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on 05-17-2022 10:41 AM
I have been doing the delta exams since the London release to maintain my ServiceNow certifications.
London -> Maldrid -> New York -> Orlando -> Paris -> Quebec -> Rome -> San Diego
That's eight releases of delta exams in four years. Since I have two mainline certifications, I have been doing two delta exams per release; the equivalent of four delta exams per year. Before San Diego, never have I once failed a delta exam! I also challenged myself and was always excited to take them on the first day that they were made available.
Then comes San Diego.
This is the first time I have failed my Certified System Administrator (CSA) delta exam on the first try (and second try). To be fair, I haven't been working on the platform as a ServiceNow system administrator for the past seven months, and have been doing more focus work on the Security Incident Response application.
In the past, the delta exams have been fairly easy. I could sometimes even pass the delta exams simply by looking up answers in the release notes as I was doing the exams within the allotted time.
This time around, I also had three delta exams to complete due to the new CIS - Security Incident Response mainline certification I recently got this year. I was starting to feel a sense of exam fatigue after studying and completing two online proctored exams in the past two months (ServiceNow and Microsoft). Knowing that the delta exams are non-proctored with 3 retakes, I thought I could wing it like before. But I was wrong.
Here are My Lessons Learned from the Failed Delta Exam Attempts
- Remember this is the delta exam. ALWAYS focus on the release notes and what's new. Forget about what you learned before, and unlearn to re-learn what's new. ServiceNow constantly re-invents itself. New features and capabilities can sometimes be a slight name change.
- Read the questions and answers multiple times and review them before submitting. There was a couple times I skipped answering a question. Maybe a glitch or I pressed "next" twice and missed a question?
- Reference the San Diego Release Highlights docs page. Most of the questions for the delta CSA are based on the Now Platform section.
- If you can't find more information on the release highlights page, search the docs site using keywords to learn more about the new feature.
- Sometimes the release notes can be too overwhelming. The text in the doc definitely will help you find the answers to the exam questions. But to really learn and get a visual understanding, I recommend taking a look at videos and trying out the new features in your Personal Developer Instance (PDI). I find the following two videos helpful:
- The delta exam questions are the same if you failed and retake the exam. So look into the questions that you are unsure about and study them. Note: the system does switch the order of the answers around, so watch out for that.
- Don't do the delta exams and read the release notes when you are tired or distracted. It's not a good way to retain knowledge.
As someone who doesn't work day-to-day as a platform administrator, and is more of an implementation specialist/developer, here are the delta exam rankings from the easiest to the most difficult for me:
- CIS-Security Incident Response (9 questions)
- Certified Application Developer (6 questions)
- Certified System Administrator (7 questions)
At the end of the day, the purpose of the delta exams is for you to learn new features and capabilities. If your career direction has changed or you have moved from a generalist to a specialist or vice versa, I think it's also a good time to re-evaluate what's important to you. Is it worth it to keep maintaining all these certifications? How many more certifications are you planning to take and how invested will you be in up-keeping them?
Hope this article helps some of you with passing the San Diego Delta Exams.
If all goes well, you will see something like this in your Now Learning:
Good luck! Don't forget to complete yours before Aug 3rd!
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Hello,
You are not alone, I failed twice to clear CSA delta this time, questions are confusion and I didn't get accurate information in docs.service-now.com, I have been in complete development and questions in delta were all of from admin perspective. Thanks for sharing this.:)
Best Regards
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Hi
Are delta and mainline same?
Regards
Suman P.

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No, both are different, mainline is proctored exam whereas delta is non proctored and contains less than 10 questions.
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Hi
Do I have to read complete CMDB documentation for CSA?
Regards
Suman P.

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Not required, go through Blue print of CSA exam and go through below links, you can easily clear it.
https://quizlet.com/571501918/servicenow-csa-practice-exams-flash-cards/
https://quizlet.com/560697946/info
https://quizlet.com/553891145/info
https://www.classmarker.com/online-test/start/?quiz=yb752a207d482ecf
https://www.proprofs.com/quiz-school/story.php?title=mjiymte5oqa80o
Regards
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Hi @Jenny Hu and Team, Thanks for the wonderful note and comments /feedback , I have 6 Mainline Exams and maintaining it for last couple of years by giving Delta exams, The Delta exams questions are very tactical and practical scenarios too, so almost all are 2 ~3 attempts only from my end , but it's always good to read and try to attempt on own, so that we will be in knowledge and up to date .
Best Regards,
Buddha
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I feel ya 🙂
Passed my SD CSA Delta the first time but only by really digging into the documentation and then I still only got 71% (i.e. 2 out of 7 I had wrong). No idea what or why I missed because I systematically eliminated all answers I also considered.
Bottom Line: The questions are meant to confuse you and the documents that are supposed to prepare you aren't nearly enough.

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This exam is ridiculous! I've got over 30 years in IT certification experience including test development, and this has to be one of the worst exams I've ever seen - does "customer support" mean field service? customer service? CSM? Give me a break. How about trying to measure understanding instead of trying to trip up the test taker? How about clear questions and distractors?
Appreciate this post, but the exam is just a joke. I would hate to lose my certification because of it.


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Hello,
If you don't mind, to clarify, are you referring to the System Administrator Delta exam as "this exam".
For context, is this your first ServiceNow delta exam?
Thanks!
-Allen


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Hello,
The delta for system administrator this release (San Diego) was more rough than normal, that much I can agree on, but commonly, they are not meant to confuse you and the documents do prepare you for getting the right answer.
-Allen


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Hello,
"Mainline" refers to the level of certification, which means it's not a micro-certification, it's a mainline certification such as: system administrator, application developer, etc.
"Delta" refers to the exam that you take AFTER you achieve the mainline certification (mentioned above) and after a new release of the ServiceNow platform (i.e., San Diego and Tokyo, etc.). To recap, a delta exam is only for a mainline certification. There are no delta exams for micro-certifications, for example.
I would not refer to any 3rd party link or quizlet when studying for the exam.
Also, you can refer to the tons of posts within the "Training and Certification" section of the forums as the question around what is best to study, etc. is asked almost daily there. There's been some great discussion you can refer to.
Best of luck!
-Allen
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I failed it last night (CSA). Doh! First vendor exam I've ever failed--including mainline and deltas. I'm about to take it again in another 15 minutes and I still haven't found answers to some of the questions. And today is the last day.
Oh well. There's always Salesforce.
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Okay, I passed. I know you guys were so worried. You can relax now. 🙂

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San Diego was the first wave of deltas, where I had to take a second try for 4 out of 8 deltas.
Well and then there is the GRC delta: I failed now 3 times 😄
One more try... *drumroll*

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Well, I didn't think I would make the GRC delta, but I did: 78% on the last try. 😄
I documented my answers btw...

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Yes, I'm referring to the CSA delta. And this is my 6th or 7th delta exam. None have been this difficult. Finally passed with 7/7, but I can't say this has been ServiceNow's best work.... With the terminology changes across the mobile apps, and multiple words meaning the same or similar things I just think this could have been a lot better.
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Going to have to agree with Fitz on this one...
I have completed 8 CSA Delta Exams dating back to 2018 and this exam felt like some of the questions were just worded oddly to try and trick or mislead the test taker. Some of the questions were clear and concise and pertained to the San Diego release appropriately and then other questions were just poorly written or worded. I also noticed that there were multiple questions about the same topics...with release notes so large, you would think they could come up with 7 unique questions from various sections. I remember specifically there being 3 questions from one topic and I was thinking "Man...this is the 3rd question on here about this subject".
This was probably the worst Delta Exam I have seen from ServiceNow. I passed on the first attempt, but still the delta exam shouldn't have questions written like they were on this test and should have more variety in the questioning.