You need to determine which tasks in your business process must occur after the completion step. What report will you run?
Correct Answer: A
Explanation:
The correct report to determine which tasks occur after the Completion Step in a business process is the “Business Process Definitions” report.
In Workday, the Business Process Definitions report provides a comprehensive view of all steps, conditions, and routing rules configured within a specific business process definition. This includes identifying the sequence of steps, whether they occur before or after the completion step, and the associated responsible roles or security groups. This report is critical for administrators and Workday Pro users to validate workflow sequencing, especially when troubleshooting process behavior or verifying compliance with organizational approval structures. Other reports, such as Business Process Definitions for Business Object, are broader and list all business processes tied to a given object, but they do not detail the post-completion steps. [Reference: Workday Pro HCM – Business Process Fundamentals, “Analyzing Business Process Definitions” section; Workday Report: Business Process Definitions., ]
Question 2
What statement about business processes is true?
Correct Answer: D
Explanation:
In Workday, a Business Process (BP) defines how specific business events are executed within the system. The true statement among the options is that you can create business process definitions based on rules. Workday allows you to maintain rule-based BP definitions, meaning that a single BP can have multiple versions triggered under different conditions (for example, based on supervisory organization, company, location, or job profile). This functionality enhances configuration flexibility by allowing organizations to adapt process flow depending on contextual attributes — without duplicating processes. Each version operates under a defined condition rule, evaluated at runtime to determine which BP definition applies. Options A, B, and C are incorrect: A is false because not every action step can be added to every process — the available step types depend on the BP template (for example, Hire, Change Job, or Request Compensation Change). B is false since condition rules can only be applied to specific steps where the system allows configuration (for instance, approvals and to-dos). C is false because only a designated Completion Step marks the end of the process, and it cannot be assigned arbitrarily to any step. Reference (Paraphrased Source): Workday Pro HCM Core – Business Process Framework and Configuration Guide (2023R2, Workday Learning).
Question 3
In what step type can you add a validation condition rule?
Correct Answer: B
Explanation:
As per the Workday Module 2 Binder:
“Validation condition rules are used in approval stepsto determine whether the step should occur or be skipped based on specific conditions.” – Workday Module 2 Binder, Business Processes Section Situation: In a business processin Workday, organizations want certain steps(like approvals) to occur only if specific conditions are met—for example, skipping approval if the amount is under a certain threshold. Task: Implement logic that dynamically controlsthe flow of a business process based on conditions. Action: You apply a validation condition rule within an approvalstep. This rule evaluates defined criteria and determines if the step should be executed or bypassed. Result: This enhances automation, improves efficiency, and reduces manual intervention in workflow execution. Hence, approvalsteps are the specific step type in which validation condition rules can be added.
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