Admineloper, considering that Admins do have to deal with creating profiles, validation rules, Salesforce Flows, formulas, fields, Lightning Web Pages, etc. Along with Developers writing Apex code for situations where Salesforce doesn't have something not premade, they are as Andrew stated scenarios where developers are still encouraged to use declarative solutions such as both Admins and Developers using a Salesforce App on the App Exchange for a solution. It does seem like there is a fair amount of overlap between both positions and there are situations where they could work together to compliment each other.
Admineloper, considering that Admins do have to deal with creating profiles, validation rules, Salesforce Flows, formulas, fields, Lightning Web Pages, etc.
Along with Developers writing Apex code for situations where Salesforce doesn't have something not premade, they are as Andrew stated scenarios where developers are still encouraged to use declarative solutions such as both Admins and Developers using a Salesforce App on the App Exchange for a solution.
It does seem like there is a fair amount of overlap between both positions and there are situations where they could work together to compliment each other.
Thanks for the breakdown between the 2 roles! I'm looking more towards the developer role, and I've been taking small steps daily to learn Apex.
Glad we could help, and best of luck on learning Apex!
Great guidance. Thanks 🎉
Glad it was helpful!