Q: 7
Which of the following is most likely to cause failure in the implementation of a test tool?
Options
Discussion
C
I agree C is the biggest risk. No agreed requirements means the tool likely won't fit, so people won't use it and the rollout fails. Pretty sure that's what usually blocks success in real life.
C tbh
C/D? If resource cost was unknown before purchase, maybe D could flip the answer but question wording points at C.
Maybe C here. If nobody agrees on tool requirements, the implementation is basically guessing and usually fails right away. D sounds possible but that's more about long-term issues, not initial failure.
C makes the most sense here-if there's no clear requirements, you risk picking a tool that doesn't actually solve your problems. That's pretty much a guaranteed way to fail in the implementation stage. Anyone see it differently?
Its C here, seen similar on practice. If requirements aren't set, you can pick a tool that's useless or doesn't fit at all. The rest are more about cost or demand but don't cause failure as often I think. Agree?
C imo. If you skip agreeing on requirements, the tool probably won't match what anyone really needs and ends up unused. Price and demand matter a bit but requirements mismatch is a killer. Anyone disagree?
<pOffical syllabus and practice exams hit this a lot. No clear requirements (C) leads to projects buying tools no one ends up using. Anyone used other resources that frame it differently?</p
C tbh. Without agreed requirements, teams can pick the wrong tool or no one adopts it properly. I think A and D are sometimes problems, but C is almost always where things break down based on exam stuff I’ve seen.
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