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Question 202

Scenario:

Please read this scenario prior to answering the question

The ABC company specializes in the development of wind turbine blades for use in large-scale commercial wind energy production systems. The company has manufacturing facilities located in Palm Springs, California, Omaha, Nebraska, and Winnipeg, Manitoba. Each of these plants supplies a different manufacturer that builds and sells complete systems. The turbine blades are custom engineered to meet each manufacturer's design specifications.

Until recently, most turbine blades were fabricated manually using molded fiber-reinforced plastics. However, recent improvements in composite materials, coupled with enhanced automated methods for precision application of materials during the molding process, have led to significant reduction in weight, increase in strength, and greatly improved blade longevity. The company has pioneered the development of a proprietary automated process for continuous extrusion of the turbine blades. Patents have been filed to protect the process, but certain trade secrets must be closely guarded.

The company has a mature Enterprise Architecture organization that is supported by a cross-functional Architecture Review Board. The Chief Information Officer and the Chief Operating Officer co-sponsor the Enterprise Architecture program.

The company has used T0GAF and its Architecture Development Method (ADM) to develop its automated manufacturing processes and systems that are used to design, manufacture, and test the blade assemblies. They have adapted their Enterprise Architecture to closely follow the TOGAF 9 framework. All of the company's enterprise architects have been trained and certified on TOGAF 9. Recently, an architecture project was completed that defined a standard approach for controlling the Automated Test System that is used at each plant to perform final quality assurance tests on each completed blade assembly. The

Manufacturing Architecture Board approved the plan for immediate implementation at each plant.

An Architecture Contract was developed that detailed the work needed to implement and deploy the new Automated Test System controller. The Chief Engineer, sponsor of the activity, has expressed concern that a uniform process be employed at each site to ensure consistency.

Refer to the Scenario -

You are the Lead Architect for this activity.

You have been asked to recommend the best approach to adopt to address the Chief Engineer's concern.

Based on TOGAF 9, which of the following is the best answer?

    Correct Answer: D

    The most effective approach is to create an Architecture Contract to govern the implementation and migration process at each site. The contract should ensure it addresses the project objectives, effectiveness metrics, acceptance criteria, and risk management. To maintain consistency and adherence to the Architecture Definition, compliance reviews should be scheduled at key points in the implementation process. Any deviations from the Architecture Contract should be reviewed by the Manufacturing Architecture Board, which should then consider whether or not to grant a dispensation to allow the implementation organization to customize the process to meet their local needs. This approach provides a structured mechanism to manage and ensure uniformity across all sites while allowing flexibility through dispensations.

Discussion
PrashanttheCloudMasterOption: D

Correct Answer best ---> worst D C B A

OCHTOption: D

**Keyword Combination:** - **"Contract-Governance-Compliance-Dispensation"** **Explanation:** - **Contract:** Creating an Architecture Contract to govern the process, ensuring legal enforceability. - **Governance:** Addressing project objectives, metrics, acceptance criteria, and risk management within the contract. - **Compliance:** Scheduling reviews at key points to ensure alignment with the Architecture Definition. - **Dispensation:** Allowing the Manufacturing Architecture Board to review deviations and consider granting customization to meet local needs. This combination encapsulates the core principles of the chosen approach, emphasizing the contract's role in governance, the importance of compliance checks, and the potential for dispensation to customize the process. It's designed to be more memorable and practical for your needs.

noureldinOption: D

Though D appears to be right, i think C is correct. The reason I think is, they have mentioned that the process should be uniform. The only difference in C and D is D says the process at each site where as C does not say that. C too talks about reviews for deviations so the concerns are addressed.

OCHTOption: D

Section 22.3.3: Architecture Contracts (for information on contracts and their significance) (https://pubs.opengroup.org/architecture/togaf91-doc/arch/chap22.html#tag_22_03_03) Section 43.4: Implementing Governance (for information on governance, compliance reviews, and the role of the Architecture Board) (https://pubs.opengroup.org/architecture/togaf91-doc/arch/chap43.html#tag_43_04) The hints/keywords from the question that should lead to option D are: Chief Engineer's concern about a uniform process at each site Ensuring consistency Addressing project objectives, effectiveness metrics, acceptance criteria, and risk management Involvement of the Manufacturing Architecture Board Compliance reviews

KrishnaKMOption: C

C seems to be correct.

noureldinOption: D

Must be "manage and govern" not just govern b/c https://pubs.opengroup.org/architecture/togaf8-doc/arch/chap25.html which says "This contract is also used to manage changes to the enterprise architecture in Phase H." Additionally, chief engineer says wants uniform deployment, which eliminates A & B b/c board needs to approve those.

MrCee1Option: D

It's D