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
Question # 35
What is one approach to unlock the intrinsic motivation of knowledge workers?
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
Question # 36
What is the purpose of the Iteration review?
Options:
A.
To serve as a forecasting meeting where the work is estimated for the Program Increments
B.
To show the backlog items and work on possible Solutions for the backlog items
C.
To measure the team's progress by showing working Stories to the stakeholders and getting ^ feedback from them
D.
To identify where there is too much work in the system and where the teams are being ^ overloaded
The Iteration Review is a regular SAFe Scrum event where the team inspects the iteration increment, assesses progress, and adjusts the team backlog. The purpose of the Iteration Review is to measure the team’s progress by showing working stories to the Product Owner and other stakeholders to get 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 opportunities. References: Iteration Review, Iteration Review, What is Iteration review in SAFe® 6.0?, Iteration Review65
Question # 37
Which statement is a value from the Agile Manifesto?
Options:
A.
Build incrementally with fast, integrated learning cycles
B.
Responding to change over following a plan
C.
Respect for people and culture
D.
Working software is the primary measure of progress
The Agile Manifesto is a set of values and principles that guide the software development process. One of the values is “responding to change over following a plan”. This means that the team values the customer’s needs and feedback over the plan and process. The team embraces change as an opportunity to deliver better solutions and adapts to changing requirements and priorities. References: The 4 Values and 12 Principles of the Agile Manifesto - Smartsheet, 12 Principles Behind the Agile Manifesto | Agile Alliance
Question # 38
What is the best measure of progress for complex system development?
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
Question # 39
What is one way to quickly address impediments to flow?
Options:
A.
Review burn-down charts
B.
Raise visibility of effects outside of ART control
One way to quickly address impediments to flow is to identify them on the Planning Board, which is a visual tool that shows the status of work items and dependencies in an iteration. By making impediments visible, the team can collaborate to resolve them and prevent them from blocking the delivery of value. The Planning Board also helps the team monitor their progress and adjust their plan as needed. References: Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe® Practitioner, Planning the Iteration, [Visualize and Limit WIP, Reduce Batch Sizes, and Manage Queue Lengths]
Question # 40
When is the System Demo conducted during program execution?
System Demo is a critical event that provides stakeholders an integrated view of the new features delivered by the Agile Release Train (ART) over the past iteration. It offers the ART a fact-based measure of current, system-level progress within the Program Increment (PI). It also enables fast feedback and learning cycles, which help the ART build the right solution and improve quality. The System Demo takes place as close to the end of the iteration as possible, ideally the next day. It requires implementing the scalable engineering practices necessary to support Continuous Integration across the ART12. References: System Demo - Scaled Agile Framework, Sample Test: SAFe® Practitioner - scaledagile.com
Question # 41
What must management do for a successful Agile transformation?
Options:
A.
Commit to quality and take responsibility to change the system
B.
Send someone to represent management, and then delegate tasks to these individuals
C.
Establish direct lines of report to the RTEs
D.
Identify and area of the transformation they can control
According to the Lean-Agile Leadership competency of SAFe, management must commit to quality and take responsibility to change the system for a successful Agile transformation. This means that leaders must lead by example, learn and model the Lean-Agile mindset, values, principles, and practices, and lead the change to a new way of working. They must also empower and engage individuals and teams to reach their highest potential, and create a culture of relentless improvement and innovation1. Management cannot delegate or outsource the responsibility of leading the Agile transformation, as they are the ones who have the authority and influence to change and improve the systems that govern how work is performed2. References: 1: Lean-Agile Leadership - Scaled Agile Framework2: What Must Management Do for a Successful Agile Transformation?
Question # 42
What is used to brainstorm potential Portfolio future states?
The portfolio’s Strategic Themes and SWOT and TOWS analysis are critical inputs to exploring alternatives for the future state. LPM uses the current state portfolio canvas as a starting point to explore the different ways in which the portfolio could evolve in alignment with the strategic themes. SWOT stands for Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats, and TOWS stands for Threats, Opportunities, Weaknesses, and Strengths. These are tools for identifying and analyzing the internal and external factors that affect the portfolio. SWOT and TOWS help LPM to brainstorm potential portfolio future states and prioritize the most promising ones. References: Portfolio Vision - Scaled Agile Framework, Portfolio Vision - Scaled Agile Framework
Question # 43
Which statement defines the purpose of Iteration Planning?
Options:
A.
It is to analyze, approve, and ready Features for implementation
B.
It is to organize the work and define a realistic scope for the Iteration
C.
It is to break Stories into tasks that are achievable in the team's capacity
D.
It is to explore and implement program Epics and split them into Features to be further explored
According to the SAFe for Teams SP (6.0) - SAFe Practitioner handbook and study guide, the purpose of Iteration Planning is to plan the work that the team will commit to deliver in the Iteration. The team collaborates with the Product Owner to select the Stories from the Team Backlog, define the acceptance criteria, break them into tasks, estimate the effort, and identify the dependencies and risks. The team also defines the Iteration goals and the Iteration backlog, which reflect the scope of the Iteration. The Iteration Planning ensures that the team has a clear and realistic plan to deliver value in the Iteration. References: Exam Study Guide: SP (6.0) - SAFe® Practitioner, SAFe® for Teams - Know Your Role on an Agile Team, [Iteration Planning]