I can think of no more humbling experience than going in front of the board. I have been on both sides and it is an emotional experience. It is two straight hours of grilling, going back and forth, and even a little adversarial in questioning techniques at times. The best advice I can give is "Don't take it personally and be honest about your limitations". Having sat on a few boards you come to realize that this is a difficult thing to do from a certification standpoint. Every MCA I know wants there to be more certified architects and wants everyone that comes in front of a board to pass. But they understand that they have a duty to ensure the bar for the certification remains consistent and that every candidate meets the guidelines of the competencies - and they only have two hours to accomplish that goal.
Here is the process from a board member's perspective:
You will notice that I mentioned the strawman multiple times above. The strawman is the guidance for meeting the certification and helps keep the bar consistent from candidate to candidate. The strawman does not provide a numerical formula that rolls up though - it becomes a judgment call based on looking at the overall meeting of the strawman. The areas where I have seen someone pass everything but one competency and still not pass the overall certification are the strategy competency and the technical depth/breadth competencies. For example, I personally have a hard time passing a candidate who cannot link the strategy of the business with the architecture even if they do well in all of the other areas.
As you can see above there is a lot of information being gathered during the board review - roughly a two hour period of time. Here are some things you can do to help yourself out during the board review:
Again, as you go through board review you will be stressed and you will be asked questions to the point of exhaustion. It isn't on purpose, but a byproduct of the process. I'd rather you were prepared for it so it was not a shock. Getting through the process and passing is a great feeling - it is a tremendous sense of accomplishment. I personally think it would be worth the pain.
This post is part of a series of articles about the MCA program. The opinions here are solely my own and may not reflect the opinions of Microsoft or anyone affiliated with the MCA program.
Disclaimer The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.