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Exam Objectives
The exam objectives are broken up into four different categories. The 70-665 exam measures your ability to accomplish the technical tasks listed below.
The percentages indicate the relative weight of each major topic area on the exam. The higher the percentage, the more questions you are likely to see on that content area on the exam.
The objectives for Exam 70-665 as stated by Microsoft are as follows:
Designing a Topology for Lync Server 2010 (25 percent)
- Design address book.
- Design central and branch office topology.
- Design mediation topology.
- Design archiving and Quality of Experience (QoE) monitoring topology.
- Design Edge topology.
- Design Call Admission Control (CAC).
- Calculate bandwidth.
This objective may include but is not limited to: generation; distribution; filtering; normalization; size management
This objective may include but is not limited to: designing sites and pools; placement of front-end servers; simple URLs; co-locating roles; designing browser-based access; Director role; capacity considerations
This objective may include but is not limited to: pooled Mediation Servers; standalone mediation servers; media bypass; co-location with other front-end services; capacity considerations
This objective may include but is not limited to: designing QoE monitoring; placement of servers; Call Detail Recording (CDR); archiving policies
This objective may include but is not limited to: sizing, security, network, and capacity considerations; deployment; federation; reverse proxy configuration; XMPP; PIC; firewall requirements; remote access
This objective may include but is not limited to: sites; site links; exemptions; PSTN bypass; rerouting; CAC policies
This objective may include but is not limited to: specify network requirements; calculate voice bandwidth; calculate video bandwidth; P2P vs. conference
Designing a Conferencing and Enterprise Voice Infrastructure (25 percent)
- Design a dial plan.
- Design for voice routing.
- Define voice policies.
- Define conference policies.
- Design for Response Group Services (RGS).
- Design for emergency services implementation.
- Plan for devices.
This objective may include but is not limited to: formulate normalization rules and apply them as dial plan policies
This objective may include but is not limited to: PSTN breakout points; PBX phones; trunk routing; media gateway; least cost/alternate routing
This objective may include but is not limited to: phone usage records; policy scope; decide level of access to certain features; private line; call parking
This objective may include but is not limited to: controlling usage; system capacity considerations
This objective may include but is not limited to: workflow; contact objects; agents and queues; groups
This objective may include but is not limited to: Enhanced 911 (E911); SIP trunk emergency service providers; location policies; Location Information Service (LIS) wiremap; analyze network mapping
This objective may include but is not limited to: considerations for different endpoint types, including analog devices, common area phones, and standalone devices; DNS and DHCP requirements
Planning for External Dependencies and Migration (24 percent)
- Plan for DNS implementation.
- Plan for PKI requirements.
- Plan for Exchange Unified Messaging (UM).
- Plan for migration.
This objective may include but is not limited to: internal and external DNS; identify supported DNS records; identify supported DNS servers
This objective may include but is not limited to: public and private certificates; Subject Alternate Names (SANs)
This objective may include but is not limited to: specify requirements to integrate Exchange UM with Lync Server 2010; Exchange UM dependencies; design Exchange UM dial plans
This objective may include but is not limited to: configuration requirements; side-by-side migration; Edge migration; meeting considerations; client limitation considerations
Planning for High Availability and Business Continuity (26 percent)
- Plan for high availability.
- Plan for load balancing.
- Plan for backup and restore.
- Plan for disaster recovery.
- Plan for system monitoring.
- Plan for site resiliency.
This objective may include but is not limited to: choosing Survivable Branch Appliance (SBA) vs. Standard vs. Enterprise in high availability; number of servers and pools required; server redundancy
This objective may include but is not limited to: DNS; Hardware Load Balancing (HLB)
This objective may include but is not limited to: partial recovery; database considerations; DBIMPEXP
This objective may include but is not limited to: bare metal recovery; spread pools; CMS reactivation
This objective may include but is not limited to: synthetic transactions; identifying components to monitor; monitoring technologies such as Microsoft System Center Operations Manager
This objective may include but is not limited to: SBA; backup registrar
Where to Go from Here
After you pass the Microsoft Lync Server 2010, Administrator (70-665) exam, you may want to take Exam 70-664: TS: Microsoft Lync Server 2010, Configuring exam.