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Certified-Business-Analyst Practice Test


Page 15 out of 62 Pages

Sales leadership at 230 Cloud Kicks (CK) is concerned about the limited adoption of Salesforce at the company. Salesforce implementation includes many custom pages. Multiple users have complained about wa.t.ng a long time for key functionality to display.


A. Monitor the Lightning Usage App


B. Run the Lightning page layout


C. Enable Debug Logs





A.
  Monitor the Lightning Usage App

Explanation: The business analyst should monitor the Lightning Usage App to address the concern of sales leadership about the limited adoption of Salesforce at Cloud Kicks. The Lightning Usage App is a tool that tracks and reports on how users are engaging with Salesforce in Lightning Experience. The Lightning Usage App can help measure and improve user adoption by showing metrics such as daily and monthly active users, usage by browser and device type, usage by profile and permission set, feature adoption, performance, and feedback. The business analyst should monitor the Lightning Usage App to identify trends, patterns, issues, or opportunities related to user adoption and take actions accordingly. Running the Lightning page layout is not an action that the business analyst should take to address the concern of sales leadership about the limited adoption of Salesforce at Cloud Kicks. Running the Lightning page layout is a process that optimizes a page layout for Lightning Experience by removing unsupported components, adding supported components, and rearranging components based on best practices. Running the Lightning page layout can help improve user experience and satisfaction but does not measure or improve user adoption directly. Enabling Debug Logs is not an action that the business analyst should take to address the concern of sales leadership about the limited adoption of Salesforce at Cloud Kicks. Enabling Debug Logs is a process that captures information about database operations, system processes, and errors that occur when executing a transaction or running unit tests. Enabling Debug Logs can help troubleshoot issues and errors but does not measure or improve user adoption directly.

Northern Trail Outfitters (NTO) is working with an implementation partner to transform its customer support team with Service Cloud. A new business analyst (BA) who is a replacement from the partner was introduced to NTO stakeholders during the discovery phase of the project. The new BA is still getting to know each of the stakeholders when they start the requirements workshop. The BA asks a stakeholder a discovery question and they seem irritated. What should the BA do to build trust with the stakeholder as the project continues?


A. Set up a casual meeting to create a personal connection with the stakeholder


B. Reset project expectations at the next meeting with the stakeholder


C. Ask an executive sponsor to address the stakeholder's concerns.





A.
  Set up a casual meeting to create a personal connection with the stakeholder

Explanation: The business analyst should set up a casual meeting to create a personal connection with the stakeholder to build trust with them as the project continues. A casual meeting is an informal conversation that allows the business analyst and the stakeholder to get to know each other better, share their backgrounds and interests, and establish rapport and empathy. A casual meeting can help to ease any tension or frustration that may have arisen during the discovery session, as well as show respect and appreciation for the stakeholder’s input and feedback.

Cloud Kicks (CK) recently decided to transition its business from spreadsheets to a Salesforce solution. CK leaders are excited about the capabilities of Salesforce. Each leader has different ideas about how the platform should be implemented. CK has hired a business analyst (BA) to help define and manage the implementation. What should the BA do in the first discovery meeting with stakeholders?


A. Collaborate with stakeholders to examine and define CK's purpose, customers, metrics, and overall business to inform project direction and vision.


B. Discuss and document specific pain points in existing processes to inform future project requirements.


C. Preview potential Salesforce solutions and collect feedback from stakeholders on each option to inform the direction of the project.





A.
  Collaborate with stakeholders to examine and define CK's purpose, customers, metrics, and overall business to inform project direction and vision.

Explanation: The business analyst should do in the first discovery meeting with stakeholders is to collaborate with stakeholders to examine and define CK’s purpose, customers, metrics, and overall business to inform project direction and vision. Discovery is a phase of a Salesforce project that aims to understand the current state of a business, identify its problems or needs, and define its goals or desired outcomes. In the first discovery meeting, the business analyst should work with stakeholders to establish a common understanding of CK’s business context, such as its mission, vision, values, customers, competitors, performance indicators, etc. This can help the business analyst align stakeholders on a shared vision and strategy for the Salesforce implementation. Discussing and documenting specific pain points in existing processes may be part of discovery, but not in the first meeting. The business analyst should first understand the big picture of CK’s business before diving into the details of its processes. Previewing potential Salesforce solutions and collecting feedback from stakeholders may be part of discovery, but not in the first meeting. The business analyst should first understand the problems or needs of CK’s business before proposing any solutions.

Universal Containers has scheduled a meeting with stakeholders, business analysts (BAs), and technical resources to review user stories. A BA reviews the user stories in advance of the meeting and notices that some best practices have been ignored. The first user story is focused on escalating cases in Service Cloud:
"The customer service agent needs the ability to escalate a case so they can assign high risk cases to tier 2 support for faster resolution."
Acceptance Criteria:

  1. Add permission set
  2. Users can escalate cases
  3. Create fields on the Case object
  4. Reports
Which best practice was ignored?


A. The "who" of the user story is well-defined.


B. The "why’’ of the user story is focused on user needs.


C. The ‘’what’’ of the acceptance criteria is negotiable.





C.
  The ‘’what’’ of the acceptance criteria is negotiable.

Explanation: A use case is a type of documentation that describes how a user interacts with a system to achieve a specific goal. It is written from the user’s point of view and follows a standard format of “A [user role] wants to [goal] by [steps]”. A use case helps to capture the user’s needs and expectations from the system and provides a basis for developing test cases and acceptance criteria. A BA should use use cases to document how users will interact with the system and what outcomes they expect from it.

This answer points out that the previous VP’s requirements may differ from those of the new executive as the largest risk with this approach of using the inherited requirements in lieu of a traditional discovery process for a Sales Cloud implementation. Requirements are statements that describe what a solution must do or have to meet the needs and expectations of the stakeholders or users. Requirements may change over time due to various factors, such as business goals, market trends, customer feedback, or stakeholder preferences. Using the previous VP’s requirements without validating them with the new executive may result in a solution that does not align with their vision, strategy, or value proposition.

Cloud Kicks is planning to create a new Service Cloud console app for its services team to resolve issues with delayed shipments to customers. The business analyst (BA) wrote the user stories based on a written list of requirements provided by the manager of the services team. Upon stakeholder review with the entire services team, many of the user stories were rejected and the BA had to revise them. When the BA wrote the initial user stories, what was the likely cause of the issue?


A. The user stories focused on well-defined personas.


B. The project team failed to discuss the user stories as a group.


C. The acceptance criteria of the user stories were too specific.





B.
  The project team failed to discuss the user stories as a group.

Explanation: The likely cause of the issue was that the project team failed to discuss the user stories as a group before writing them. This could lead to misunderstandings, misalignment, or missing information among the stakeholders and the business analyst. The best practice for writing user stories is to collaborate with all relevant stakeholders and use techniques such as brainstorming, story mapping, or story splitting to elicit and prioritize user needs. The user stories should also be validated and reviewed by all stakeholders before finalizing them. The user stories focusing on well-defined personas is not a likely cause of the issue because personas are useful tools to represent different types of users and their goals, needs, and pain points. The acceptance criteria of the user stories being too specific is not a likely cause of the issue because acceptance criteria are statements that define how to verify that a user story is completed and meets the user’s expectations.


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