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  1. Programs
  2. AWS Certified SysOps Administrator - Associate

AWS Certified SysOps Administrator - Associate

Amazon Web Services (AWS)

Certification

Become a contributor for free to openly demonstrate student outcomes, industry alignment & eligibility criteria.

The AWS Certified CloudOps Engineer - Associate (SOA-C03) exam is intended for CloudOps engineers. The exam validates a candidate's ability to deploy, manage, and operate workloads on AWS.

Format

Online

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Program Pathways

Credentials this program stacks toward

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Program Details

Detailed information about this program

The AWS Certified CloudOps Engineer - Associate (SOA-C03) exam is intended for CloudOps engineers. The exam validates a candidate's ability to deploy, manage, and operate workloads on AWS. The exam also validates a candidate's ability to complete the following tasks: - Support and maintain AWS workloads according to the AWS Well-Architected Framework. - Perform operations by using the AWS Management Console and the AWS CLI. - Implement security controls to meet compliance requirements. - Monitor, log, and troubleshoot systems. - Apply networking concepts (for example, DNS, TCP, IP, firewalls). - Implement architectural requirements (for example, high availability, performance, capacity). - Perform business continuity and disaster recovery procedures. - Identify, classify, and remediate incidents. The target candidate should have 1 year of experience with deployment, management, troubleshooting, networking, and security on AWS. The target candidate also should have at least 1 year of experience in a related operations role such as system administrator. Recommended general IT knowledge and experience The target candidate should have the following general IT knowledge and experience: - Techniques for monitoring, logging, and troubleshooting - Networking concepts (for example, DNS, TCP, IP, firewalls) - Implementation of architectural requirements (for example, high availability, performance, capacity) - Familiarity with at least one scripting language - Familiarity with at least one major operating system - Understanding of cloud computing - Containerization and orchestration basics - Understanding of continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) and Git Recommended AWS knowledge and experience The target candidate should have the following AWS knowledge: - The AWS Well-Architected Framework - AWS storage and container solutions - AWS monitoring tools - How to use the AWS Management Console, the AWS CLI, infrastructure as code (IaC) solutions, and AWS CloudFormation - AWS networking and security services - How to implement AWS security controls and compliance requirements - Cloud financial management - Operations within hybrid and multi-VPC environments - AWS database services (for example, Amazon RDS, Amazon DynamoDB, Amazon ElastiCache) - AWS compute services (for example, Amazon EC2, AWS Lambda, Amazon Elastic Container Service [Amazon ECS]) Job tasks that are out of scope for the target candidate The following list contains job tasks that the target candidate is not expected to be able to perform. This list is non-exhaustive. These tasks are out of scope for the exam: - Design distributed architectures. - Design CI/CD pipelines. - Design hybrid and multi-VPC networking. - Develop software. - Define security, compliance, and governance requirements. - Develop ransomware defense strategies. - Assess and plan resource capacity. - Analyze costs and total cost of ownership. - Manage billing and invoicing for AWS services. Exam content 1. Response types The exam includes two types of questions: - Multiple choice: Has one correct response and three incorrect responses (distractors) - Multiple response: Has two or more correct responses out of five or more response options Multiple choice and multiple response: Select one or more responses that best complete the statement or answer the question. Distractors, or incorrect answers, are response options that a candidate with incomplete knowledge or skill might choose. Distractors are generally plausible responses that match the content area.On the exam, unanswered questions are scored as incorrect. There is no penalty for guessing. The exam includes 50 questions that affect your score. These questions include multiple-choice questions and multiple-response questions. Each scored multiple-choice question and each scored multiple-response question counts as a single scored opportunity. 2. Unscored content The exam includes 15 unscored questions that do not affect your score. AWS collects information about performance on these unscored questions to evaluate these questions for future use as scored questions. These unscored questions are not identified on the exam. 3. Exam results The AWS Certified CloudOps Engineer - Associate (SOA-C03) exam has a pass or fail designation. The exam is scored against a minimum standard established by AWS professionals who follow certification industry best practices and guidelines. Your results for the exam are reported as a scaled score of 100–1,000. The minimum passing score is 720. Your score shows how you performed on the exam as a whole and whether you passed. Scaled scoring models help equate scores across multiple exam forms that might have slightly different difficulty levels. Your score report could contain a table of classifications of your performance at each section level. The exam uses a compensatory scoring model, which means that you do not need to achieve a passing score in each section. You need to pass only the overall exam. Each section of the exam has a specific weighting, so some sections have more questions than other sections have. The table of classifications contains general information that highlights your strengths and weaknesses. Use caution when you interpret section-level feedback.

Requirements

What you need to earn this credential

No requirements listed.

Financial Aid

Eligible funding programs

No funding information available.

Scholarships

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Locations

Where this program is offered

No locations specified.

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Related Programs

Programs related to this one

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Skills & Competencies

Skills developed through this program

  • Deploy, manage, and operate workloads on AWS
  • Support and maintain AWS workloads according to the AWS Well-Architected Framework
  • Perform operations using the AWS Management Console and the AWS CLI
  • Implement security controls to meet compliance requirements
  • Monitor, log, and troubleshoot systems
  • Apply networking concepts including DNS, TCP, IP, and firewalls
Career Pathways

Occupations this program prepares you for

  • Computer Systems Engineers/Architects15-1299.08
What You'll Learn

Key competencies developed through this program

Auto-populated·from NSX Competency Framework

Mastery: developing (Level 2)(based on Certification)

  • Client system requirements — analyze and translate into preliminary technical specifications with reduced oversight in a professional services environment.
  • Hardware and software component recommendations — evaluate suitability for defined purposes and present options to project stakeholders using structured comparison frameworks.
  • Secure system implementation guidelines — prepare and communicate tailored security configuration instructions to installation teams for mid-scale deployments.
  • Operating systems and network software — coordinate and execute installation or upgrade projects across multiple workstations or servers with minimal supervision.
  • System operation monitoring — apply monitoring tools to detect performance degradation or failure indicators and initiate standard corrective responses.
  • User need assessments — identify required system data, hardware, and software components by conducting structured needs-analysis sessions with end users.
  • Object-oriented or web platform development software — configure and adapt development environments to support application deployment on assigned systems.
  • Technical documentation — produce clear written procedures and configuration guides using document management software for internal or client audiences.
  • Routine hardware and software maintenance — plan and execute scheduled maintenance cycles including upgrades to minimize operational downtime.
  • Systems evaluation — apply analytical methods to assess existing infrastructure performance against defined benchmarks in familiar organizational contexts.

Some details on this page are auto-populated from public workforce data sources: O*NET (opens in new tab), BLS (opens in new tab), College Scorecard (opens in new tab), DOL Training Provider Results (opens in new tab), NSX (opens in new tab). Provided in partnership with LER.me Career Intelligence.

Student Outcomes

Performance metrics for this program

Auto-populated·from Scorecard + DOL
Completion Rate
100%
Placement Rate
Not reported