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LEADING SAFE PRACTICE EXAM QUESTIONS WITH CORRECT DETAILED ANSWERS | ALREADY GRADED A+RECENT VERSION

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LEADING SAFE PRACTICE EXAM QUESTIONS WITH CORRECT DETAILED ANSWERS | ALREADY GRADED A+RECENT VERSION 1) Team and technical agility pg. 21 - answer apply built-in quality practices for technical agility. Put this in for the definition of done (dod). 2) Devops pg. 22 (first slide) - answer provides the culture, automation, lean-flow, measurement, and recovery that enable continuous delivery. 3) Business solutions and lean systems engineer pg.22 (2nd slide) - answer solution trains coordinate multiple agile release trains (art) and suppliers. Manage frequent integration. Continuously address compliance concerns. Architect for scale, modularity, release-ability, and serviceability. 4) Lesson 1 review pg. 26 - answer read: team and technical agility, devops and release on demand, business solutions and lean systems, lean portfolio management, lean-agile leadership. 5) Agile manifesto - answer we are uncovering better ways of developing software by doing it and helping other do it. Through this work we have come to value: Individuals and interactions over processes and tools. Working software over comprehensive documentation. Customer collaboration over contract negotiation. Responding to change over following a plan. While there is value in the items on the right, we value the items on the left more. 6) The agile manifesto principles - answer 1. Our highest priority is to satisfy the customer through early and continuous delivery of valuable software. 2. Welcome changing requirements, even late in development. Agile processes harness change for the customer's competitive advantage. 3. Deliver working software frequently, from a couple of weeks to a couple of months, with a preference for the shorter timescale. 4. Business people and developers must work together daily throughout the project. 5. Build projects around motivated individuals. Give them the environment and support they need, and trust them to get the job done. 6. The most efficient and effective method of conveying information to and within a development team is face-to-face conversation. 7. Working software is the primary measure of progress. 8. Agile processes promote sustainable development. The sponsors, developers, and users should be able to maintain a constant pace indefinitely. 9. Continuous attention to technical excellence and good design enhances agility. 10. Simplicity -- the art of maximizing the amount of work not done -- is essential. 11. The architecture, requirements, and designs emerge from self-organizing teams. 12. At regular intervals, the team reflects on how to become effective, then tunes and adjusts its behavior accordingly. 7) Safe lean-agile principles - answer 1. Take an economic view. 2. Apply systems thinking 3. Assume variability; preserve options. 4. Build incrementally with fast, integrated learning cycles. 5. Base milestones on objective evaluation of working systems. 6. Visualize and limit wip (work in progress), reduce batch sizes, and manage queue lengths. 7. Apply cadence, synchronize with cross-domain planning. 8. Unlock the intrinsic motivation of knowledge workers. 9. Decentralize decision-making. 8) Transparency pg.31 - answer visualize all relevant work. Take ownership and responsibility for errors and mistakes. Admit your own mistakes. Support others who acknowledge and learn from their mistakes. Never punish the messenger. 9) Built-in quality pg. 31 - answer demonstrate quality by refusing to accept or ship low quality work. Support investments in capacity planning for maintenance and reduction of technical debt. Ensures ux, architecture, operations, security, compliance, and others, are part of the flow of work. Apply lean principles to limit time or shorten the length of time. 10) Bpat pg. 31 - answer built-in quality, program execution, alignment, and transparency 11) Value pg. 34 - answer achieve the shortest sustainable lead time with: best quality and value to people and society. High morale, safety, and customer delight. 12) Respect for people and culture pg. 34 - answer people do all the work. Your customer is whoever consumes your work: don't overload them, don't make them wait, don't force them to do wasteful work, don't impose wishful thinking. Build long-term partnerships based on trust. Cultural change comes last not first. To change the culture, you have to change the organization. 13) Innovation pg. 35 - answer producers innovate; customers validate, get out of the office (gemba* the "real place" where the work is actually done; where value is produced). Provide time and space for creativity. Apply innovation accounting. Pivot without mercy or guilt. 14) Take an economic view pg. 48 - answer sequence jobs for maximum benefit. Do not consider money already spent. Make economic choices continuously. Empower local decision-making. *if you only quantify one thing, quantify the cost of delay* (wsjf = waited, shortest, job first) 15) Finding optimum batch size pg. 66 - answer optimum batch size is an example of a u-curve optimization. - total costs are the sum of holding costs and transaction costs. - higher transaction costs shift optimum batch size higher. - higher holding costs shift batch size lower (test asks last two in a negative context, multiple choice question). 16) Wq = lq /average processing rate - answer 17) Unlock the intrinsic motivation of knowledge workers pg. 73 - answer autonomy, mastery, and purpose 18) Form cross-functional agile teams pg. 87 - answer estimating guard band (hardening) 19) Build quality in with technical agility pg. 88 - answer *you can't scale crappy code (or hardware, or anything else). Building quality in: -ensures that every increment of the solution reflects quality standards. -is required for high, sustainable development velocity. -includes software quality practices (most inspired by xp - extreme programming) continuous integration, test-first, refactoring, pair work, collective ownership, and more. -supports hardware quality with exploratory, early iterations; frequent system-level integration; design verification; mbse (model-based system engineering); and set-based design. 20) Organize agile release trains around the flow of value pg. 93 - answer for large systems, solution trains align arts to a common mission. Roadmap/vision - backlog architect/engineer, solution management, and ste - economic framework and solution intent - kanban backlog - solution train - solution demo - large solution, customer, and solution context - business solutions and lean systems. 21) Prepare for pi planning pg. 97 - answer features are implemented by stories. Features are decomposed into stories by teams on the train. -small increments of value that can be developed in days and are relatively easy to estimate. -teams on the train collaborate to deliver features incrementally via user stories. -features fit in one pi for one art; stories fit in one iteration for one team. -enabler story: represent different types of work, such as: exploration, architecture, infrastructure, compliance. 22) Addressing program risks: roam, pg. 117 - answer after all plans have been presented, remaining program risks and impediments are discussed and categorized. Roaming risks: R: resolve - has been addresses; no longer a concern. O: own - someone has taken responsibility. A: accept - nothing more can be done; if risk occurs, release may compromised. M: mitigate - team has plan to adjust as necessary. 23) Finalize plans and establish business value pg. 114 - answer make planning adjustments: Based on the previous day's management review problem-solving meeting, adjustments are discussed. *possible changes: business priorities; adjustment to vision; changes to scope; movement of people* 24) Arts continuously deliver value pg. 124 - answer continuous delivery pipeline: Agile release train -continuous exploration -continuous integration -continuous deployment -release on demand 25) Program events drive the train pg. 126 - answer program events create a closed-loop system to keep the train on the tracks. (3 or 4 questions on this slide) -art sync -scrum of scrums -po sync -system demo -prepare for pi planning -inspect and adapt -pi planning 26) Art sync is used to coordinate progress pg. 127 - answer programs coordinate dependencies through sync meetings. Art sync: scrum of scrums and po sync -scrum of scrums: visibility into progress and impediments; facilitated by rte; participants: scrum masters, other select team members, smes if necessary. Weekly or more frequently, 30 - 60 minutes. Timeboxed and followed by a 'meet after' -po sync: visibility into progress, scope, and priority adjustments. Facilitated by rte or pm. Participants: pm's, pos, other stakeholders, and smes as necessary. Weekly or more frequently, 30 -60 minutes. Timeboxed and followed by a 'meet after'. 27) What is devops? Pg. 129 - answer an agile approach to bridge the gap between development and operations to deliver value faster and more reliably. Development: create change; add or modify features Operations: create stability; create or enhance services Devops is a capability of every agile release train.

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Institution
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Course
SAFe Agile

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LEADING SAFE
PRACTICE EXAM QUESTIONS
WITH CORRECT DETAILED
ANSWERS | ALREADY GRADED
A+<RECENT VERSION>




1) Team and technical agility pg. 21 - answer apply built-in quality
practices for technical agility. Put this in for the definition of done (dod).


2) Devops pg. 22 (first slide) - answer provides the culture, automation,
lean-flow, measurement, and recovery that enable continuous delivery.


3) Business solutions and lean systems engineer pg.22 (2nd slide) -
answer solution trains coordinate multiple agile release trains (art) and
suppliers. Manage frequent integration. Continuously address compliance
concerns. Architect for scale, modularity, release-ability, and
serviceability.


4) Lesson 1 review pg. 26 - answer read: team and technical agility,
devops and release on demand, business solutions and lean systems, lean
portfolio management, lean-agile leadership.

,5) Agile manifesto - answer we are uncovering better ways of
developing software by doing it and helping other do it. Through this
work we have come to value:


Individuals and interactions over processes and tools.
Working software over comprehensive documentation.
Customer collaboration over contract negotiation.
Responding to change over following a plan.


While there is value in the items on the right, we value the items on the
left more.


6) The agile manifesto principles - answer 1. Our highest priority is to
satisfy the customer through early and continuous delivery of valuable
software.
2. Welcome changing requirements, even late in development. Agile
processes harness change for the customer's competitive advantage.
3. Deliver working software frequently, from a couple of weeks to a
couple of months, with a preference for the shorter timescale.
4. Business people and developers must work together daily throughout
the project.
5. Build projects around motivated individuals. Give them the
environment and support they need, and trust them to get the job done.
6. The most efficient and effective method of conveying information to
and within a development team is face-to-face conversation.
7. Working software is the primary measure of progress.
8. Agile processes promote sustainable development. The sponsors,
developers, and users should be able to maintain a constant pace
indefinitely.
9. Continuous attention to technical excellence and good design enhances
agility.
10. Simplicity -- the art of maximizing the amount of work not done -- is
essential.
11. The architecture, requirements, and designs emerge from self-
organizing teams.
12. At regular intervals, the team reflects on how to become effective,
then tunes and adjusts its behavior accordingly.

,7) Safe lean-agile principles - answer 1. Take an economic view.
2. Apply systems thinking
3. Assume variability; preserve options.
4. Build incrementally with fast, integrated learning cycles.
5. Base milestones on objective evaluation of working systems.
6. Visualize and limit wip (work in progress), reduce batch sizes, and
manage queue lengths.
7. Apply cadence, synchronize with cross-domain planning.
8. Unlock the intrinsic motivation of knowledge workers.
9. Decentralize decision-making.


8) Transparency pg.31 - answer visualize all relevant work. Take
ownership and responsibility for errors and mistakes. Admit your own
mistakes. Support others who acknowledge and learn from their mistakes.
Never punish the messenger.


9) Built-in quality pg. 31 - answer demonstrate quality by refusing to
accept or ship low quality work. Support investments in capacity
planning for maintenance and reduction of technical debt. Ensures ux,
architecture, operations, security, compliance, and others, are part of the
flow of work. Apply lean principles to limit time or shorten the length of
time.


10) Bpat pg. 31 - answer built-in quality, program execution,
alignment, and transparency


11) Value pg. 34 - answer achieve the shortest sustainable lead time
with: best quality and value to people and society. High morale, safety,
and customer delight.


12) Respect for people and culture pg. 34 - answer people do all the
work. Your customer is whoever consumes your work: don't overload

, them, don't make them wait, don't force them to do wasteful work, don't
impose wishful thinking. Build long-term partnerships based on trust.
Cultural change comes last not first. To change the culture, you have to
change the organization.


13) Innovation pg. 35 - answer producers innovate; customers
validate, get out of the office (gemba* the "real place" where the work is
actually done; where value is produced). Provide time and space for
creativity. Apply innovation accounting. Pivot without mercy or guilt.


14) Take an economic view pg. 48 - answer sequence jobs for
maximum benefit. Do not consider money already spent. Make economic
choices continuously. Empower local decision-making. *if you only
quantify one thing, quantify the cost of delay* (wsjf = waited, shortest,
job first)


15) Finding optimum batch size pg. 66 - answer optimum batch size
is an example of a u-curve optimization.
- total costs are the sum of holding costs and transaction costs.
- higher transaction costs shift optimum batch size higher.
- higher holding costs shift batch size lower
(test asks last two in a negative context, multiple choice question).


16) Wq = lq /average processing rate - answer


17) Unlock the intrinsic motivation of knowledge workers pg. 73 -
answer autonomy, mastery, and purpose


18) Form cross-functional agile teams pg. 87 - answer estimating
guard band (hardening)

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