In Workday HCM, condition rules are used within business process definitions to control when steps start, continue, or stop executing. When working with consolidated approvals, it is common to define stopping points so that once a required level of approval is met—such as approval by a vice president—the approval chain does not continue unnecessarily.
To stop a consolidated approval chain after a vice president approves the task, you must use an Exit condition rule. Exit conditions are evaluated after a step completes and determine whether the business process should continue to subsequent steps or stop processing additional steps. When the exit condition evaluates to true, Workday exits the process flow at that point.
This behavior makes exit conditions ideal for scenarios where hierarchical or role-based approval chains should end once a certain authority level has approved. In this case, once the vice president approval is completed, the exit condition prevents additional approvers from receiving the task.
The other condition types do not meet this requirement. Entry conditions control whether a step starts at all but do not stop a process once it has begun. Validation conditions are used to enforce data accuracy and prevent submission if requirements are not met. While Running conditions are evaluated while a step is in progress and are typically used to cancel or reroute steps if circumstances change.
From a Workday Pro HCM best-practice perspective, exit condition rules are the correct and recommended method for ending approval chains early when business requirements are satisfied. Therefore, the correct and Workday-verified answer is Exit