Q: 14
A Revenue Cloud Consultant Surveys a customer’sSales Cloud implementation anddiscovers Multiple
triggers, Workflow and flow Processes applied to the Opportunityobject. what is the most
appropriate recommendation tothe customer before designing aRevenue Cloud Solution?
Options
Discussion
Option A here. Best practice is to stick to a single automation type on Opportunity for performance and simplicity, especially before doing a Revenue Cloud rollout. Multiple triggers and flows get messy fast. Pretty sure that's what the exam wants, but open to other takes.
Option A makes sense because mixing triggers, workflow, and flows on the same object usually causes conflicts and performance hits. I saw a similar question in some exam reports. Best to stick with a single automation type for maintainability.
Probably A. Similar scenario in exam reports, Salesforce wants you to consolidate to one automation type for easier maintenance and performance.
Option A makes sense here. Had something like this in a mock, and consolidating automations improves performance and is best practice for maintainability. Not 100 percent if there’s a hidden requirement but A fits what Salesforce wants.
Nah, I don’t think C is right here. A is best practice and what Salesforce expects for maintainability, unless the question specifically called out a business need that forces multiple types (which it doesn’t). C is a trap in these scenarios.
I don't think A is always the most fitting here, I'd go for C. Sometimes you just can't move everything into one automation type if Revenue Cloud features don't cover all the needs. Maybe I'm off, but I feel like C's the trap option. Agree?
A, this aligns with what official study materials and exam guides keep pushing-consolidate to one automation type for better performance. Saw similar advice in some practice tests too. Pretty sure this is what they want unless there’s a super unique edge case.
Totally agree with A here. Having multiple automation types on the same object can cause performance and troubleshooting headaches. Salesforce best practice is to keep it to one type unless a business rule absolutely forces more. Pretty sure that's what they're testing for.
I see why C sounds right if business needs are too unique, but for Salesforce best practice and maintainability, A is usually preferred. Single automation type limits conflicts and boosts performance. Pretty sure that's what the exam expects-anyone disagree?
C tbh. If you've already got multiple automations in place and certain business processes can't be done with just Revenue Cloud features, sticking with multiple types is sometimes unavoidable. It’s not ideal from a maintenance view but some orgs have complex requirements. Not 100% sure, but that’s how I’d approach it unless the question is pushing best practice only.
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