Practice Exam & Certification Prep: Complete
Questions with Verified Answers
DOMAIN 1: CUSTOMER-CENTRICITY & DESIGN THINKING (15 Questions)
Q1: You're the APM for a B2B SaaS platform. User analytics indicate a 35% drop-off
during the onboarding flow. Qualitative research suggests users feel overwhelmed by
the number of configuration options presented. Using Design Thinking principles, your
immediate next step should be to:
A) Simplify the onboarding flow by reducing configuration options by 50%
B) Develop an interactive tutorial overlay to guide users through each option
C) Create empathy maps and journey maps to visualize specific emotional friction
points during onboarding
D) Prioritize a "quick start" template feature for the next PI Planning
Correct Answer: C
100% CORRECT RATIONALE:
● SAFe Concept: Design Thinking - Empathize and Define stages. The double
diamond model requires deep understanding before solutioning.
● Business Rationale: Analytics show where users drop off; qualitative data hints at
why, but empathy/journey maps synthesize these into specific, actionable
insights about emotional states and pain points. This prevents solving the wrong
problem elegantly.
● Scenario Application: The drop-off could stem from option anxiety, unclear value
proposition, or time constraints. Journey mapping reveals which specific
elements cause overwhelm, enabling targeted intervention rather than generic
simplification.
, ● Anti-Pattern Identification:
○ A: "Solution Jumping" Anti-Pattern. Arbitrarily cutting options assumes
quantity is the problem, not presentation or relevance, potentially
destroying power-user functionality.
○ B: "Feature Masking" Anti-Pattern. Adding a tutorial treats the symptom
(confusion) rather than the root cause (poor UX design) and adds
complexity.
○ D: "Backlog Bypass" Anti-Pattern. Prematurely prioritizing a solution
without proper discovery violates Continuous Exploration principles.
● APM Mindset: An APM serves as the customer anthropologist, using structured
inquiry to transform data into deep empathy before committing to build.
Q2: During customer discovery for a healthcare payment solution, you identify three
distinct personas: "Efficient Erin" (administrator seeking speed), "Compliant Carl"
(auditor requiring traceability), and "Anxious Alice" (patient confused by medical billing).
A stakeholder suggests building a unified interface for all three. Based on Design
Thinking, your response should emphasize:
A) Building the unified interface to ensure consistency and reduce development costs
B) Creating three separate interfaces optimized for each persona's specific needs and
emotional states
C) Developing personas-based user stories to identify conflicts and convergence points
before deciding on interface strategy
D) Prioritizing "Efficient Erin" as the primary persona since administrators represent the
largest user volume
Correct Answer: C
100% CORRECT RATIONALE:
● SAFe Concept: Personas and Problem Synthesis. Design Thinking requires
understanding user diversity before converging on solutions.
● Business Rationale: Personas often have conflicting needs (speed vs. traceability
vs. simplicity). A unified interface might satisfy no one; separate interfaces
create maintenance nightmares. The APM must first map these conflicts to
determine where convergence is possible and where divergence is necessary.
● Scenario Application: By writing persona-based stories, you might discover that
Erin and Carl need dashboard depth while Alice needs mobile simplicity—a
, responsive design solution that serves both modes, or you might find
irreconcilable workflow conflicts requiring separate paths.
● Anti-Pattern Identification:
○ A: "False Economy" Anti-Pattern. Optimizing development cost over user
effectiveness reduces adoption and value realization.
○ B: "Persona Siloing" Anti-Pattern. Prematurely committing to separate
interfaces without exploring shared components creates unnecessary
complexity and technical debt.
○ D: "Volume Bias" Anti-Pattern. Selecting personas based on quantity rather
than strategic value or pain severity can miss high-value opportunities.
● APM Mindset: An APM acts as the synthesis architect, balancing user diversity
with solution elegance through evidence-based decision-making.
Q3: Your team has conducted 30 customer interviews for a new mobile banking feature.
The data is rich but contradictory—some customers want maximum security steps,
others want frictionless transactions. Using Lean Startup principles within SAFe, how do
you proceed?
A) Build both versions and A/B test them to let data decide the winner
B) Segment the customers into security-conscious and convenience-oriented cohorts
and define separate hypotheses for each
C) Average the feedback and design a medium-security, medium-friction solution
D) Defer the feature until you can achieve consensus through additional research
Correct Answer: B
100% CORRECT RATIONALE:
● SAFe Concept: Hypothesis-Driven Development and Market Segmentation.
Different customer segments have different value hypotheses that must be
tested independently.
● Business Rationale: Contradictory feedback often indicates distinct market
segments with different needs. Averaging (C) creates a solution that satisfies no
one. A/B testing (A) is premature without understanding who prefers what. You
must first define segments, then formulate specific, testable hypotheses for each
(e.g., "Segment A will adopt if 2FA is mandatory" vs. "Segment B will adopt if
login time <3 seconds").
, ● Scenario Application: By segmenting into cohorts, you can design targeted
MVPs—perhaps a "Secure Plus" tier for security-conscious users and a "Quick
Access" mode for convenience seekers—testing each hypothesis with the
appropriate segment.
● Anti-Pattern Identification:
○ A: "Premature Experimentation" Anti-Pattern. Testing without segment
definition yields noisy data and inconclusive results.
○ C: "Design by Committee" Anti-Pattern. Compromising between extremes
creates mediocrity, not value.
○ D: "Paralysis by Analysis" Anti-Pattern. Endless research to achieve
consensus when segments have genuinely different needs is wasteful.
● APM Mindset: An APM demonstrates analytical rigor, recognizing that customer
diversity requires segmented hypotheses rather than universal solutions.
Q4: You're mapping the value stream for an insurance claims processing solution. You
discover that the time from claim submission to first payment averages 14 days, but
actual processing work takes only 8 hours. The rest is wait time for documentation,
approvals, and handoffs. As an APM, your priority action should be:
A) Increase development capacity to build a faster payment calculation engine
B) Identify and eliminate delays and non-value-add time in the process before adding
new features
C) Add a customer-facing "claim status tracker" to improve transparency during the
14-day wait
D) Prioritize automation of the approval workflow to reduce the 8 hours of processing
time
Correct Answer: B
100% CORRECT RATIONALE:
● SAFe Concept: Value Stream Mapping and Lean Principle #2 (Build Quality In)
and #6 (Make Value Flow Without Interruptions). The goal is to optimize the
whole system, not just the development or processing components.
● Business Rationale: In a 14-day cycle with 8 hours of work, the process is 98%
wait time. Optimizing the 8 hours (D) or adding tracking (C) addresses
symptoms, not the disease. The APM must first eliminate delays and waste in
the value stream before automating or enhancing features.