Sean Cuevo is a Senior Salesforce Engineer with 12 years of experience building and scaling Salesforce solutions across nonprofit, education, and media organizations. He has led architecture and delivery for complex products like Grants Management at Salesforce.org and now drives platform engineering at Twitch, often bridging Salesforce with AWS-hosted services. Sean combines deep Apex and Lightning expertise with practical DevOps—creating deployment automation, sandbox sync tools, and integrations in languages like Go and JavaScript. He contributes to the SFDO community project DLRS, improving test coverage and query validation for cross-object rollups, reflecting a strong focus on reliability and QA. Based in Sammamish, WA, he mentors teams and shapes data architectures that streamline enrollment, invoicing, and operations workflows. Collected finance and accounting training informs his pragmatic, audit-friendly approach to system design and governance.
12 years of coding experience
11 years of employment as a software developer
MAcc, Accounting, MAcc, Accounting at Kennesaw State University - Michael J. Coles College of Business
BBA, Finance, BBA, Finance at University of Georgia - Terry College of Business
Declarative Lookup Rollup Summaries (DLRS) is a community built and maintained Salesforce application that allows you to create cross object roll-ups declaratively - no code! For install instructions and documentation, visit our website https://sfdo-community-sprints.github.io/DLRS-Documentation/
Role in this project:
Back-end Developer & QA Engineer
Contributions:1 review, 26 commits, 10 PRs in 1 year 2 months
Contributions summary:Sean primarily worked on improving the test coverage of the `RollupSummariesSelector` class. They added new tests to validate different scenarios, including those for edit mode, sort order, and specific methods like `selectActiveByUniqueName` and `selectActiveByChildObject`. The user also included tests to ensure the correct methods were being called based on the context (e.g., forEdit vs. notForEdit) and added query validation tests.
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