Professional Scrum Product Owner Training in Concord
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                	 We offer private customized training for groups of 3 or more attendees.
                 
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Course Description | 
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|   In the Professional Scrum Product Owner course, explore and learn to apply the accountabilities of the Product Owner and the principles of Professional Scrum. Gain an understanding of the pivotal role the Product Owner plays in bridging strategy and agile product management in order to help the Scrum Team create valuable products. 
                        Course Length: 2 Days 
                    Course Tuition: $790 (US)  | 
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		                Prerequisites | 
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                    Course Outline | 
                
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	Agile Product Management 
		Reasons to Pursue Agility 
	
		Agile Product Managers Have a Product 
	
		Mindset 
	
		The Bigger Picture 
	
		Product Management Activities 
	
		Product Management Encapsulates Many 
	
		Things 
	
		Product Owner Is an Agile Product Manager 
	
		An Entrepreneurial Product Owner 
	
		Techniques for Modeling Business Strategy 
	
		Business Model Canvas 
	
		Lean Canvas 
	
		Value Proposition Canvas 
	
		Business Strategy 
	
		Boiler Plate Warning 
	
		Techniques For Creating A Product Vision 
	
		Innovation Games Product Box 
	
		Product Vision Template 
	
		Business Problem Statement 
	
		Product Owner and Technology 
	
		Strategic Alignment Index 
	
		Discontinuing Products Is Not What Kills You 
	
	Value-Driven Development 
		What is value? 
	
		For organizations, value is… 
	
		Delivering Value 
	
		A Release Is Needed to Realize Value 
	
		Traditional Development Delays the Realization of Value 
	
		Business Value Over Time 
	
		Business Value Over Time – Optimized 
	
		Delivering Value 
	
		How do you measure? 
	
		Information Value Neutrality 
	
		The Right Metrics 
	
		Value Measures 
	
		Product Variations 
	
		Innovation Rate 
	
		On-Product Index 
	
		Usage Index 
	
		Securing Success by Securing Scope? 
	
		Installed Version Index 
	
		The Right Metrics 
	
	Scrum Theory & Empiricism 
		When Will It Be Ready? 
	
		The Complexity of Product Development 
	
		The Predictability of Product Development 
	
		The Complexity of Product Development 
	
		Situation Dictates the Type of Process 
	
		Empirical Processes Require Trust & Courage 
	
		Scrum Values 
	
		Take Away – Scrum Theory & Empirical Process Control 
	
	The Scrum Framework 
		Definition of Scrum 
	
		What is needed for Scrum? 
	
		Roles: Each One Has a Specific Accountability 
	
		Fitting the pieces together 
	
		Roles, Artifacts and Events in the Scrum Framework 
	
		Exploring the purpose of a Product Owner 
	
		The Rewrite Fallacy 
	
		Key Points for the Product Owner 
	
		Key Points for the Product Owner 
	
		The Product Owner / Development Team Relationship 
	
		Stakeholders – Who Are They and What Do They Want? 
	
		What Is a Scrum Sprint? 
	
		Sprint Goal 
	
		Some Sprint Goals 
	
		Sprint Planning Meeting Flow 
	
		Product Owner and Sprint Backlog 
	
		Attributes of a High-performing Team 
	
		Cancelling a Sprint 
	
		A Sprint is a Feedback Loop 
	
		Flow of the Sprint Review Meeting 
	
		Definition of “Done” 
	
		Increment Requires Transparency 
	
		Increment Grows Over Time Iteratively – Always Done 
	
		Sprint Retrospective 
	
		Can one product owner possibly do it all? 
	
		One Product Owner Can Do It All, with Help and Thought 
	
		Product Owner Role 
	
	Product Backlog Management 
		Levels of Specification 
	
		Characteristics of a Product Backlog 
	
		Use Product Backlog to Maintain a Roadmap 
	
		Managing the Vision, Value and Validation Flow using Kanban 
	
		Valid Product Backlog Items 
	
		The Three C’s of User Stories 
	
		User Story 
	
		Popular User Story Template 
	
		If Not Precise Enough, Split Them 
	
		Refined to Ready 
	
		Acceptance Criteria 
	
		A/B Test and Technical Spike 
	
		Story Mapping 
	
		Create a Product Backlog 
	
		Product Backlog Supports Emergent Architecture Development 
	
		Architecture Changes 
	
		How Do You Prioritize Work? 
	
		Product Backlog Order Influenced by Many Factors 
	
		Techniques for Product Backlog Ordering & Value 
	
		Product Backlog Ordering 
	
		Map Product Backlog Items to Value Proposition 
	
	Release Planning 
		A Release Serves to Actually Deliver Value 
	
		Some Reasons Are Better Than Others 
	
		Release Strategies 
	
		Customer Absorption Is One Constraint 
	
		Build Plan as Needed 
	
		Techniques for Estimating Product Backlog Size 
	
		Estimating Size 
	
		Velocity Is an Option to Measure Progress 
	
		When Will Item “A” Likely Ship? 
	
		Monitoring Progress and Uncertainty 
	
		Undone Work & Technical Debt 
	
		The impact of Technical Debt on future Value 
	
		Good Velocity 
	
		Refinement 
	
	Closing 
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Software Design/Development and System Integration Uses & Stats
| 
	            				 Difficulty 
	            				
	            			 | 
	            			
	            				 Popularity 
	            				
	            			 | 
	            			Year Created  2001 | 
	            			
| 
	            				 Pros 
	            				
	Faster Deployment of Solutions 
	Gives Every Team Member a Purpose 
	Keeps the End Goal in Mind at Every Level 
	Promotes Flexibility in Order to Adapt 
	Faster Detection of Issues and Defects  | 
	            			
	            				 Cons 
	            				
	Can Act As a Band-Aid to Bigger Problems 
	Can Create a Micro-Managed Environment 
	Not Everyone Is On Board 
	Push for Higher Performance 
	Not Well-Suited for Every Project  | 
	            			
| Software Design/Development and System Integration Job Market | 
	            				 
	            				Average Salary 
	            				 | 
	            			
	            				 
	            				Job Count 
	            				 | 
	            			
	            				 
	            				Top Job Locations 
	            				Agile and SCRUM methodologies are practiced mostly in larger organizations that have cross-platform teams that need to be on the same page. Adoption rates vary in different industries. 
 Industry Agile Adoption Rate Software (ISV) 23 percent Financial services 14 percent Professional services 12 percent Insurance 6 percent Healthcare 6 percent Government 5 percent Telecoms 4 percent Transportation 4 percent Manufacturing 4 percent  | 
	            			
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	            					Complimentary Skills to have along with Software Design/Development and System Integration
	            					 Agile Methodologies and Frameworks include: ASD - DevOps - DAD - DSDM - FDD - IID - Kanban - Lean - SD - LeSS - MDD - MSF - PSP - RAD - RUP - SAFe - Scrum SEMAT TSP UP XP The Standards and Bodies of Knowledge Include: BABOK - CMMI - IEEE standards - ISO 9001 - ISO/IEC standards - PMBOK - SWEBOK - ITIL  | 
	            			

	            				
	            				
	            				




