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IIBA CBAP Exam - Topic 1 Question 54 Discussion

Actual exam question for IIBA's CBAP exam
Question #: 54
Topic #: 1
[All CBAP Questions]

A large insurance company wants to buy a new claims processing system or upgrade one of its two existing system. Each year the claims department is given a $3.5 million budget to spend. Time is of the essence since there are tome regulatory charges that will be coming the following year that will require several features that currently neither one of the two claims System currently support.

There are eight stakeholders involved in this initiative. There are local to where the claim system are managed, while five are located across the country. The business analyst (BA) struggled to get all stakeholders to agree on the desired features but ultimately got agreement on ten identified key features for the new claims system. The BA was able to build a current state and future state process model which included all ten key features.

System a processes 75% of the company's claims. It is 5 years old and the claim processors love it because it is easy to use. However it must go offline for two hours each day. The code is very module so it does have flexibility to be modified. To upgrade system A to have all ten features it would cost $5 million. System A would be at capacity if it were to process all of the company's claims.

System B process 25% of the company's claims. It is an older mainframe system, but rarely goes offline. It could easily handle double the number of claims that system A processes. However it has a lot of legacy code and would cost $6 million to upgrade.

Both system have some of the tem desired key features. But neither system has all ten. The cost to buy a new system would be $7 million.

Below is the estimated cost for each feature in priority order.

During elicitation the BA must understand the non-functional requirements. What non functional requirement does System B support over System A?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: C

Contribute your Thoughts:

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Rosamond
4 months ago
$6 million for System B seems steep for an old system!
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Laurel
5 months ago
Scalability is definitely System B's strong suit over A.
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Tyisha
5 months ago
Surprised that System B is so much older but still reliable.
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Mitsue
5 months ago
I think System A is still the better choice, it's user-friendly.
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Novella
5 months ago
System B can handle double the claims, that's a big plus!
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Gail
5 months ago
I’m a bit confused about the differences between compatibility and scalability. I think I need to review those concepts again before the exam.
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Zack
5 months ago
I practiced a similar question about system upgrades, and I think usability was emphasized there. But in this case, System B seems to have the edge in scalability.
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Gaston
5 months ago
I remember discussing non-functional requirements in class, and I think scalability might be the right answer since System B can handle more claims than System A.
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Lilli
6 months ago
I'm not entirely sure, but I feel like compliance could be a factor too, especially with the regulatory changes coming next year.
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Rosita
6 months ago
I've got a strategy - I'll start by matching the objectives to the phases, then double-check my work to make sure I haven't missed anything.
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Mammie
6 months ago
The key here is understanding the concept of the "system of record fabric" for IT management. I think option C best captures the core elements of that.
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