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Scrum Exam PSK-I Topic 1 Question 3 Discussion

Actual exam question for Scrum's PSK-I exam
Question #: 3
Topic #: 1
[All PSK-I Questions]

Which of these is NOT a good description of Cycle Time?

(choose the best answer)

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: C

Cycle Time in the context of Professional Scrum with Kanban is defined as the time it takes for a single work item to move from the start to the end of a specific process or workflow. This metric is crucial for understanding how efficiently a team can process individual work items through their defined workflow stages.

* Option A describes a broader measurement from the initial concept to customer feedback post-release. This could align more with the concept of Lead Time rather than Cycle Time.

* Option B correctly describes a possible measurement for Cycle Time --- the time a work item spends in one specific column (workflow stage). This is in line with the definitions provided in the Kanban Guide for Scrum Teams, where Cycle Time can measure time within distinct parts of the workflow.

* Option D accurately reflects the definition of Cycle Time, which measures the elapsed time from when work starts on an item until it is completed.

* Option C describes 'Throughput,' which is a measure of the number of items delivered over a specific time period (e.g., daily or weekly). This is not related to Cycle Time but is a separate flow metric often used alongside Cycle Time to understand team performance and capacity better(

Thus, Option C is the correct answer as it does not correctly describe Cycle Time. This explanation is verified with resources from Scrum.org that define Cycle Time within the scope of Professional Scrum with Kanban practices.


Contribute your Thoughts:

Annelle
2 months ago
Wait, is 'Cycle Time' the same as 'Takt Time'? I'm getting my Lean/Agile terms mixed up again.
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Alpha
19 days ago
D) The time a work item starts until when it finishes.
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Dorothy
22 days ago
C) The number of items that move into the delivery/end point per time period (e.g., daily/weekly).
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Casandra
28 days ago
B) The length of time a work item stays in one column.
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Willow
1 months ago
A) The time a work item takes from initial idea/concept to feedback returned from customers after a production release.
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Hyun
2 months ago
Hmm, I was tempted to go with option A, but you're right, that's more of a 'lead time' concept. Cycle time is definitely about the time within a single column.
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Martina
2 months ago
Haha, I bet the person who wrote this question was trying to trick us. Nice try, but I'm on to you!
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Martina
2 months ago
I agree with Reiko. Cycle time is a measure of the time taken to move an item through a single step in a process, not the total end-to-end duration.
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Reiko
2 months ago
Option B is the best answer. Cycle time is about the time a work item stays in a single column, not the overall time from idea to customer feedback.
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Ines
29 days ago
Yes, cycle time is specifically about how long a work item stays in one column.
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Nadine
1 months ago
I agree, option B is the correct answer.
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Emmanuel
2 months ago
That makes sense, thanks for clarifying.
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Emmanuel
2 months ago
I agree, option B is the correct answer.
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Anthony
2 months ago
Hmm, I see your point. But I still think D) makes more sense because it covers the entire duration of the work item.
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Alonso
3 months ago
I disagree, I believe the answer is A) The time a work item takes from initial idea/concept to feedback returned from customers after a production release.
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Anthony
3 months ago
I think the answer is D) The time a work item starts until when it finishes.
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