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Pegasystems PEGACPDC88V1 Exam - Topic 7 Question 28 Discussion

Actual exam question for Pegasystems's PEGACPDC88V1 exam
Question #: 28
Topic #: 7
[All PEGACPDC88V1 Questions]

The U+ Bank marketing department currently promotes various home loan offers to qualified customers. Now, the bank does not want customers to receive more than four promotional emails per quarter, regardless of past responses to that action by the customer.

Which option allows you to implement the business requirement?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: A

Volume constraints allow you to limit the number of times an action is presented to customers across one or more channels. You can use volume constraints to implement the requirement that customers do not receive more than four promotional emails per quarter, regardless of past responses to that action by the customer. You can configure the volume constraint to limit the number of actions per channel per quarter and select the option to ignore previous responses. Outbound channel limits are used to limit the number of customers contacted per channel per run, not per quarter. Suppression policies are used to exclude customers from receiving an action based on certain conditions, such as opt-out preferences or recent purchases, not based on the number of times the action is presented. Suitability rules are used to determine whether an action is suitable for a customer based on their propensity, priority, or other criteria, not based on the number of times the action is presented.


Contribute your Thoughts:

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Avery
4 months ago
I’m surprised they’re not considering customer preferences at all!
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Ardella
4 months ago
Volume constraints (A) seems too vague for this.
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Rossana
4 months ago
Wait, are they really limiting to just four emails?
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Edelmira
4 months ago
I disagree, suppression policies (C) could work too.
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Fernanda
5 months ago
I think option B makes the most sense.
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Refugia
5 months ago
Suitability rules don't seem to fit this scenario, but I could be wrong. I feel like the answer has to be one of the other options.
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Larae
5 months ago
I remember practicing a similar question, and I think volume constraints could be relevant here, but I'm not completely confident.
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Robt
5 months ago
I'm not entirely sure, but suppression policies seem like they might help in preventing customers from receiving too many emails.
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Chau
5 months ago
I think this question is about limiting the number of emails sent to customers, so maybe it's related to outbound channel limits?
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Susy
5 months ago
Volume constraints? I'm not sure I follow. Wouldn't that just limit the total number of emails sent, rather than the number per customer? I'm leaning more towards Suppression policies or Outbound channel limits.
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Reuben
5 months ago
Hmm, I'm a bit unsure about this one. I'm trying to decide between Suppression policies and Outbound channel limits. I'll need to think it through a bit more.
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Audry
5 months ago
This seems pretty straightforward. I think the answer is Suppression policies, since that would allow us to limit the number of emails sent to each customer.
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Brandee
6 months ago
Okay, let me see if I can break this down. The key is that we need to limit the number of emails per quarter, regardless of past responses. So I'm thinking Suppression policies or Volume constraints might be the way to go.
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Emogene
6 months ago
I'm leaning towards the Microsoft Azure SQL Data Warehouse Connector option since it seems more directly applicable to the data source mentioned in the question.
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Pearly
2 years ago
C) Suppression policies, no doubt. Anything to avoid those angry customers who get too many emails. Maybe they should just send carrier pigeons instead?
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Rosamond
1 year ago
C) Suppression policies
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Chantell
1 year ago
B) Outbound channel limits
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Paul
1 year ago
A) Volume constraints
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Latrice
2 years ago
I agree with Lavera, I think A) Volume constraints is the best option to implement the business requirement.
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Isadora
2 years ago
Ah, the age-old question of email marketing limits. I'd go with C) Suppression policies - it's the most straightforward way to cap those promo emails.
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Floyd
2 years ago
Hmm, I'm torn between B) Outbound channel limits and C) Suppression policies. Guess I'll have to do some more research to be sure.
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Valda
1 year ago
Yes, B) Outbound channel limits could work too, but C) Suppression policies might be more specific to this situation.
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Evangelina
1 year ago
But wouldn't B) Outbound channel limits also help control the number of emails sent to customers?
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Paris
1 year ago
I agree, C) Suppression policies can help prevent customers from receiving too many emails.
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Salome
1 year ago
I think C) Suppression policies would be the best option to limit the number of promotional emails.
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Lavera
2 years ago
But wouldn't suppression policies just block certain emails? I think volume constraints limit the number of emails sent.
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Flo
2 years ago
I disagree, I believe the correct answer is C) Suppression policies.
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Lavera
2 years ago
I think the answer is A) Volume constraints.
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Willie
2 years ago
Definitely C) Suppression policies. Limiting the number of emails per quarter is a textbook use case for suppression policies.
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Miriam
2 years ago
I would go with C) Suppression policies as well. It's the most straightforward option for this business requirement.
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Danica
2 years ago
I think A) Volume constraints could also work to limit the number of promotional emails sent to customers.
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Tracey
2 years ago
I agree, C) Suppression policies is the best option for limiting the number of emails per quarter.
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