20+ practice questions focused on Enterprise Network Design — one of the most tested topics on the ENCOR 350-401 exam. Each question includes a detailed explanation so you learn why the right answer is correct.
Start Enterprise Network Design PracticeA large enterprise is redesigning its campus network to support 5000 users across three buildings. The design must provide high availability and fast convergence in case of a link failure. The network engineer is considering using Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) in the access layer. What is the primary design concern with using STP in this scenario?
Explanation: STP (802.1D) converges slowly, typically taking 30-50 seconds (listening + learning states) after a topology change. In a large campus network with 5000 users, this delay causes unacceptable downtime. Additionally, STP blocks redundant links to prevent loops, wasting bandwidth that could be used for load balancing. Modern alternatives like Rapid PVST+ (802.1w) or MST (802.1s) offer sub-second convergence, making classic STP a poor choice for high-availability designs.
A company is deploying a new data center and needs to choose between a three-tier (core, aggregation, access) and a spine-leaf architecture. The network engineer is concerned about east-west traffic patterns for server virtualization. Which architecture is most suitable and why?
Explanation: Spine-leaf architecture is most suitable for east-west traffic patterns because it provides a full mesh of connections between leaf switches and spine switches, enabling equal-cost multipath (ECMP) routing. This allows all leaf-to-leaf traffic to traverse multiple parallel paths with equal cost, maximizing bandwidth utilization and minimizing latency, which is critical for server virtualization traffic that often moves between hypervisors.
An enterprise network is experiencing high CPU utilization on the distribution layer switches. The design uses VLANs with SVIs for inter-VLAN routing, and HSRP for first-hop redundancy. The engineer notices that the standby switch is also experiencing high CPU. What is the most likely cause?
Explanation: In an HSRP setup, both the active and standby routers process incoming Hello messages for every VLAN on which HSRP is configured. Even though the standby switch does not forward inter-VLAN traffic, it must still receive and process periodic HSRP hellos (default every 3 seconds) to maintain its role and detect active failures. With a large number of VLANs, the cumulative CPU overhead from processing these hellos can cause high utilization on both switches.
A network engineer is designing a WAN connection for a branch office that requires high availability and bandwidth aggregation. The branch has two internet connections from different ISPs. The engineer wants to use both links actively for load balancing and failover. Which design approach should be used?
Explanation: SD-WAN is the correct design because it natively supports active/active utilization of multiple WAN links with policy-based load balancing, allowing traffic to be distributed across both ISP connections based on application policies, SLA metrics, or other criteria. It also provides seamless failover by dynamically rerouting traffic if one link fails, meeting the requirements for high availability and bandwidth aggregation without relying on a single active link.
A campus network uses a collapsed core design with two distribution switches and multiple access switches. The engineer wants to ensure that if one distribution switch fails, the access switches can still reach the core. The access switches are connected to both distribution switches. What additional configuration is required on the access switches?
Explanation: Option A is correct because VPC allows the access switches to form a single logical link to the pair of distribution switches, enabling active-active forwarding and seamless failover. If one distribution switch fails, the access switch continues to reach the core through the surviving distribution switch without requiring STP convergence or routing protocol changes.
+15 more Enterprise Network Design questions available
Practice all Enterprise Network Design questions1. Baseline your knowledge
Start with 10 questions to gauge your current understanding of Enterprise Network Design. This tells you whether you need a concept refresher or just practice.
2. Review every explanation
For each question — right or wrong — read the full explanation. Understanding why an answer is correct is more valuable than knowing the answer itself.
3. Focus on exam traps
Enterprise Network Design questions on the 350-401 frequently use trap wording. Look for subtle differences in answers that test your precision, not just general knowledge.
4. Reach 80% consistently
Do repeated sessions until you score 80%+ three times in a row. Then move to mixed-mode practice to test cross-topic recall under realistic conditions.
The exact number varies per candidate. Enterprise Network Design is tested as part of the ENCOR 350-401 blueprint. Practicing with targeted Enterprise Network Design questions ensures you can handle any format or difficulty that appears.
Yes. Courseiva provides free 350-401 practice questions across all exam topics and domains. The platform includes topic-based practice, mock exams, missed-question review, bookmarked questions, and readiness tracking — no account required.
Difficulty is subjective, but Enterprise Network Design is a high-priority exam concept tested in multiple ways — direct recall, scenario analysis, and command-output interpretation. Consistent practice is the best way to build confidence.
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