TOGAF Part 1 Practice Test
TOGAF Part 1 Practice Test
TOGAF Part 1 Practice Test
August 2020
Version 1.0
The Part 1 Practice Test is representative of the content covered in the TOGAF 9 Part 1
Examination. It includes question formats found in the actual examination. It also includes
questions of varying difficulty. A candidate’s performance on this Practice Test does not
guarantee similar performance on the actual examination.
Page | 1
© Copyright Web Age Solutions
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any
means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright
owner.
Boundaryless Information Flow ™ is a trademark and Making Standards Work ®, The Open Group®, TOGAF®,
UNIX®, and the “X” device are registered trademarks of The Open Group in the United States and other countries.
Page | 2
CONTENTS
1 Instructions....................................................................................................................................................... 4
2 Examination ..................................................................................................................................................... 4
Page | 3
1 INSTRUCTIONS
This is a simple multiple choice test. This test should be taken as a closed book test. There is one correct
answer for each question, scoring 1 point. You need to score 24 or more points1 out of a maximum of 40
to pass this test.
Please read each question carefully before reading the answer options. Be aware that some questions may
seem to have more than one right answer, but you are to look for the one that makes the most sense and is
the most correct.
2 EXAMINATION
Item 1
Question: Which of the following entities could possibly form an Enterprise according to TOGAF?
Item 2
Question: Which of the following is a possible definition in TOGAF, according to context, of architecture?
A. An informal description of a system and its components, used to guide further architectural planning,
B. A detailed plan of a system at a component level that guides its development.
C. A plan for how to operationalize an ICT system that captures its components and their interactions.
D. The formal technical design of an ICT system.
E. A business process model showing tasks, activities, actors and resources.
Item 3
Question: TOGAF defines the development of four key architecture domains. Which of the following is NOT one of
these?
A. Business
B. Security
C. Data
D. Application
E. Technology
1
Note that this pass mark may differ from the live TOGAF 9 Part 1 Examination. Consult The Open Group
certification web site for the latest information on examination pass marks.
Page | 4
Item 4
Question: Which is NOT one of the six parts of the TOGAF 9.2 standard?
Item 5
Question: Which Phase of the ADM includes identifying key stakeholders who will be involved in your
architecture transformation effort?
A. Phase A
B. Phase B
C. Phase C
D. Phase D
E. Phase E
Item 6
Question: What is an architectural work product referred to that comes in one of three types: Catalogue, Matrix
or Diagram?
A. A Deliverable
B. A Building Block
C. An Artifact
D. A Work Item
E. An Architectural Output
Item 7
Question: The ADM supports the concept of iteration in which of the following ways?
A. You can move from one phase to the next following the arrows and completing a full cycle of the ADM as many
times as is needed to fully develop your architecture, but you can never go back to a previous phase.
B. You can only iterate between the Business, Application, Data and Technology architecture development phases;
you must execute the other phases in sequence.
C. Once a Phase has been completed you must continue around the ADM until you arrive back at that phase if
you want to make additional architectural enhancements.
D. You can iterate around the ADM and within a single phase as many times as you like, as well as jumping back
to a previously completed phase over and over again.
E. You can repeat activities within any phase over and over again and then proceed to the next phase.
Page | 5
Item 8
Question: In which Phases of the ADM are impacts across the architecture landscape resolved?
A. Phases A, B and C.
B. Phases P, A, B and C.
C. Phases B, C and D.
D. Phases B, C, D and E.
E. Phases E and F.
Item 9
Question: When executing the ADM, when should you consider the re-use of architectural artifacts stored in the
Architecture Repository?
Item 10
Question: Which of the following statements is NOT true with respect to the Enterprise Continuum?
A. The Enterprise Continuum is a way of classifying contextual assets used to develop architectures such as
policies and standards.
B. The Enterprise continuum is actively used during the execution of the ADM.
C. The Enterprise Continuum can be used to classify solutions (as opposed to descriptions or specifications of
solutions).
D. The Enterprise Continuum contains two specializations, namely the Architecture and Solutions continuums.
E. The Enterprise Continuum evolve from Foundation Architectures to Organisation-specific Architectures.
Item 11
Question: Which of the following should be classified as a Foundational Solution within the Solutions Continuum?
Page | 6
Item 12
Question: Which of the following statements most accurately describes the relationship between the Enterprise
Continuum and the Architecture Repository in TOGAF?
Item 13
Question: To manage the content of the Enterprise Continuum we need tools in order to:
Item 14
Question: Which of the following responses does NOT complete the next sentence? The Preliminary Phase
includes the activity of…
Item 15
Question: A payment terminal in one of the over 300 stores nationally belonging to a women’s clothing retailer
breaks down and can no longer except credit card payments. According to TOGAF, this is a Simplification Change.
In which Phase is this analysis performed?
A. Phase E
B. Phase F
C. Phase G
D. Phase H
E. Requirements Management
Page | 7
Item 16
Question: In which Phase of the ADM is the following architecture developed: Business processes, their
relationships to each other and to people and the principles that govern future design?
A. Phase A
B. Phase B
C. Phase C
D. Phase D
E. Phase E
Item 17
Question: Which one of the concepts listed below is NOT a key concept in the transition from developing to
delivering a target architecture?
Item 18
Question: In which phase of the ADM is the business value and cost of work packages and Transition Architectures
communicated to key stakeholders?
A. Phase E
B. Phase F
C. Phase G
D. Requirements Management
E. Preliminary
Item 19
Question: Which activity below is NOT performed as part of, or in parallel with, Phase G of the ADM?
A. Establishing a program within the organisation that will be responsible for delivering the target architecture.
B. Overseeing the architecture implementation according to the organisation’s corporate and ICT governance.
C. Govern the ICT personnel for the organisation to ensure effective delivery of target and transition
architectures.
D. Defining an operations framework which will provide ongoing maintenance and evergreening of the final
deployed solution.
E. Make use of the organisation’s Portfolio or Program management capabilities to deliver the target architecture.
Page | 8
Item 20
Question: In Phase D the architecture team must consider relevant technology architecture resources. Which of
the resources listed below is NOT one of these?
Item 21
Question: In which phase are gaps between the baseline and target architectures across all domains, consolidated
into work packages?
A. Phase E
B. Phase F
C. Phase G
D. Phase H
E. Requirements Management
Item 22
Question: What are the 5 criteria that can be used to distinguish a well-written principle from a poor one?
Item 23
Question: Which option below completes the sentence: A Business Scenario is…
A. ...a technique for eliciting technical requirements that a business must address.
B. …a technique for identifying and eliciting business requirements that an architecture must address.
C. …a way of modeling a business architecture that addresses the architectural requirements.
D. …a technique for expressing business workflows that an architecture must address.
E. …a way to capture business aspects that must be addressed by the target architecture.
Item 24
Question: Which of the following is NOT a potential source of gaps when using the Gap Analysis technique in
TOGAF?
A. People
B. Financials
Page | 9
C. Project Management
D. Missing data
E. Eliminated applications
Item 25
Question: Which of the following statements with respect to how interoperability manifests within the ADM is
NOT true.
A. In Phase A the nature and security considerations of information and service exchanges are found using
business scenarios.
B. In Phase D appropriate technical mechanisms to permit information and service exchanges are specified.
C. In Phase C the use of open data standards to represent the information exchange model ensures maximum
interoperability.
D. In Phase B information and service exchanges are defined in business terms.
E. In Phase F interoperability is planned for and implemented as a result of prior architectural considerations.
Item 26
Question: Which of the following best describes the Business Transformation Readiness Assessment technique?
A. A technique to define the extent to which an organisation will share information and services between
departments
B. A technique used to validate the degree to which an architecture is ready to be transformed.
C. A technique used to identify and understand the business requirements an architecture must address
D. A technique used to develop general rules and guidelines for the architecture being developed
E. A technique for assessing how rapidly an organisation is able to transform.
F. A technique used to understand the readiness of an organization to accept change.
Item 27
Question: Complete the sentence: “Business transformation risks are first identified in Phase ____ and
maintained as governance artifacts in Phase ___. “
A. P and G
B. A and G
C. E and G
D. G and H
E. Requirements Management and G
Page | 10
Item 28
A. …return on investment
B. …achieving business goals
C. …maximizing business efficiency
D. …improving stakeholder returns
E. …achieving technical outcomes
Item 29
A. Implementing a system of controls over the creation and monitoring of all architectural components and
activities, to ensure the effective introduction, implementation, and evolution of architectures within the
organization
B. Implementing a system to ensure compliance with internal and external standards and regulatory obligations
C. Establishing processes that support effective management of the above processes within agreed parameters
D. Developing practices that ensure accountability to a clearly identified stakeholder community, both inside and
outside the organization
E. Establishing an ICT capability for effective delivery of architecture projects through business-technology
alignment
Item 30
Question: What are the 5 key concepts within the Architecture Governance Framework
Item 31
Page | 11
Item 32
Item 33
A. A stakeholder has one or more concerns about a system, and a concern can be shared by one or more
stakeholders.
B. A Viewpoint is relevant to one or more Stakeholders, and a Stakeholder makes use of one or more Viewpoints.
C. A Viewpoint is a specification of the conventions for a set of different kinds of architectural descriptions.
D. A view is specified by means of a viewpoint, which prescribes the concepts, models, analysis techniques, and
visualizations that are provided by the view
E. A viewpoint addresses a related set of concerns and a concern is addressed by one or more viewpoints.
Item 34
Question: A Viewpoint can be described using a set of related elements. What are they?
Item 35
Question: In which Phase of the ADM is a high-level model of candidate building blocks developed?
A. Phase A
B. Phase B
C. Phase C
D. Phase D
E. Phase E
Page | 12
Item 36
Question: In which Phase of the ADM are building blocks aggregated into work packages in order to address
architectural gaps?
A. Phase A
B. Phase B
C. Phase C
D. Phase D
E. Phase E
Item 37
Question: Which description below best describes the nature of an Architecture Contract, according to TOGAF?
A. Architecture Contracts are the joint agreements between development partners and sponsors on the
deliverables, quality, and fitness-for-purpose of an architecture.
B. Architecture Contracts are legally binding agreements between Enterprise Architects and customers that
guarantee the final product meets all their requirements.
C. Architecture Contracts are service-level agreements between architecture and the rest of the organisation that
ensure the final architecture is fit-for-purpose.
D. Architecture Contracts establish a binding agreement between the Architecture Board and the Enterprise
Architecture team that governs their roles, responsibilities and performance metrics.
E. Architecture Contracts provide a legal foundation for governance at the corporate level of the architecture
capability within the organisation.
Item 38
Question: Which of the following statements does NOT accurately describe how the Architecture Definition
Document is altered in each phase of the ADM?
A. It is first created in Phase A, where it is populated with artifacts created to support the Architecture Vision.
B. It is updated in Phase B, with Business Architecture-related material.
C. It is subsequently updated with Database and Application Architecture content in Phase C.
D. It is then updated with Technology Architecture content in Phase D.
E. Where the scope of change to implement the Target Architecture requires an incremental approach, the
Architecture Definition Document will be updated to include one or more Transition Architectures in Phase E
Item 39
Question: The Technical Reference Model (TRM) has three main parts; what are they?
Page | 13
E. Software, Application Platform, Communications Infrastructure
Item 40
Question: The Application Platform within the III-RM contains five main components: Information Consumer
Applications, Information Provider Applications, and Brokering Applications are three of them. The other two
are:
Page | 14
Page | 15