    • Design for graceful degradation when dependencies fail
    • Achieve >90% test coverage with meaningful assertions

    Quick Checklist:

    • All Apex classes declare sharing mode (with sharing, without sharing, or inherited sharing)
    • CRUD/FLS checks before DML operations
    • Input validation for all user-supplied data
    • Error handling with user-friendly messages
    • No hardcoded credentials or sensitive data
    • Audit trail for critical operations
    • Test coverage >90% with edge cases

    For detailed security patterns and compliance requirements, consult references/trusted.md.

    2. Easy

    Design intuitive, accessible user experiences that maximize adoption and productivity.

    Core Principles:

    • User-centered design
    • Accessibility (WCAG 2.1 AA compliance)
    • Performance optimization
    • Intuitive navigation
    • Consistent UX patterns

    Key Considerations for Managed Packages:

    • Follow Lightning Design System (SLDS) guidelines
    • Optimize page load times (<3 seconds)
    • Implement keyboard navigation and screen reader support
    • Provide contextual help and documentation
    • Use familiar Salesforce UX patterns
    • Design mobile-responsive interfaces
    • Minimize clicks to complete tasks

    Quick Checklist:

    • Lightning Web Components follow SLDS guidelines
    • All interactive elements are keyboard accessible
    • ARIA labels for screen readers
    • Page load time <3 seconds
    • Mobile-responsive design
    • Contextual help available
    • Error messages are actionable

    For detailed UX patterns and performance optimization techniques, consult references/easy.md.

    3. Adaptable

    Create flexible solutions that evolve with changing business needs and scale with growth.

    Core Principles:

    • Configuration over customization
    • Extensibility through APIs
    • Bulkified operations for scale
    • Governor limit awareness
    • Version upgrade compatibility

    Key Considerations for Managed Packages:

    • Design for configurability (Custom Metadata, Custom Settings)
    • Expose extension points via global classes/interfaces
    • Bulkify all Apex code for large data volumes
    • Optimize SOQL queries and avoid N+1 patterns
    • Plan for backward compatibility across versions
    • Use Platform Events for scalable integrations
    • Design asynchronous processing for long-running operations

    Quick Checklist:

    • No SOQL/DML inside loops
    • Queries use selective filters and indexes
    • Batch/Queueable Apex for bulk operations
    • Custom Metadata for configuration
    • Global extension points documented
    • Upgrade scripts for package updates
    • Asynchronous processing where appropriate

    For detailed scalability patterns and governor limit optimization, consult references/adaptable.md.

    4. Composable

    Build modular, reusable components that integrate seamlessly with the Salesforce ecosystem.

    Core Principles:

    • Modular architecture
    • Separation of concerns
    • Reusable components
    • Standard APIs and interfaces
    • Declarative over programmatic

    Key Considerations for Managed Packages:

    • Apply layered architecture (Service, Domain, Selector layers)
    • Create reusable LWC components with clear APIs
    • Use standard Salesforce platform features over custom code
    • Design for composition (small, focused components)
    • Implement standard interfaces (Callable, Queueable, Batchable)
    • Expose functionality via Invocable methods for Flow integration
    • Use Platform Events for decoupled communication

    Quick Checklist:

    • Clear separation of concerns (Service/Domain/Selector)
    • Reusable components with well-defined interfaces
    • Invocable Apex methods for Flow integration
    • Platform Events for decoupled integrations
    • Standard Salesforce interfaces used where applicable
    • Declarative configuration options
    • Component composition over monolithic design

    For detailed patterns on service layers, domain logic, and selector patterns, consult references/composable.md.

    5. Connected

    Enable seamless integrations with external systems and Salesforce ecosystem components.

    Core Principles:

    • API-first design
    • Event-driven architecture
    • Real-time and batch integration
    • Secure authentication
    • Monitoring and observability

    Key Considerations for Managed Packages:

    • Design REST APIs for external integrations
    • Use Named Credentials for secure authentication
    • Implement Platform Events for real-time data flow
    • Support both synchronous and asynchronous patterns
    • Provide comprehensive API documentation
    • Implement retry logic and circuit breakers
    • Enable integration monitoring and logging

    Quick Checklist:

    • REST APIs exposed with clear documentation
    • Named Credentials for external authentication
    • Platform Events for event-driven patterns
    • Callout retry logic implemented
    • Integration error handling and logging
    • API versioning strategy
    • Integration monitoring capabilities

    For detailed integration patterns, authentication strategies, and API design guidelines, consult references/connected.md.

    Applying the Framework

    During Design Phase

    When designing a new managed package, address each pillar systematically:

    1. Start with Trusted: Define security requirements, compliance needs, and data protection strategies
    2. Design for Easy: Map user workflows, identify pain points, plan UX improvements
    3. Plan for Adaptable: Identify scalability requirements, plan for growth, design configuration points
    4. Architect for Composable: Define component boundaries, establish interfaces, plan reusability
    5. Enable Connected: Identify integration points, design APIs, plan event-driven flows

    During Architecture Review

    Validate existing designs against all five pillars using the decision matrices in references/decision-matrices.md. Each pillar should score at least 70% compliance for production readiness.

    Continuous Improvement

    Architecture is not static. Regularly reassess solutions against the framework as requirements evolve:

    • Review quarterly for emerging patterns
    • Update after major Salesforce releases
    • Reassess when adding major features
    • Validate before each package release

    Decision Framework

    When making architectural decisions, use the decision matrices to evaluate tradeoffs across pillars. Common decision points include:

    Build vs. Configure:

    • Trusted: Custom code increases security surface area
    • Easy: Configuration is easier for admins
    • Adaptable: Configuration enables customer flexibility
    • Composable: Platform features promote composition
    • Connected: APIs available for both

    Synchronous vs. Asynchronous:

    • Trusted: Async provides retry mechanisms
    • Easy: Sync provides immediate feedback
    • Adaptable: Async scales better
    • Composable: Both patterns have use cases
    • Connected: Depends on integration requirements

    Monolithic vs. Modular:

    • Trusted: Smaller modules easier to secure
    • Easy: Simpler interfaces with focused modules
    • Adaptable: Modules update independently
    • Composable: Modularity enables composition
    • Connected: Modules integrate via APIs

    For detailed decision matrices with scoring frameworks, consult references/decision-matrices.md.

    Integration with Package Development

    This framework applies throughout the package development lifecycle:

    Discovery & Design:

    • Use framework pillars to structure requirements gathering
    • Create architecture diagrams annotated with pillar considerations
    • Document architectural decisions and rationale

    Development:

    • Apply pillar principles in code reviews
    • Use checklists during implementation
    • Validate components against pillar requirements

    Testing:

    • Test coverage validates Trusted pillar
    • Performance testing validates Easy and Adaptable
    • Integration testing validates Connected

    Release:

    • Architecture validation as release gate
    • Document pillar compliance in release notes
    • Plan improvements for next version

    Common Anti-Patterns

    Avoid these architectural mistakes:

    Trusted Violations:

    • Missing CRUD/FLS checks ("It's an admin page")
    • Using without sharing by default
    • Storing credentials in code or static resources

    Easy Violations:

    • Complex, multi-step processes without progress indicators
    • Inconsistent UI patterns across components
    • Poor mobile experience

    Adaptable Violations:

    • SOQL queries without LIMIT clauses
    • Synchronous processing for bulk operations
    • No configuration options for customers

    Composable Violations:

    • Business logic in triggers
    • Monolithic classes with multiple responsibilities
    • Tight coupling between components

    Connected Violations:

    • No API documentation
    • Hardcoded integration endpoints
    • Missing error handling for callouts

    Additional Resources

    Reference Files

    For detailed guidance on each pillar:

    • references/trusted.md - Security patterns, compliance, testing strategies
    • references/easy.md - UX patterns, accessibility guidelines, performance optimization
    • references/adaptable.md - Scalability patterns, governor limits, configuration strategies
    • references/composable.md - Service layer patterns, component design, reusability
    • references/connected.md - Integration patterns, API design, authentication

    Decision Support

    • references/decision-matrices.md - Scoring frameworks for architectural decisions, tradeoff analysis, compliance scoring

    External Resources

    Consult official Salesforce Well Architected documentation:

    • Well Architected Framework Overview
    • Trusted Pillar
    • Easy Pillar
    • Adaptable Pillar
    • Composable Pillar
    • Connected Pillar

    Quick Reference

    Pillar Summary

    Pillar Focus Key Metric
    Trusted Security, reliability, compliance Test coverage >90%, zero security violations
    Easy UX, accessibility, performance Page load <3s, WCAG 2.1 AA compliance
    Adaptable Scale, flexibility, configuration No governor limit violations, bulkified code
    Composable Modularity, reusability, standards Clear separation of concerns, reusable components
    Connected Integration, APIs, events API documentation complete, monitoring enabled

    When to Use This Skill

    Activate this skill when:

    • Starting new package design
    • Conducting architecture reviews
    • Validating package before release
    • Making significant architectural decisions
    • Responding to scalability or security concerns
    • Evaluating build vs. buy decisions

    Apply the framework comprehensively for production-grade managed packages that meet enterprise standards.

    Recommended Servers
    Svelte
    Svelte
    Salesforce
    Salesforce
    vastlint - IAB XML VAST validator and linter
    vastlint - IAB XML VAST validator and linter
    Repository
    dangt85/sf-package-architect
    Files