Within the Common Service Data Model (CSDM), information objects are used to represent non-CI data entities that provide important business or governance context but are not configuration items themselves. These objects are especially important when extending service visibility beyond pure infrastructure and application relationships.
The use case described in Option A—understanding asset lifecycle compliance in a Business Application context—explicitly requires information objects. Asset lifecycle data (such as financial state, depreciation, warranty, and compliance milestones) is typically managed in IT Asset Management (ITAM) and must be associated to Business Applications without converting every asset-related data point into a CI. Information objects enable this linkage while maintaining clean CMDB boundaries.
Option B focuses on event-to-incident automation, which relies on CIs, technical services, and operational relationships, not information objects. Option C (proactive case management) is primarily a CSM and service offering use case. Option D (SecOps risk context) relies on application services and business application relationships, not information objects. Option E (business service impact) is addressed through service modeling and service mapping, again without requiring information objects.
Information objects are introduced as organizations mature and need to integrate governance, financial, or compliance data with service and application models—making asset lifecycle compliance the correct match.
Therefore, the correct answer is A.