Q: 12
How do you define the term Organizational Change Management?
Options
Discussion
B tbh. OCM isn't just about moving to agile, it's broader like shifting from the current to a future state. "Agile" in A is trying to trip us up. Unless the question says agile is required, B's the standard SAP answer.
B
I don’t think it’s A. B is correct since OCM isn’t just about agile, and "current to future state" covers every scenario. That agile reference is a common distractor here. Disagree?
I see why some pick A since SAP likes to mention agile, but “current to future state” in B matches what OCM is really about, regardless of methodology. Focusing just on agile feels like a trap here. Anyone else think the phrasing in D is tempting but too narrow?
Probably B
Why doesn't A fit here? Isn't OCM broader than just agile change management?
I don’t think B fits. A is closer since SAP leans agile change management in recent guides.
I don’t think B is right, I'd go for A. The agile focus pops up a lot in SAP material and feels closer to what they ask sometimes, even if "current to future state" sounds broader.
B is the best fit here since OCM always means helping everyone move from how things are now to how they'll be after the change, and it's not limited to agile. "Current to future state" wording matches what SAP usually covers in the main definitions. Pretty sure that's what they're looking for, unless they ask specifically about agile work.
B here, SAP official guides and their practice tests usually define Organizational Change Management like that. Anyone else finding the learning hub examples all line up with B too?
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