2026/2027 Update | 200+ Questions and Verified
Answers | V2 Course
SAYLOR DIRECT CREDIT - ADVANCED APPLICATION ASSESSMENT
SECTION 1: ADVANCED STRATEGIC FRAMEWORKS (Q1-Q10)
Q1: A mid-size B2B SaaS firm (ARR $80 M, 1,200 employees) sees growth slowing in its
core North-American market while its EU foothold is still embryonic. Using the
GE-McKinsey Matrix, which strategic posture best balances resource risk and growth
upside?
A. Divest the EU unit to fund a US$25 M AI-acquisition that deepens North-American
wallet-share.
B. Classify EU as “Selective/Expand,” fund a €6 M 18-month localization & channel
program, keep NA in “Harvest.”
C. Treat both markets as “Invest to Grow,” raising a $40 M Series-C to chase share
everywhere simultaneously.
D. Re-segment EU into micro-verticals, label them all “Harvest,” and redirect savings to
NA enterprise upsell.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The GE-McKinsey Matrix guides resource allocation by weighing market
attractiveness against competitive strength; the EU scores high attractiveness but low
presence, justifying selective expansion while harvesting mature NA cash-cows. Option
B sequences investment, limiting burn while testing product-market fit with localized
campaigns. Option C ignores portfolio logic by over-investing in two dissimilar life-cycle
stages, almost certainly destroying capital.
,Q2: A DTC eco-footwear startup (2026 revenue $12 M, 42 % YoY) must choose its next
move. Internal data show repeat rate 38 %, CAC $38, LTV $110. Applying Ansoff’s
Matrix, which initiative offers the highest risk-adjusted growth?
A. Launch biodegradable shoe-repair pods (new product) to existing customers via
subscription.
B. Open 15 pop-up stores in Tier-2 US cities (new market) with the current hero sneaker.
C. License the brand to a vegan-handbag maker (diversification) for a 6 % royalty.
D. Increase TikTok ad spend 80 % to accelerate penetration in the same segment.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Ansoff labels product-extension to current users as “product development,”
carrying lower risk than market or diversification moves while leveraging high LTV.
Repair pods deepen loyalty and create recurring revenue, improving payback without
ballooning CAC. Option C enters an unrelated category where the startup has no
competence, exposing it to fashion-cycle volatility.
Q3: A national quick-service restaurant chain (1,800 outlets, 2026 same-store sales −2
%) maps its strategic business units. Burgers sit in the “Dog” quadrant of the BCG
matrix, but plant-based tenders show 28 % YoY growth albeit from a 4 % revenue base.
Which portfolio action is most consistent with BCG logic?
A. Spin off the burger SBU to private equity and reinvest proceeds in national advertising
for tenders.
B. Keep burgers for cash neutrality, funnel 70 % of new CapEx to tender line expansion
and co-branded ghost kitchens.
C. Harvest tenders for short-term profit to fund burger renovation because scale still
dwarfs tenders.
D. Acquire a rival chicken chain to convert all outlets overnight, abandoning both legacy
lines.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: BCG prescribes milking “Dogs” for their residual cash to fund “Question
Marks” with high relative-market-share potential. Burgers stabilize cash while tenders, if
nurtured, could become next “Stars.” Option A forfeits a steady internal finance source
and invites competitive entry; Option C misreads growth momentum and starves future
winners.
, Q4: A regional credit-union (assets $3 B, 190 k members) faces fintech entrants offering
4 % savings yields. Porter’s Five Forces analysis shows “Threat of Substitutes” as high
and “Supplier Power” (depositors) shifting to moderate. Which integrated response best
re-aligns competitive forces?
A. Match the 4 % yield across all accounts to stop outflows, funded by higher loan rates.
B. Bundle AI-driven budgeting app, free financial coaching, and 3 % yield, then negotiate
corporate payroll partnerships.
C. Lobby regulators to cap fintech deposit rates, framing it as consumer-protection.
D. Sell the loan portfolio, pivot to a fee-only advisory model, and exit retail deposits.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Bundling augments differentiation, raising switching costs and reducing price
sensitivity, thereby weakening both substitute appeal and supplier bargaining power.
Corporate payroll deals secure stable, low-cost deposits. Option A ignites a race to zero
margin without structural defense, while D amounts to liquidation, not strategy.
Q5: A legacy news publisher (print −18 %, digital paywall 190 k subs) applies SOSTAC.
Diagnosis reveals “Weakness: tech debt; Opportunity: Gen-Z audio news.” Which
sequencing best follows SOSTAC’s ordered logic?
A. Tactics first: launch TikTok channel tomorrow; justify Strategy later if traffic rises.
B. Objectives: grow Gen-Z reach 25 % in 24 months; Strategy: multimedia micro-content;
Tactics: short-form video + podcast; Action: CMS upgrade; Control: cohort CTR.
C. Action first: fire 30 % newsroom, then set Objective of cost breakeven.
D. Control first: benchmark NYT metrics, then retrofit Objectives to match them.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: SOSTAC mandates sequential coherence—Objectives derive from Situation,
Strategy from Objectives, Tactics from Strategy, etc.—ensuring every action is
goal-anchored and measurable. Option B exemplifies this cascade, tying tech
investment to a measurable Gen-Z objective. Option A reverses the order, risking
scattered efforts and KPI confusion.
Q6: A specialty chemical maker (B2B, €400 M sales) plots its 40 SBUs on the
GE-McKinsey nine-cell. Two “Invest to Grow” SBUs require €30 M each but available
capex is only €35 M. What rule governs the least-worse allocation?