To get the most accurate picture of an organization's actual state in a DevOps evolution, why is it essential to listen to everybody that's involved, particularly those who are doing the work on a day to day basis?
The correct answer is A because a reliable DevOps assessment must expose the organization's real operating conditions, not only its intended structure, formal reports, or leadership interpretation. In DevOps evolution, leaders must understand actual flow of work, friction points, queue times, handoffs, rework, incident patterns, cultural constraints, and sources of delay. These are often most visible to the people performing the work every day: engineers, testers, service desk staff, operations teams, security practitioners, product owners, and release personnel.
Management perspectives are valuable, but they can be filtered through dashboards, status reports, escalation paths, and optimistic assumptions. Leaders may see strategic intent, while teams experience practical reality. This is why DevOps emphasizes learning from the system of work, going to where the work happens, creating psychological safety, and listening across organizational levels. Without frontline input, transformation activity may optimize the wrong constraint or reinforce existing dysfunction.
Options B, C, and D describe valid DevOps ideas, but they do not directly explain why broad listening is essential when assessing the current state. The relevant study guide areas are Measuring to Learn, DevOps and Transformational Leadership, Becoming a DevOps Organization, and Unlearning Behaviors.
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