Which of the core competencies of the Lean Enterprise helps align strategy and execution?
Team & Technical Agility
Organizational Agility
Agile Product Delivery
Lean Portfolio Management
= Lean Portfolio Management (LPM) is one of the seven core competencies of the Lean Enterprise that helps align strategy and execution. LPM enables enterprises to establish and communicate a set of strategic themes that provide business context for decision making and investment allocation. LPM also helps to apply Lean budgeting and guardrails to empower decentralized program execution and foster innovation. LPM also supports Agile portfolio operations and governance by providing the necessary visibility, coordination, and collaboration across the portfolio. References: = SAFe for Lean Enterprises, Lean Portfolio Management
What should be taken into account when estimating Story point size?
Complexity
Team size
Number of days it will take
Priority
Story point size is a relative measure of the effort and complexity involved in implementing a user story. It is not based on the team size, the number of days it will take, or the priority of the story. Rather, it is based on the comparison of the story with other stories of similar or different sizes. Story points help teams estimate how much work they can complete in an iteration, based on their past performance and current capacity. Story points also help teams plan and track their progress at the program level, by aligning the features and capabilities with the stories that implement them. References: Story - Scaled Agile Framework, A Guide to Story Point Estimation - DEV Community, What should be taken into account when estimating Story poin - Madanswer
The Agile Release Train aligns teams to a common mission using a single Vision and what else?
Program Backlog
Release on Demand
Weighted shortest job first
Team Backlogs
The Agile Release Train (ART) is a long-lived team of Agile teams that incrementally develops, delivers, and often operates one or more solutions in a value stream1. The ART aligns teams to a common mission using a single Vision and a Program Backlog. The Vision is a description of the future state of the solution under development. It reflects customer and stakeholder needs, as well as the features and capabilities planned for the solution2. The Program Backlog is the single source of truth for the upcoming features of the system. It contains the enablers necessary to build the Architectural Runway, as well as the user and business features that deliver customer value3. The Vision and the Program Backlog provide the context and the content for the ART to plan, commit, develop, and deploy together. References: Agile Release Train - Scaled Agile Framework, Vision - Scaled Agile Framework, Program Backlog - Scaled Agile Framework
How can trust be gained between the business and development?
Automate the delivery pipeline
Deliver predictability
Release new value to production every day
Maintain Iterations as a safe zone
Trust is the foundation of any successful collaboration, especially between the business and development teams, who often have different perspectives, expectations, and incentives. Trust exists when everyone can confidently rely on one another to act with integrity, particularly in times of difficulty. Without trust, it is impossible to build high-performing teams and trains or build (or rebuild) the confidence needed to make and meet reasonable commitments1. One way to gain trust between the business and development is to deliver predictability, which means that the teams and the Agile Release Train (ART) can consistently deliver value in the shortest sustainable lead time, with the best quality and value, and meet the agreed-upon objectives and goals2. Predictability is achieved by applying the SAFe principles and practices, such as aligning to a common mission and vision, planning and executing in iterations and increments, applying systems thinking and feedback loops, and embracing change and innovation3. Predictability helps to establish and maintain trust between the business and development, as it demonstrates the reliability, transparency, and accountability of the teams and the ART, and it enables the business to make informed decisions and provide timely feedback4. The other options are not the best ways to gain trust between the business and development, as they either do not address the core issue of trust, or they may have negative consequences. Automating the delivery pipeline is a technical practice that supports DevOps and continuous delivery, and it can improve the speed, quality, and efficiency of the value delivery, but it does not necessarily build trust between the business and development, as it does not address the communication, collaboration, and alignment aspects of trust. Releasing new value to production every day is a desirable outcome of DevOps and continuous delivery, and it can provide fast feedback and validation of the value delivered, but it does not guarantee trust between the business and development, as it may also introduce risks, errors, and instability, and it may not reflect the actual needs and expectations of the customers and stakeholders. Maintaining iterations as a safe zone is a practice that protects the teams from external interference and distractions during the iteration execution, and it can help the teams focus on their work and deliver value, but it does not foster trust between the business and development, as it may also create silos, isolation, and resistance to change, and it may prevent the teams from collaborating and communicating with the business and other teams. References: Core Values - Scaled Agile Framework, Predictability - Scaled Agile Framework, SAFe Lean-Agile Principles - Scaled Agile Framework, How can trust be gained between the business and development?
What is one key purpose of DevOps?
DevOps focuses on a set of practices applied to large systems
DevOps joins development & operations to enable continuous delivery
DevOps enables continuous release by building a scalable Continuous Delivery Pipeline
DevOps focuses on automating the delivery pipeline to reduce transaction cost
= DevOps is a mindset, culture, and set of technical practices that supports the integration, automation, and collaboration needed to effectively develop and operate a solution. DevOps joins development and operations to enable continuous delivery, which means delivering value to customers in the shortest sustainable lead time. Continuous delivery is achieved by creating a Continuous Delivery Pipeline (CDP), which is a high-performance innovation engine that consists of four elements: Continuous Exploration, Continuous Integration, Continuous Deployment, and Release on Demand. DevOps also helps to improve the quality, reliability, and security of the solution by applying practices such as testing, monitoring, and feedback throughout the CDP. References: = DevOps - Scaled Agile Framework, Continuous Delivery Pipeline - Scaled Agile Framework
What is a major benefit of reducing batch size?
Increases visibility
Decreases stress on the system
Increases work in process
Increases throughput
Reducing batch size is one of the key ways to improve flow in product development. Smaller batches move faster and more smoothly through the system, reducing cycle time, variability, and waste. Smaller batches also enable faster feedback and learning, which leads to higher quality and customer satisfaction. By reducing batch size, the system can deliver more value in a given time, which means increased throughput12. References: Make Value Flow without Interruptions - Scaled Agile Framework, Principle #6 – Visualize and limit WIP, reduce batch sizes, and manage queue lengths - Scaled Agile Framework
The "3 Cs" is a popular guideline for writing user stories. What does each of the three Cs represent? (Choose three.)
Confirmation
Conform
Clarification
Card
Conversation
Concept
= The “3 Cs” of user stories are three criteria that help to ensure that the requirements in your story are clear, complete, and correct. These three criteria are Card, Conversation, and Confirmation1.
Card: A user story card is a placeholder for a conversation. It is a brief and informal description of a software feature written from the perspective of the end user. It captures the essence of the user’s need, without going into too much detail or technical jargon. It is usually written on a physical or digital card that can be easily moved and prioritized2.
Conversation: A user story card is not enough to convey all the information needed to develop and deliver the feature. It is meant to trigger a conversation between the product owner, the development team, and other stakeholders. The conversation is where the details, assumptions, risks, and acceptance criteria are discussed and clarified. The conversation is also an opportunity to collaborate, negotiate, and validate the user story3.
Confirmation: A user story is not complete until it has a confirmation. This is a set of criteria that define what done looks like for the feature. It is also known as acceptance criteria, and it specifies the conditions that must be met for the user story to be accepted by the product owner and the customer. The confirmation is usually written as a series of testable statements that can be verified by the development team and the product owner4.
What are two behaviors of an effective Scrum Master? (Choose two.)You have reached the max number of allowed answers
Facilitate the PI Planning session
To act as a servant leader and exhibit Lean-Agile Leadership
To guarantee no changes are made to the scope during an Iteration
To facilitate the team's progress toward the Iteration goals
Facilitate more than two teams
An effective Scrum Master is a servant leader who helps the team self-organize, collaborate, and deliver value. They also exhibit Lean-Agile Leadership by embracing the SAFe Core Values, Principles, and Practices, and by coaching the team and stakeholders on how to apply them. Additionally, an effective Scrum Master facilitates the team’s progress toward the Iteration goals by removing impediments, ensuring alignment with the Product Owner and other teams, and fostering continuous improvement. References: Scrum Master - Scaled Agile Framework, SAFe for Teams Student Workbook: materials and exercises from Lesson 2, Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe® Practitioner
Which type of decision should remain centralized even in a decentralized decision-making environment?
Decisions that come with a high cost of delay
Decisions that deliver large and broad economic benefit
Decisions that require local information
Decisions that are made frequently
According to the SAFe framework, some decisions are strategic, have far-reaching impact, and are outside the scope, knowledge, or responsibilities of the teams. These decisions should be centralized, as they are made by leaders who have the market knowledge, longer-range perspectives, and understanding of the business and financial landscape necessary to steer the enterprise. One of the characteristics of these types of decisions is that they provide significant economies of scale, meaning that they deliver large and broad economic benefits to the organization. Examples of such decisions are a common way of working, standard development languages, standard tooling, and offshoring. These decisions are infrequent, long-lasting, and require coordination and alignment across multiple teams and value streams. References: Principle #9 - Decentralize Decision-Making - Scaled Agile Framework, SAFe® and Importance of Decentralized Decision Making – Learnow
What is the first step in Kotter's 8-step process for leading change?
Generate short-term wins
Enlist a volunteer army
Create a sense of urgency
Build a guiding coalition
According to Kotter’s 8-step process for leading change, the first step is to create a sense of urgency among both managers and employees. This means making them aware of the existing problems or opportunities that require change, and motivating them to act with passion and purpose. Creating a sense of urgency helps to overcome complacency, resistance, and fear of change, and builds momentum for the change initiative. References: Kotter’s 8-step process for leading change, The Easy Guide to Kotter’s 8 Step Change Model, John Kotter’s Eight Step Change Model, Kotter’s 8 step Model of Change, How to Successfully Implement Kotter’s 8 Step Change Model
A cumulative flow diagram focuses on which curves?
Arrival curve ("to do") and evolution curve ("change")
Implementation curve ("movement") and departure curve ("done")
Backlog curve ("work") and departure curve ("done")
Arrival curve ("to-do") and departure curve ("done")
cumulative flow diagram (CFD) is a graphical tool that shows the status of work items for a given period of time. The horizontal axis represents time, and the vertical axis represents the number of work items. The CFD is composed of different colored bands, each representing a different stage of the workflow (such as “to do”, “in progress”, “done”, etc.). The CFD helps visualize the flow of work, identify bottlenecks, and monitor cycle time and throughput1. A cumulative flow diagram focuses on two main curves: the arrival curve and the departure curve. The arrival curve is the top edge of the “to do” band, and it shows the rate at which new work items are added to the system. The departure curve is the top edge of the “done” band, and it shows the rate at which work items are completed and delivered. The difference between the arrival curve and the departure curve represents the amount of work in progress (WIP) in the system2. By comparing the arrival curve and the departure curve, one can assess the stability and predictability of the system. Ideally, the arrival curve and the departure curve should be parallel and close to each other, indicating a smooth and consistent flow of work. If the arrival curve is steeper than the departure curve, it means that more work is entering the system than leaving it, which can lead to increased WIP, longer cycle time, and lower quality. If the departure curve is steeper than the arrival curve, it means that more work is leaving the system than entering it, which can lead to reduced WIP, shorter cycle time, and higher quality3. References: Cumulative Flow Diagram - Scaled Agile Framework, Cumulative Flow Diagrams - Kanbanize, Cumulative Flow Diagram - LeSS
On the seventh day of the Iteration, the team realizes that they will not complete 5 of the 13 Stories. The Product Owner (PO) says she cannot negotiate the scope of the remaining Stories any further. What is the PO's best course of action?
Defer acceptance testing to the next Iteration
Communicate the status of the Iteration to all stakeholders
Have an emergency Iteration Planning meeting
Stop the current Iteration and plan a new Iteration with the new knowledge
The PO’s best course of action is to communicate the status of the Iteration to all stakeholders, including the other teams on the Agile Release Train (ART), the Release Train Engineer (RTE), the System Architect/Engineer, the Product Management, and the Business Owners. This will help to align expectations, manage dependencies, and mitigate risks. The PO should also collaborate with the team and the stakeholders to prioritize the remaining work and identify the most valuable Stories to deliver by the end of the Iteration. The PO should not defer acceptance testing to the next Iteration, as this would violate the Definition of Done and compromise the quality of the system increment. The PO should not have an emergency Iteration Planning meeting, as this would disrupt the cadence and synchronization of the ART and waste time and resources. The PO should not stop the current Iteration and plan a new Iteration with the new knowledge, as this would also disrupt the cadence and synchronization of the ART and create confusion and uncertainty.
What is one of the tools associated with Design Thinking?
Set based design
Portfolio canvas
Empathy maps
Behavior-driven development
One of the tools associated with Design Thinking is empathy maps, which are a visual way to capture and organize the user’s needs, goals, pains, and gains. Empathy maps help the team to understand the user’s perspective, empathize with their emotions, and design solutions that address their problems and aspirations. Empathy maps are typically created during the Discover phase of Design Thinking, where the team conducts user research and synthesizes the findings. References: SAFe for Teams Student Workbook: materials and exercises from Lesson 1; v5.scaledagileframework.com/design-thinking/; v5.scaledagileframework.com/get-feedback/
Which is an example of a part of an Iteration retrospective?
Estimation of Stories
Team discussion around opportunities for continuous improvement
Program level analysis of a problem using root cause analysis techniques
Gathering feedback from the stakeholders
An Iteration retrospective is a meeting that occurs at the end of each Iteration, where the Agile team reflects on their performance, identifies what went well and what can be improved, and agrees on action items to implement in the next Iteration. One of the essential parts of an Iteration retrospective is the team discussion around opportunities for continuous improvement, where the team members share their observations, feedback, and suggestions, and collaborate to find solutions for the challenges they faced. This part of the retrospective helps the team to learn from their experience, enhance their processes and practices, and increase their effectiveness and efficiency. References: Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe® Practitioner, [Iteration Retrospective]
Which three questions should each team member answer during the daily stand-up? (Choose three.)
Are there any impediments that will prevent the team from meeting the Iteration goals?
How am I splitting the Solutions into Capabilities and Enablers?
How am I optimizing the full Solution?
What did I do yesterday to advance the Iteration goals?
What will I do today to advance the Iteration goals?
How I am contributing to an environment of continuous change?
The daily stand-up is a 15-minute meeting that occurs every day during the Iteration, where the Agile team members synchronize their work, share their progress, and identify any impediments or dependencies. The daily stand-up follows a simple format, where each team member answers three questions:
What did I do yesterday to advance the Iteration goals?
What will I do today to advance the Iteration goals?
Are there any impediments that will prevent the team from meeting the Iteration goals? These questions help the team members to align their actions with the Iteration goals, communicate their status and plans, and raise any issues or risks that need to be addressed. The daily stand-up also fosters collaboration, accountability, and transparency among the team members, and enables them to adjust their work as needed to deliver value. References: Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe® Practitioner, Daily Stand-up
How does relentless improvement support value in the SAFe House of Lean?
It allows teams to pivot without mercy or guilt
It uses informed decision-making through fast feedback
It builds long-term partnerships based on trust
It optimizes the whole
Relentless improvement is the fourth pillar of the SAFe House of Lean, which represents the foundational beliefs that are key to SAFe’s effectiveness1. Relentless improvement encourages learning and growth through continuous reflection and process enhancements2. It uses informed decision-making through fast feedback, which means that teams and individuals use empirical data and validated learning to evaluate their assumptions and outcomes, and adjust their actions accordingly3. This enables them to deliver value faster, with higher quality and lower risk, and to foster a culture of innovation and experimentation4. References: Core Values - Scaled Agile Framework, Relentless Improvement - Scaled Agile Framework, Principle #4 - Build incrementally with fast, integrated learning cycles - Scaled Agile Framework, How does relentless improvement support value in the SAFe house of lean …
Which pillar in the House of Lean focuses on the Customer being the consumer of the work?
Value
Innovation
Respect for People & Culture
Flow
Value is the first and most important pillar in the House of Lean, which is a model that guides the Lean-Agile transformation and culture. Value means delivering the maximum benefit to the customer in the shortest sustainable lead time, while providing the best quality and lowest cost possible1. Value is the ultimate goal of the House of Lean, and it is achieved by applying the other pillars: innovation, relentless improvement, leadership, and respect for people and culture2. Value is also the foundation of the Lean-Agile mindset, which is the way of thinking and acting that enables Business Agility3. Value focuses on the customer as the consumer of the work, and requires understanding and meeting their needs, expectations, and desires4. References: = 1: SAFe Core Values - Scaled Agile Framework1; 2: The SAFe House of Lean model: short and sweet - Echometer2; 3: Lean-Agile Mindset - Scaled Agile Framework3; 4: Exploring Which Pillar in the House of Lean Focuses on the Customer4
Team A has seven developers that can define and build any application the organization requires. Team A works with another team to test and deploy their work. Can Team A be considered a high-functioning Agile Team?
Yes, because they can build any application the organization requires
No, because they are not cross-functional
No, because they have fewer than ten developers
Yes, because they use another team to deploy
A high-functioning Agile Team is a cross-functional group of typically ten or fewer individuals with all the skills necessary to define, build, test, and deliver value to their customer1. Team A is not cross-functional because they depend on another team to test and deploy their work, which creates handoffs and delays in the value delivery process. A cross-functional team should be able to perform all the activities required to deliver a potentially releasable increment of value in each iteration2. Team A should collaborate with the other team to integrate their testing and deployment capabilities and form a single Agile Team that can deliver value independently. References: Agile Teams - Scaled Agile Framework, 7 Qualities of High-Performing Agile Teams | AgileConnection
What is one approach to unlock the intrinsic motivation of knowledge workers?
Centralize decision-making
Provide autonomy
Reduce work in process (WIP) limits
Strive to achieve a state of continuous flow
Providing autonomy is one approach to unlock the intrinsic motivation of knowledge workers. Autonomy means giving knowledge workers the freedom and responsibility to make decisions about their work, such as how to do it, when to do it, and who to do it with. Autonomy fosters a sense of ownership, empowerment, and self-determination, which are essential for creativity and innovation. Autonomy also supports the Lean-Agile principle of decentralizing decision-making, which enables faster and better outcomes. SAFe provides several mechanisms to enable autonomy for knowledge workers, such as self-organizing and self-managing Agile teams, ARTs and Solution Trains, Communities of Practice, and Innovation and Planning Iterations. References: = Unlock the Intrinsic Motivation of Knowledge Workers, Decentralize Decision-Making, Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe® Practitioner
Which of the following is a SAFe Lean-Agile Principle?
Precisely specify value by product
Visualize work
Turn mistakes into learning moments
Organize around value
Organize around value is one of the 10 SAFe Lean-Agile Principles that guide the implementation of SAFe in any context. It states that enterprises must align their people, processes, and technology to the full and continuous flow of value that delivers customer and business outcomes. This principle helps enterprises to eliminate silos, reduce handoffs, improve collaboration, and optimize value streams. It also enables faster feedback, shorter lead times, higher quality, and better economics. References: SAFe Lean-Agile Principles, Organize Around Value, Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe Practitioner
Which of the following categories addresses potential risks?
Resolved
Obtained
Supervised
Acquired
In SAFe 6.0, during PI Planning, program risks are identified, categorized, and addressed in a process called the ROAM technique. ROAM stands for Resolved, Owned, Accepted, and Mitigated.
Resolved means the risk has been addressed and is no longer a concern.
Owned means someone takes responsibility for managing the risk.
Accepted means the risk is acknowledged and will be monitored.
Mitigated means steps are taken to reduce the impact or likelihood of the risk.
Thus, the correct category that addresses potential risks is Resolved (option A).
Which basic Agile quality practice reduces bottlenecks & ensures consistency?
Definition of Done
Peer-review and pairing
Collective ownership and standards
Establish flow
Establishing flow is a basic Agile quality practice that reduces bottlenecks and ensures consistency by removing errors, rework, and other waste that slows throughput. It also supports faster learning and feedback by shifting left on the timeline. Flow is one of the four core values of SAFe and a key principle of the Lean-Agile Mindset. References: Built-In Quality, SAFe Core Values, Lean-Agile Mindset
During the Innovation and Planning Iteration, an organization invites every team member to work on any project they choose. Which of the following SAFe Core Values is the organization demonstrating?
Relentless improvement
Visualizing work
Make value flow without interruptions
Siloed thinking
Relentless improvement is one of the four SAFe Core Values, which are the guiding principles that help individuals and organizations achieve Business Agility1. Relentless improvement means that everyone in the organization is committed to continuously learning, growing, and innovating, and that they embrace a culture of experimentation, feedback, and problem-solving2. By inviting every team member to work on any project they choose during the Innovation and Planning Iteration, the organization is demonstrating relentless improvement, as they are providing time and space for people to explore their creative ideas, learn new skills, and collaborate with others outside their usual teams. This can lead to better solutions, higher engagement, and faster adaptation to changing customer and market needs34. References: = 1: SAFe Core Values - Scaled Agile Framework5; 2: Relentless Improvement - Scaled Agile Framework; 3: Innovation and Planning Iteration - Scaled Agile Framework; 4: How to Implement Quality in a Lean-Agile Environment Successfully
The daily stand-up timebox should not exceed how many minutes?
5 minutes
20 minutes
15 minutes
10 minutes
The daily stand-up is a key event in SAFe that helps teams synchronize their work, identify impediments, and adjust their plans. It is a time-boxed event that should not exceed 15 minutes, as longer meetings can reduce the team’s focus and productivity. The daily stand-up is also aligned with the Lean-Agile principle of applying cadence and synchronizing with cross-domain planning, which enables teams to operate reliably and efficiently.
Which of the following principles includes "working software is the primary measure of progress"?
Agile Product Delivery
Lean Portfolio Management
Lean Thinking
Agile Manifesto
The principle that includes “working software is the primary measure of progress” is one of the twelve principles behind the Agile Manifesto. The Agile Manifesto is a declaration of four values and twelve principles that guide the Agile software development movement. The value that corresponds to this principle is “working software over comprehensive documentation”. The principle states that the ultimate goal of any software development project is to deliver working software that satisfies the customer’s needs and expectations, and that any other intermediate or auxiliary artifacts, such as plans, documents, models, or reports, are secondary and should not distract from the main objective. The principle also implies that working software should be delivered frequently and continuously, and that the progress of the project should be measured by the amount and quality of the software delivered, not by the adherence to a predefined plan or schedule. References: Principles behind the Agile Manifesto, Agile Manifesto - Scaled Agile Framework
What is one component of a Guardrail in Lean Portfolio Management?
Participatory budgeting forums that lead to Value Stream budget changes
Determining if business needs meet the Portfolio Threshold
Capacity allocation of the Value Stream compared to process mapping
Allocation of centralized vs decentralized decisions in the Enterprise
A guardrail in Lean Portfolio Management (LPM) is a policy or practice that helps ensure that the portfolio is aligned and funded to create and maintain the solutions needed to meet business targets. One of the guardrails in LPM is the allocation of centralized vs decentralized decisions in the enterprise. This guardrail defines the boundaries and guidelines for decision making at different levels of the organization, such as strategic, tactical, and operational. Centralized decisions are those that require alignment and agreement across multiple value streams or portfolios, such as vision, strategy, budget allocation, and governance. Decentralized decisions are those that can be made by the value streams or teams closest to the customer and the work, such as backlog prioritization, solution design, and delivery. The goal of this guardrail is to empower the teams and value streams to make fast and effective decisions, while ensuring alignment and coherence at the portfolio and enterprise levels12. References: Lean Budget Guardrails - Scaled Agile Framework, Decentralize Decision Making - Scaled Agile Framework
Product Management is responsible for "what gets built" as defined by the Vision, Roadmap, and what else?
Program Backlog
Key stakeholders
Customers
PI Planning
n: Product Management is responsible for defining desirable, viable, feasible, and sustainable solutions that meet customer needs and supporting development across the product life cycle. They align the product strategy, vision, and roadmap to the portfolio’s strategic themes and lean budgets. They also create, maintain, and adjust the program backlog, which contains the features and enablers that the Agile Release Train (ART) will implement. They work with customers, teams, and product owners to understand and communicate their needs and participate in solution validation. They also collaborate with system architects and the release train engineer to guide the ART toward successful delivery12. References: Product Management - Scaled Agile Framework, Agile Release Train - Scaled Agile Framework
Which activity is key to successfully implementing the Scaled Agile Framework?
Use the Innovation and Planning Iteration instead of the PI Planning process
Replace the PI Planning process with the Inspect and Adapt workshop when possible
Use a cadence-based PI Planning process
Remove blocks such as portfolio estimation
= The PI Planning process is a key activity for successfully implementing the Scaled Agile Framework. It is a two-day event that brings together all the teams and stakeholders of an Agile Release Train (ART) to align on a common vision, identify dependencies, plan the features and stories for the next Program Increment (PI), and commit to a set of PI objectives. The PI Planning process follows a regular cadence, typically every 8 to 12 weeks, to synchronize the work of the ART and ensure alignment with the business strategy and customer needs. The PI Planning process also fosters collaboration, trust, and empowerment among the teams and stakeholders, and enables fast feedback and learning cycles. References: = PI Planning - Scaled Agile Framework, Implementing SAFe - Scaled Agile Framework
What is the product vision?
A method for aligning to the product direction
The user stories required to meet customer needs
A set of prioritized Features
An explanation of the architectural runway needed to deliver products to the customer
The product vision is a description of the future state of the product or service under development. It reflects customer and stakeholder needs, as well as the features and capabilities proposed to meet those needs. The product vision is both aspirational and achievable, providing the broader context and purpose of the product or service. It describes the markets, customer segments, user needs, and how the product or service will be different from the competition. The product vision is owned by the product owner, but its development requires input from stakeholders and the scrum team(s). The product vision helps align the team to the product direction and motivates them to deliver value to the customers and stakeholders. References: Vision, Solution Vision, An Insight Into 3 Types of Vision In SAFe®, Product Vision | Agile Product Management, What is a Product Vision | Scrum.org
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What is the typical timebox in which to complete a User Story?
One iteration
One month
One year
One PI
A User Story is a short description of a piece of functionality that delivers value to a customer or stakeholder. It is typically written from the perspective of an end user and follows the format: “As a
When should a component team be used?
To develop T-shaped skills together with Continuous Integration
To create each replaceable component with minimized dependencies
To gain the fastest velocity with well defined interfaces
To obtain high reuse and technical specialization with a focus on nonfunctional requirements
A component team is an Agile Team whose primary area of concern is focused on a specific component, or set of components, of the system. They leverage their technical skills and interest and focus on building robust components that provide for reliability, separation of concerns, foster re-use, and improve testability. Component teams are typically used when the system has complex, nonfunctional requirements that require deep technical expertise and specialization, such as performance, security, scalability, etc. Component teams can also enable high reuse of components across multiple solutions, reducing duplication and waste. However, component teams also introduce challenges, such as increased dependencies, coordination, and integration efforts with other teams, as well as reduced end-to-end value delivery and customer feedback. Therefore, component teams should be used sparingly and only when the benefits outweigh the costs. References: Organizing Agile Teams and ARTs: Team Topologies at Scale, Agile Teams, Feature Teams vs Component Teams, System Team, Feature Team vs Component Team in Agile
What is found on an ART planning board?
Epics
Features
User stories
Tasks
According to the Scaled Agile Framework, the ART Planning Board is a visualization of the PI’s feature delivery dates, feature dependencies among teams, and relevant milestones1. Features are the primary elements that are planned and tracked on the ART Planning Board2.
Epics, user stories, and tasks are not found on the ART Planning Board, but they are related to features in different ways. Epics are large initiatives that span multiple ARTs and PIs, and they are decomposed into features and enablers2. User stories and tasks are smaller units of work that are used by teams to implement features within iterations2.
Which statement reflects one of the steps for setting initial velocity?
Maintenance tasks do not need to be included in velocity; maintenance tasks fall outside thi scope
The team members assess their availability, acknowledging time off and other potential v u duties
Determining velocity is a new function in each Iteration; previous Iterations should not be ^ transferred to a new Iteration
Identify work on technical infrastructure, tooling, and other systemic impediments
One of the steps for setting initial velocity is to assess the team’s capacity, which is the amount of time available for the team to work on the backlog items. The team members assess their availability, acknowledging time off and other potential duties that may reduce their capacity, such as meetings, training, support, etc. The team then calculates their capacity by multiplying the number of team members by the number of hours per day by the number of days in the Iteration. The team’s capacity is used as an input for estimating the initial velocity, which is the amount of work the team can complete in an Iteration. References: Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe® Practitioner, Capacity Allocation, Velocity
Which of the following statements describes the Product Owner role?
Prioritizing the ART Backlog
Ensuring quality by testing the Solution
Representing the Customer to the Agile Team
Estimating Stories in the Product Backlog
The Product Owner role is the Agile team member primarily responsible for maximizing the value delivered by the team by ensuring that the team backlog is aligned with customer and stakeholder needs1. As a member of the extended Product Management function, the Product Owner is the team’s primary customer advocate and primary link to business and technology strategy1. This means that the Product Owner represents the customer to the Agile team, and communicates the product vision, goals, and requirements to the team. The Product Owner also collaborates with the customer and other stakeholders to gather feedback, validate assumptions, and ensure that the team is building the right things and building them right23. References: = 1: Product Owner - Scaled Agile Framework1; 2: What is a Product Owner? | Scrum.org2; 3: I’m a New Product Owner! What Are My Responsibilities? - Scrum Alliance3
An Agile Team collects the Iteration Metrics they have agreed upon during which part of the team retrospective?
During the Features agreement retrospective
During the qualitative part of the team retrospective
During the quantitative part of the team retrospective
During the time and materials retrospective
An Agile Team collects the Iteration Metrics they have agreed upon during the quantitative part of the team retrospective. This is the part where the team assesses whether they met the Iteration Goals using a binary (yes or no) measure, and reviews the metrics that provide visibility and insight into the team’s performance and process improvement. Examples of Iteration Metrics include flow metrics, such as flow velocity, load and distribution, defects addressed, and automated test coverage. The team uses these metrics to identify trends, patterns, and areas for improvement, and to inform their qualitative feedback and improvement stories. References: Iteration Retrospective - Scaled Agile Framework, Metrics - Scaled Agile Framework
Which factor helps unlock the intrinsic motivation of knowledge workers?
Pay-for-performance
Autonomy
Parallel development
Team performance incentives
According to the SAFe for Teams SP (6.0) - SAFe Practitioner handbook and study guide, the factor that helps unlock the intrinsic motivation of knowledge workers is autonomy. Autonomy means giving knowledge workers the freedom and responsibility to make decisions about their work, such as what to work on, how to do it, and when to do it. Autonomy fosters creativity, innovation, and engagement, as knowledge workers can pursue their own interests and passions, and feel a sense of ownership and accountability for their outcomes. Autonomy also supports the Agile principle of self-organizing teams, which are more productive and responsive to change than traditional, command-and-control teams. References: Principle #8 - Unlock the Intrinsic Motivation of Knowledge Workers - Scaled Agile Framework, Which factor helps unlock the intrinsic motivation of knowledge workers?, Principle #8: Unlock the intrinsic motivation of knowledge workers …
How does a team demonstrate progress?
By presenting status slides
By having the Product Owner verbally communicate to the stakeholders
By showing the actual working product
By showing screen shots of the product
According to the SAFe for Teams SP (6.0) - SAFe Practitioner handbook and study guide, one of the core values of SAFe is alignment, which means that everyone involved in the solution development has a common understanding of the vision, strategy, and goals. To achieve alignment, teams need to demonstrate progress by showing the actual working product to the stakeholders and getting feedback. This is done through the sync events such as the Team Demo and the System Demo, where teams showcase the features and stories they have completed in the iteration or the PI. By showing the actual working product, teams can validate their assumptions, measure the value delivered, and identify improvement opportunities. References: Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe® Practitioner, SAFe® for Teams - Know Your Role on an Agile Team, SAFe for Teams | SAFe Practitioner (SP) Certification
What is one way to understand WIP in a system?
Pair to complete the work faster
Make current work visible
Split stories
Size stories smaller
WIP stands for work in process, which is the amount of work that is currently being done in a system. One way to understand WIP is to make it visible to all stakeholders, using tools such as Kanban boards, cumulative flow diagrams, or burn-up charts. By making WIP visible, we can see the current state of the work, identify bottlenecks, limit WIP to match capacity, and improve flow efficiency. References: Principle #6 – Visualize and limit WIP, reduce batch sizes, and manage queue lengths, Make Value Flow without Interruptions, SAFe Principle 6: Visualise and limit WIP, reduce batch sizes, and manage queued lengths
What is one component of the Continuous Delivery Pipeline?
Continuous Exploration
Continuous Cadence
Continuous Planning
Continuous Improvement
Continuous Exploration (CE) is one of the four aspects of the Continuous Delivery Pipeline (CDP), along with Continuous Integration (CI), Continuous Deployment (CD), and Release on Demand1. CE focuses on creating alignment on what needs to be built by applying design thinking and Lean startup principles2. CE involves generating and validating hypotheses, defining a Minimum Viable Product (MVP), and developing a vision, roadmap, and features for the solution2. CE enables the enterprise to understand the market problem or customer need and the solution required to meet that need2. References: Continuous Delivery Pipeline, Continuous Exploration
What is the formula to calculate flow efficiency?
Total wait time / Flow time [Total wait time divided by Flow time]
Total active time / Flow time [Total active time divided by Flow time]
Total wait time + Flow time [Total wait time plus Flow time]
Total active time + Flow time [Total active time plus Flow time]
Flow efficiency is the ratio of the total time spent in value-added work activities divided by the total flow time. Flow time is the time it takes for a work item to move from the start to the end of the process. Value-added work activities are those that directly contribute to the customer value or the quality of the product. Non-value-added work activities are those that do not add value to the customer or the product, such as waiting, rework, or handoffs. Flow efficiency measures how well the organization is minimizing the non-value-added work and maximizing the value-added work. The formula to calculate flow efficiency is:
Flow efficiency=Flow timeTotal active time×100%
A higher flow efficiency indicates a more streamlined and effective process, while a lower flow efficiency indicates a more wasteful and inefficient process. Flow efficiency can be used to identify and eliminate the sources of waste and improve the flow of value to the customer1234. References: Flow Efficiency - Scaled Agile Framework, Flow Efficiency: A great metric you probably aren’t using, Flow Efficiency: A Great Metric You Probably Aren’t Using - Nimblework, Flow Efficiency: A Kanban Metric Introduction - Everyday Kanban
Which of the following is both a SAFe Lean-Agile Principle and Lean-Thinking principle?
Lean portfolio management
Make value flow without interruptions
Decentralize decision-making
Connect strategy to execution
Which of the following statements describes the balance between emergent design and intentional architecture when building in quality?
It is required for implementation speed and maturity
It is required for speed of development and maintainability
It is required for backlog speed and designed refinement
It is required for speed of value delivery and Solution Intent
The balance between emergent design and intentional architecture when building in quality is required for speed of development and maintainability. Emergent design is the practice of defining and evolving the architecture only as necessary to deliver the next increment of functionality, based on the feedback and learning from the previous increments. Intentional architecture is the practice of defining and implementing some upfront design guidelines and standards that enable the integration and evolution of the solution across multiple teams and domains. Both practices are implemented with enablers, which are technical items that support the development and delivery of features and capabilities. The balance between emergent design and intentional architecture allows the teams and the Agile Release Train (ART) to deliver value faster, with higher quality and lower risk, and to maintain and improve the solution over time12. The other options are not accurate descriptions of the balance between emergent design and intentional architecture, as they either do not reflect the benefits of both practices, or use terms that are not relevant to the SAFe context. References: Architectural Runway - Scaled Agile Framework, Built-In Quality - Scaled Agile Framework
What does the ART planning board show?
Risks
Significant dependencies
Capacity and load
Epics
The ART planning board, also known as the program board, is a visualization of the PI’s feature delivery dates, feature dependencies among teams, and relevant milestones. It helps the ART align on a common mission and vision, identify and resolve dependencies, and track progress and risks throughout the PI. The ART planning board does not show risks, capacity and load, or epics, although these may be discussed or tracked elsewhere during PI planning or execution. References: ART Planning Board, PI Planning, SAFe Program Board 101
What are Lean Portfolio Management, Agile Product Delivery, and Lean-Agile Leadership?
Steps in the Business Agility Value Stream
Agile values
SAFe Core Competencies
SAFe Lean-Agile Principles
Lean Portfolio Management, Agile Product Delivery, and Lean-Agile Leadership are three of the seven SAFe Core Competencies. These competencies are essential to achieving Business Agility, which is the ability to compete and thrive in the digital age by quickly responding to market changes and emerging opportunities with innovative business solutions1. The SAFe Core Competencies are as follows2:
Lean-Agile Leadership: Inspires, empowers, and coaches the people who design, build, and support the world’s solutions
Team and Technical Agility: Drives high-quality, innovative solutions that delight customers and operate reliably
Agile Product Delivery: Builds solutions that customers love, delivered with high frequency and quality
Enterprise Solution Delivery: Builds and evolves the world’s largest and most sophisticated software, hardware, cyber-physical, and systems-of-systems solutions
Lean Portfolio Management: Aligns strategy and execution by applying Lean and systems thinking approaches to strategy and investment funding, Agile portfolio operations, and governance
Organizational Agility: Adapts quickly to changing market conditions and customer needs by reconfiguring strategy, structure, processes, people, and technology toward value-creating and value-preserving opportunities
Continuous Learning Culture: Improves the competency and skills of individuals and teams, fosters a culture of innovation, and creates organizational resiliency References: 1: Business Agility - Scaled Agile Framework2: Core Competencies - Scaled Agile Framework
During the Inspect and Adapt event, how are reflection, data collection, problem solving, and identification of improvement actions used?
To evaluate better implementation steps
To enhance and improve the Innovation and Planning practices
To help the team bond and work more efficiently together
To increase the quality and reliability of the next PI
According to the SAFe for Teams SP (6.0) - SAFe Practitioner handbook and study guide, the Inspect and Adapt event is a significant event held at the end of each PI, where the current state of the solution is demonstrated and evaluated. Teams then reflect and identify improvement backlog items via a structured problem-solving workshop. The purpose of the Inspect and Adapt event is to increase the quality and reliability of the next PI by applying the following practices:
Reflection: Teams review the PI objectives, the system demo, and the quantitative and qualitative measurements to assess the current state of the solution and the ART performance. Teams also share their learnings, successes, and challenges with each other and the stakeholders.
Data collection: Teams collect data from various sources, such as team and program metrics, customer feedback, surveys, and assessments, to measure the outcomes and the health of the solution and the ART. Teams also use tools such as the PI burndown chart, the cumulative flow diagram, and the team self-assessment to visualize the data and identify trends and patterns.
Problem solving: Teams use a structured problem-solving workshop to identify the most critical issues or impediments that are affecting the solution or the ART. Teams use techniques such as brainstorming
What is critical to successfully implementing quality in a Lean-Agile environment?
Making quality everyone's responsibility
A phased-gate rollout
Separation of Dev and Ops
Component teams
= Making quality everyone’s responsibility is critical to successfully implementing quality in a Lean-Agile environment. This means that all the people involved in creating and delivering value to the customer, from business functions to software applications, share the same quality standards and practices. Quality is not something that can be delegated or outsourced to a separate team or department. It is embedded in the culture, mindset, and behavior of every individual and team. Making quality everyone’s responsibility enables faster feedback, continuous improvement, and higher customer satisfaction12. References: = 1: Built-In Quality - Scaled Agile Framework2; 2: How to Implement Quality in a Lean-Agile Environment Successfully1
Which team type is organized to assist other teams with specialized capabilities and help them become more proficient in new technologies?
Enabling team
Platform team
Stream-aligned team
Complicated subsystem team
Enabling teams are one of the four team topologies defined by Skelton and Pais in their book Team Topologies. They are organized to assist other teams with specialized capabilities and help them become more proficient in new technologies. They provide guidance, coaching, and mentoring to stream-aligned teams, platform teams, or complicated subsystem teams, and help them adopt new practices, tools, or frameworks. They also collaborate with them to deliver specific features or components that require their expertise. Enabling teams are temporary and dissolve once their mission is accomplished or no longer needed. References: Organizing Agile Teams and ARTs: Team Topologies at Scale, Team Topologies at Scale: A Worked Example, Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe Practitioner
Which statement is true about the PI Planning event?
It involves only the team members who are most qualified to estimate the work
It involves program Portfolio Management to prioritize the Stories presented by teams during the final plan review
It involves everyone in the program over a two-day period
It involves Product Management and Product Owners on the first day and the rest of the teams on the second day
The PI Planning event is a two-day event that brings together all the teams and stakeholders of an Agile Release Train (ART) to align on a common vision, mission, and goals for the upcoming Program Increment (PI). The PI Planning event involves everyone in the program, including the Business Owners, Product Management, System Architects, Agile teams, Scrum Masters, Product Owners, Release Train Engineers, and other relevant roles. The PI Planning event also fosters collaboration, communication, and commitment among the participants, and helps identify and address the risks and impediments that may affect the delivery of value. References: Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe® Practitioner, PI Planning
Which of the following SAFe Core Competencies of Business Agility includes the built-in quality dimension?
Agile Product Delivery
Team and Technical Agility
Organizational Agility
Enterprise Solution Delivery
The SAFe Core Competencies of Business Agility are the seven essential skills that enable enterprises to achieve true business agility and thrive in the digital age1. The built-in quality dimension is one of the five dimensions of Team and Technical Agility, which is the competency that describes the critical skills and Lean-Agile principles and practices that high-performing Agile teams and teams of Agile teams use to create high-quality solutions for their customers2. The built-in quality dimension ensures that every element and every increment of the solution reflects quality standards throughout the development lifecycle2. The other options are incorrect because:
A. Agile Product Delivery is the competency that describes how to deliver innovative solutions to the market that delight customers and meet their needs and expectations3. It does not include the built-in quality dimension, although it does rely on it as a prerequisite for achieving continuous delivery and release on demand3.
C. Organizational Agility is the competency that describes how to adapt strategy and operations quickly to meet the changing needs of customers, competitors, and markets4. It does not include the built-in quality dimension, although it does depend on it as a foundation for enabling faster feedback and learning cycles4.
D. Enterprise Solution Delivery is the competency that describes how to build and evolve the world’s largest applications, networks, and cyber-physical systems5. It does not include the built-in quality dimension, although it does require it as a key enabler for achieving solution integrity, compliance, and alignment with the enterprise architecture5. References: 1: Business Agility - Scaled Agile Framework, 2: Team and Technical Agility - Scaled Agile Framework, 3: Agile Product Delivery - Scaled Agile Framework, 4: Organizational Agility - Scaled Agile Framework, 5: Enterprise Solution Delivery - Scaled Agile Framework
What is the next step in the SAFe Implementation Roadmap after organizing around value?
Train teams and launch ARTs
Create the implementation plan
Enhance the Portfolio
Prepare for ART launch
= The SAFe Implementation Roadmap is a series of 12 critical moves that guide enterprises in implementing SAFe successfully. The roadmap is based on the experience and best practices of hundreds of SAFe transformations. The roadmap is not a one-size-fits-all approach, but rather a suggested sequence of steps that can be adapted to the specific context and needs of each organization. The sixth step in the roadmap is Organize Around Value, which involves identifying the value streams and Agile Release Trains (ARTs) that deliver value to the customers. The next step after that is Prepare for ART Launch, which involves planning and preparing for the first Program Increment (PI) planning event, where the ART members align on a common vision, mission, and backlog, and commit to a set of PI objectives. This step is crucial for establishing the cadence, synchronization, and collaboration of the ART, and setting the stage for delivering value in an Agile way. References: = Implementation Roadmap - Scaled Agile Framework, Prepare for ART Launch - Scaled Agile Framework, Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe® Practitioner
A team finishes developing all of their Stories in the first six days of the Iteration, tests them in the following two days, and fixes bugs in the days remaining. How is the team behaving?
They are abusing the practice of hardening
They are ignoring nonfunctional requirements within the Iteration
They are waterfalling the Iteration
They are applying the Agile development practice of "separation of concerns"
The team is waterfalling the Iteration, which means they are following a sequential and rigid process of development, testing, and fixing, instead of an iterative and incremental approach. This is not aligned with the Agile principles and practices, which advocate for delivering working software frequently, with continuous feedback and improvement. Waterfalling the Iteration reduces the team’s ability to respond to change, deliver value, and collaborate effectively. It also increases the risk of accumulating technical debt, defects, and rework. References: Iteration Execution - Scaled Agile Framework, SCALING: SP - SAFe for Teams 4.6 Flashcards - Brainscape
What is one of the Lean Thinking Principles?
Individuals and Iterations over processes and tools
Make value flow without interruptions
Working software over comprehensive documentation
Responding to change over following a plan
One of the Lean Thinking Principles is to make value flow without interruptions. This means that the organization should optimize the entire value stream, from the customer’s perspective, and eliminate any waste or delays that prevent the smooth and fast delivery of value. Waste can be anything that does not add value to the customer, such as defects, overproduction, waiting, inventory, transportation, motion, or overprocessing. Delays can be caused by handoffs, queues, approvals, dependencies, or variability. By making value flow without interruptions, the organization can increase customer satisfaction, reduce costs, improve quality, and accelerate time to market. References: Lean Thinking: Overview, Principles, Benefits, & Applications Explained, Lean Thinking – Lean Practice | Planview LeanKit
Which SAFe Lean-Agile Principle includes an emphasis on "deliver early and often"?
Organize around value
Make value flow without interruptions
Build incrementally with fast, integrated learning cycles
Take an economic view
Building incrementally with fast, integrated learning cycles is one of the ten SAFe Lean-Agile Principles. It means that the enterprise delivers value in small batches of work, frequently and reliably, to provide fast feedback and foster innovation. By building incrementally, the enterprise can reduce risk, complexity, and uncertainty, and validate assumptions before committing to large investments. By integrating frequently, the enterprise can ensure quality, collaboration, and alignment across the value stream. By creating learning cycles, the enterprise can test hypotheses, measure outcomes, and pivot as needed to achieve the desired results1. References: 1: Build Incrementally with Fast, Integrated Learning Cycles - Scaled Agile Framework
What is the best measure of progress for complex system development?
System Demo
Prioritized backlog
Inspect and Adapt
Iteration Review
The system demo is the best measure of progress for complex system development because it provides an integrated, comprehensive view of the new features delivered by the Agile Release Train (ART) over the past iteration. The system demo offers the ART a fact-based measure of current, system-level progress within the Program Increment (PI). It also allows the stakeholders to give feedback on the solution’s fitness for purpose and alignment with the vision. The system demo tests and evaluates the complete solution in a production-like context to receive feedback from stakeholders, including Business Owners, executive sponsors, other Agile Teams, development management, and customers (and their proxies). References: System Demo - Scaled Agile Framework, Principle #4 - Build incrementally with fast, integrated learning cycles - Scaled Agile Framework
Why is it important to decouple deployment from release?
To allow early access to specific groups of customers
To make deploying of assets a business decision
To remove the need to respond quickly to production issues
To enable releasing functionality on demand to meet business needs
= Decoupling deployment from release means having the ability to deploy changes to a system without having to make a new release of the system. This can be a valuable capability when making changes to a system that is in production and needs to be rolled back quickly if there are problems. It also allows releasing functionality on demand to meet business needs, which is one of the aspects of the Continuous Delivery Pipeline in SAFe. By decoupling deployment from release, enterprises can achieve faster feedback, higher frequency, and greater safety in delivering value to customers. References: = Release on Demand, DevOps: Why Is It Important to Decouple Deployment From Release?, Why Is It Important to Decouple Deployment from Release?, What a Lovely Decouple: Why Decoupling Deploy from Release Is a Game Changer
Which SAFe Core Value includes "use common terminology" and "understand your customer"?
Alignment
Relentless Improvement
Transparency
Respect for People
= Alignment is one of the four core values of SAFe that represents the foundational beliefs that are key to SAFe’s effectiveness. Alignment helps everyone in the SAFe portfolio work toward a common direction and deliver value with speed and quality. One of the ways to create and maintain alignment in SAFe is to speak with a common language and understand your customer. Speaking with a common language means using consistent terms and definitions across the enterprise to avoid confusion and ambiguity. Understanding your customer means identifying their needs, preferences, and expectations, and delivering solutions that meet or exceed them. References: = Core Values - Scaled Agile Framework, SAFe Core Values - Scaled Agile Framework
What is a minimum viable product? (MVP)
A minimal version of a new product used to test a hypothesis
A prototype that can be used to explore user needs
A Feature that can be delivered in an Iteration
A minimal product that can be built to achieve market dominance
According to the SAFe-for-Teams-SAFe-Practitioner-6-0 documents, a minimum viable product (MVP) is an early and minimal version of a new solution sufficient to prove or disprove an epic hypothesis1. An MVP is not a prototype, a feature, or a product. It is a learning tool that helps validate assumptions, reduce uncertainty, and increase the likelihood of building the right thing2. Therefore, the correct answer is A. A minimal version of a new product used to test a hypothesis. References: Epic - Scaled Agile Framework, What is a Minimum Viable Product (MVP)? | Agile Alliance
What are the three parts of Inspect and Adapt?
The PI System Demo, confidence vote, and ROAMing risks
Backlog refinement, qualitative and quantitative measurement, and ROAMing risks
Backlog refinement, confidence vote, and Problem-Solving workshop
The PI System Demo, qualitative and quantitative measurement, and Problem-solving workshop
The Inspect and Adapt (I&A) is a significant event held at the end of each Program Increment (PI), where the current state of the Solution is demonstrated and evaluated by the train. Teams then reflect and identify improvement backlog items via a structured, problem-solving workshop. The I&A event consists of three parts: the PI System Demo, where the features developed during the PI are shown and feedback is collected; the quantitative and qualitative measurement, where the teams assess their performance and progress using various metrics and surveys; and the retrospective and problem-solving workshop, where the teams identify and analyze the root causes of their most critical issues and devise action plans to address them12. References: Inspect and Adapt, Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe® Practitioner
During the PI Planning event, when are planning adjustments agreed upon?
During breakout sessions
During the draft plan review
During the Coach sync
During the management review and problem-solving meeting
During the PI Planning event, planning adjustments are agreed upon during the management review and problem-solving meeting, which is the last activity of the first day of the event1. In this meeting, the management team reviews the draft plans of the teams, identifies and resolves any issues, risks, or dependencies, and makes any necessary changes to the scope, people, or resources1. The management team also communicates the planning adjustments back to the Agile Release Train (ART) the next day, before the teams continue their planning and make the appropriate adjustments2. References: PI Planning, Management Review and Problem-Solving
What are the four types of team topologies?
Stream-aligned, platform, enabling, and complicated subsystem
Stream-aligned, functional requirements, product domain, and technical
Functional requirements, platform, enabling, and technical
Functional requirements, product domain, technical, and complicated subsystem
According to the book Team Topologies by Matthew Skelton and Manuel Pais, the four types of team topologies are stream-aligned, platform, enabling, and complicated subsystem. These team types are designed to optimize the flow of work and information in an organization, and to align with the principles of DevOps and agile. A stream-aligned team is focused on a single stream of work, such as a product, a feature, a user journey, or a user persona. A platform team provides the infrastructure and services that enable other teams to deliver value to customers. An enabling team helps other teams overcome obstacles and learn new skills and technologies. A complicated-subsystem team handles tasks that require specialized knowledge and expertise, such as mathematics, algorithms, or cryptography. References: Team Topologies: The 4 Team Types Explained | Shortform Books, Team Topologies | Atlassian, Key Concepts — Team Topologies, The Four Team Types from Team Topologies - IT Revolution, What are the core team types in Team Topologies?
What is the purpose of the Iteration review?
To work on solutions for backlog items
To identify where there is too much work in the system
To measure the team's progress
To forecast where work is estimated for the upcoming PIs
The purpose of the Iteration review is to measure the team’s progress by showing working stories to the Product Owner and other stakeholders and getting their feedback. The Iteration review provides a way to gather immediate, contextual feedback from the team’s stakeholders on a regular cadence. The Iteration review also allows the team to demonstrate their contributions, receive feedback to improve the solution, and adjust the Team Backlog based on new opportunities1234. References: Iteration Review - Scaled Agile Framework, Iteration Review - Scaled Agile Framework, What is Iteration review in SAFe® 6.0? - premieragile.com, Iteration Review - Scaled Agile Framework
Which statement is a principle of the Agile Manifesto?
Measure everything
Visualize and limit WIP, reduce batch sizes, and manage queue lengths
Simplicity "the art of maximizing the amount of work not done" is essential
Respect for people and culture
This statement is one of the 12 principles behind the Agile Manifesto1, which guides the agile software development approach. It means that agile teams should focus on delivering the most valuable features and avoid unnecessary work that does not add value to the customer or the product. By applying simplicity, agile teams can reduce waste, increase efficiency, and improve quality. References: 12 Principles Behind the Agile Manifesto
What is one of the Lean budget Guardrails?
Objective measurements
Continuous Business Owner engagement
Participatory budgeting
Spending caps for each ART
This statement is one of the Lean budget Guardrails, which describe the policies and practices for budgeting, spending, and governance for a specific portfolio1. Continuous Business Owner engagement means that the Business Owners, who are key stakeholders for each Agile Release Train (ART), are actively involved in the planning, execution, and review of the value delivery1. They provide feedback, guidance, and approval for the PI objectives, features, and enablers, as well as participate in the Inspect and Adapt (I&A) workshop and the Program Increment (PI) system demo2. Continuous Business Owner engagement helps ensure alignment, transparency, and accountability for the value streams and ARTs1. References: Lean Budget Guardrails, Business Owners
Which statement describes the information within a Story?
A Story provides just enough information for the intent to be understood by both business and technical people
A Story is written in full detailed specifications so that the work is ready to be implemented immediately
No further conversation is required after the Story is identified because it contains all necessary details
Story acceptance criteria must be finalized before beginning Iteration Planning
A Story is a short description of a small piece of desired functionality written from the user’s perspective and in their language. A Story has three primary components: Card, Conversation, and Confirmation. The Card captures the essence of the Story using the format: “As a (who), I want (what), so that (why).” The Conversation is the ongoing dialogue between the team and the customer or product owner to elaborate and refine the Story details. The Confirmation is the set of acceptance criteria and tests that verify the Story is done and meets the customer’s expectations. A Story provides just enough information for both business and technical people to understand the intent, but not so much that it becomes a specification or a contract. Details are deferred until the Story is ready to be implemented, which allows for more flexibility and feedback. A Story is not a static artifact, but a dynamic one that evolves through collaboration and learning12. References: Story - Scaled Agile Framework, [What is User Story? -
Which process guides the final approval for a release in SAFe?
Release Governance
Lean Portfolio Management
Product Management
Continuous Delivery Pipeline
Release Governance is the process that guides the final approval for a release in SAFe. It involves a set of roles and responsibilities that ensure the quality, compliance, and fitness for purpose of the solution before it is released to customers. Release Governance also coordinates the timing and frequency of releases based on market demand and business needs. Release Governance is part of the Release on Demand aspect of the Continuous Delivery Pipeline, which is the fourth and last element in the four-part pipeline of Continuous Exploration, Continuous Integration, Continuous Deployment, and Release on Demand. References: Release on Demand - Scaled Agile Framework, SAFe for teams 93% Flashcards | Quizlet, Release on Demand - SAFe 4.5 Reference Guide: Scaled Agile Framework …
Which statement applies to uncommitted objectives?
They are included in the commitment
They are items the team has high confidence in
They are counted when calculating load
They are extra things teams can do if they have time
Uncommitted objectives are used to identify work that can be variable within the scope of a PI. The work is planned, but the outcome is not certain. Teams can use uncommitted objectives whenever there is low confidence in meeting the objective. They are not included in the team’s commitment or counted against teams in the ART predictability measure. They are extra things teams can do if they have time and capacity, but they will not be penalized if not achieved. References: PI Objectives, What is an uncommitted objective in SAFe?, SAFe 5.0, PI Objectives - Easy Agile
Deploy, verify, monitor, & respond are all activities of what?
Continuous Integration
Continuous Exploration
Continuous Deployment
Release on Demand
Continuous Deployment is the process of releasing every good build to users through a delivery pipeline that performs various tests, deployments, and validations1. Deploy, verify, monitor, and respond are the four activities of Continuous Deployment that ensure the quality and reliability of the software2. References: 1: Continuous Deployment2: Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe® Practitioner
Which of the following statements describes the balanced Agile testing pyramid?
Many small, low-level, automated tests & fewer large, manual tests
Many solution tests run by internal team members & fewer run by external testers
Many solution tests run by external testers and fewer run by internal team members
Many large, manual tests of the end-to-end solution and fewer small, automated tests
The balanced Agile testing pyramid is a testing strategy that illustrates the distribution of different types of tests in a test suite. It suggests that we should have many unit tests, which are small, low-level, and automated tests that verify the functionality of individual components of the codebase. We should also have many service or integration tests, which are automated tests that verify the interaction and integration of different components or services. Finally, we should have fewer large, manual tests, such as graphical user interface tests or end-to-end tests, which verify the functionality and usability of the whole system from the user’s perspective. The balanced Agile testing pyramid helps agile teams to achieve faster feedback, higher quality, and lower maintenance costs. References: The Practical Test Pyramid, What is Testing Pyramid? How Does It Benefit Agile Teams?, Climbing the Testing Pyramid, Agile Test Pyramid, Agile Test Automation Pyramid
What is one dimension of the Team and Technical Agility Core Competency?
Relentless Improvement
Innovation Culture
Built in Quality
Leading by Example
The Team and Technical Agility Core Competency describes the critical skills and Lean-Agile principles and practices that high-performing Agile teams and Teams of Agile teams use to create high-quality solutions for their customers. It consists of three dimensions: Agile Teams, Team of Agile Teams, and Built in Quality1. Built in Quality is the dimension that ensures that every aspect of the solution, from code to compliance, is designed and implemented with high standards and practices that guarantee quality. Built in Quality enables fast and reliable delivery of value, reduces waste and rework, and fosters a culture of continuous improvement. Some of the practices that support Built in Quality in SAFe are Test-First, Behavior-Driven Development, Acceptance Test-Driven Development, Continuous Integration, Continuous Deployment, and Communities of Practice2. References: Team and Technical Agility - Scaled Agile Framework, Built-In Quality - Scaled Agile Framework.
Which of the following basic quality practices applies to all teams?
Agile architecture
Rapid prototyping
Modeling and simulation
Collective ownership and standards
Collective ownership and standards are basic quality practices that apply to all teams, regardless of their domain or work product. They promote shared responsibility, accountability, and alignment among team members and across teams1. They also enable faster feedback, continuous improvement, and reduced waste2. The other options are not basic quality practices, but rather specific techniques or approaches that may be useful for some teams or domains, but not all. Agile architecture is a way of designing and evolving systems that support the delivery of value and quality3. Rapid prototyping is a way of creating and testing a minimum viable product (MVP) to validate assumptions and learn from customers4. Modeling and simulation are ways of representing and analyzing complex systems or phenomena using mathematical or computational methods.
What is the purpose of building a continuous delivery pipeline?
To deliver new functionality more frequently than with traditional processes
To identify key stakeholders within the system architecture
To prioritize system stability over development speed
To prioritize development speed over system stability
The purpose of building a continuous delivery pipeline is to enable a streamlined and automated process of delivering software value to the end users. A continuous delivery pipeline consists of four aspects: continuous exploration, continuous integration, continuous deployment, and release on demand. These aspects work together to support the delivery of small batches of new functionality, which are then released to fulfill market demand. Building and maintaining a continuous delivery pipeline allows each Agile Release Train (ART) to deliver new functionality to users far more frequently than with traditional processes, which often involve long and complex release cycles. By delivering value more frequently, the ART can respond faster to customer feedback, reduce waste, improve quality, and increase business agility. References: Continuous Delivery Pipeline - Scaled Agile Framework, Continuous Delivery Pipeline - Scaled Agile Framework, SAFe Continuous Delivery Pipeline: A Comprehensive Guide to the …, Continuous Delivery Pipeline: The 5 Stages Explained - Codefresh
Which of the following is an output of the PI Planning process?
PI Vision
PI Goals
Actual PI Business Value
PI Objectives
The PI Planning process is a two-day event that aligns all the teams on the Agile Release Train (ART) to a shared mission and vision for the upcoming Program Increment (PI)1. The PI Planning process has several inputs and outputs, as shown in Figure 12. One of the outputs of the PI Planning process is the PI Objectives, which are a set of SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, and Time-bound) goals that each team and the ART commit to achieving in the PI3. The PI Objectives are based on the features and enablers that the teams plan to deliver, and they reflect the business and technical value that the teams and the ART intend to provide to the stakeholders4. The PI Objectives are also used to track the progress and performance of the teams and the ART throughout the PI execution5. The other options are not outputs of the PI Planning process, but rather inputs or outcomes. The PI Vision is an input to the PI Planning process, which describes the current state, future state, and features of the solution that the ART will deliver in the PI. The PI Goals are an outcome of the PI Planning process, which are derived from the PI Objectives and summarize the business and technical benefits that the ART will deliver in the PI. The Actual PI Business Value is an outcome of the PI execution, which measures the actual value delivered by the ART at the end of the PI, based on the PI Objectives and stakeholder feedback. References: PI Planning - Scaled Agile Framework, Inputs and Outputs of PI Planning - Scaled Agile Framework, PI Objectives - Scaled Agile Framework, PI Planning - Scaled Agile Framework, Program Execution - Scaled Agile Framework, [PI Vision - Scaled Agile Framework], [PI Goals - Scaled Agile Framework], [Inspect and Adapt - Scaled Agile Framework]
Figure 1. Inputs and outputs of PI Planning2
Which of the following statements describes the concept of "shift-left"?
Move testing and validation activities earlier in the work cycle to get faster or continuous feedback
Write tests at the end of development to capture potential failures discovered throughout the development process
Perform testing and validation activities in the production environment under real-world conditions
Run two nearly identical production environments, moving users between the two to make small changes to one or the other
The concept of “shift-left” means moving testing and validation activities earlier in the work cycle to get faster or continuous feedback. This helps to identify and fix defects, errors, or issues as soon as possible, reducing the cost and risk of rework and delays. Shift-left testing also supports the agile principle of delivering working software frequently and the lean principle of building quality in. By shifting testing left, teams can ensure that the solutions they deliver meet the customer needs and expectations, as well as the quality standards and compliance requirements. References: Built-In Quality, Shift Left Testing: What, Why & How To Shift Left, What Executives Should Know About Shift-Left Security, What is Shift Left Security?
How does SAFe provide a second operating system that enables Business Agility?
By achieving economies of scale
By organizing around functional areas to focus on skills development
By creating a hierarchy to provide stability
By focusing on customers, products, innovation, and growth
SAFe provides a second operating system that enables Business Agility by creating a network of Agile teams and trains that are aligned to a common vision and strategy, and empowered to deliver value to customers and users. SAFe leverages the Lean-Agile mindset, the core competencies, and the principles and practices to foster a culture of innovation, learning, and collaboration. SAFe also supports the continuous delivery pipeline, which enables fast feedback and frequent value delivery. References: SAFe® for Teams - Know Your Role on an Agile Team | Scaled Agile, Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe® Practitioner - scaledagile.com, SAFe 6.0 for Teams with SP Certification - ICON Agility Serviceswq
Which of the following activities occurs during the Inspect and Adapt workshop?
Refining the ART backlog
A demo of the integrated system
A retrospective of the Iteration
Planning the next PI
The Inspect and Adapt workshop is a significant event held at the end of each Program Increment (PI), where the current state of the Solution is demonstrated and evaluated by the train1. The first part of the workshop is the PI System Demo, which shows all the Features that the Agile Release Train (ART) has developed over the course of the PI2. The other options are not activities that occur during the Inspect and Adapt workshop. Refining the ART backlog is a continuous process that happens throughout the PI3. A retrospective of the Iteration is a team-level event that happens after every Iteration4. Planning the next PI is a separate event that happens before the start of the next PI.
What is typically included in the definition of done for the team increment?
Stories are accepted by Product Management
45 new questions addStories are accepted by the Product Owner
Customer documentation is ready
Regression testing is done
The definition of done (DoD) is a set of criteria that a product increment must meet for the team to consider it complete and ready for customers1. It ensures the quality and consistency of a deliverable. The DoD is agreed upon by the entire project team, including developers, testers, product owners, and other stakeholders2. One of the common criteria that is typically included in the DoD for the team increment is regression testing, which is the process of verifying that the existing functionality of the system is not affected by the new changes3. Regression testing is done to ensure that the product increment meets the quality standards and does not introduce any defects or errors4. References: What is the Definition of Done? Understanding DOD in Agile - Atlassian, What is the definition of done? Guide for agile teams with examples - LogRocket Blog, What is Regression Testing? Definition, Tools, Method, and Example, What is typically included in the Definition of Done for the - Madanswer
TESTED 05 Oct 2025
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