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AI Learning Over Time • Cohort-Based

Cohorts and Workshops

These offerings are designed for groups who want to build practical AI capability together over time—using a repeatable, outcomes-focused approach. Explore the options below, then visit each class page for the full details.

  • Team Activation — align on goals, tools, and guardrails.
  • AI Audit — assess readiness, risks, and highest-value use cases.
  • AI + Scrum Cohorts — build habits across roles with hands-on practice.
  • AI for Scrum Teams — practical, role-based workflows your team can adopt.
Tip: If you’re not sure where to start, choose AI Audit first—then map a cohort plan from the findings.

Ready to start?

Pick your next step—start with free learning, watch the videos, or browse the full course catalog.

Prefer Virtual or On-Site delivery for your team? See Corporate Training Offerings.

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24 Feb 2026

Step 2: Backlog Refinement with AI (Without Losing Collaboration)

The objective is to use AI to:

  • Clarify intent

  • Improve acceptance criteria

  • Suggest smarter vertical slices

  • Reduce cognitive load before discussion

The collaboration still belongs to the team.

AI proposes.
The team decides.

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments

24 Feb 2026

Step 3: Sprint Planning That Reduces Over-Commitment

Over-commitment rarely comes from optimism alone.

It usually comes from:

  • Hidden dependencies

  • Unseen complexity

  • Ambiguous acceptance criteria

  • Capacity blind spots

  • Integration risk

AI can help surface these before commitment — without replacing team judgment.

The principle: interrogate the plan before you promise it.

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments

24 Feb 2026

Step 1: AI Foundations for Product Owners: A Practical Mental Model

This content introduces a practical mental model for how Product Owners should use AI effectively.

Instead of focusing on tools, it emphasizes outcomes. AI delivers the most value in four areas:

  1. Discovery – Clarifying user needs and exposing assumptions.

  2. Backlog Quality – Strengthening acceptance criteria and reducing ambiguity.

  3. Prioritization – Evaluating trade-offs across value, risk, and constraints.

  4. Stakeholder Communication – Translating complexity into clear narratives.

The core message: AI should amplify critical thinking, not replace product judgment.

A practical exercise reinforces this approach:

  • Identify the top three unknowns for the next release (users, value, constraints).

  • Ask AI to generate ten clarifying questions for each unknown.

The objective is to surface blind spots early, improve backlog decisions, and increase the probability of delivering meaningful business outcomes.

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments

24 Feb 2026

Step 2:AI for Product Owners: Turn Customer Feedback Into Sprint Experiments

Customer & Stakeholder Discovery Prompts

This content explains how Product Owners can use AI to convert raw customer and stakeholder feedback into actionable sprint work.

Instead of treating interviews and notes as static documentation, the approach reframes them as structured inputs for rapid synthesis.

The model follows four steps:

  1. Input – Gather interviews, support tickets, surveys, and call notes.

  2. Clustering – Use AI to group feedback into meaningful themes.

  3. Risk Framing – Identify usability, adoption, and value risks.

  4. Experiment Design – Translate insights into 2–3 testable sprint experiments.

A practical exercise reinforces the method:

  • Paste 10–20 lines of real feedback into AI.

  • Ask it to cluster themes, surface risks, and propose three experiments for the next sprint.

The core principle: AI accelerates synthesis, enabling continuous learning and faster validation within the Scrum cadence.

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments

24 Feb 2026

Step 2: AI for Product Owners: Turn Customer Feedback Into Sprint Experiments

Customer & Stakeholder Discovery Prompts

This content explains how Product Owners can use AI to convert raw customer and stakeholder feedback into actionable sprint work.

Instead of treating interviews and notes as static documentation, the approach reframes them as structured inputs for rapid synthesis.

The model follows four steps:

  1. Input – Gather interviews, support tickets, surveys, and call notes.

  2. Clustering – Use AI to group feedback into meaningful themes.

  3. Risk Framing – Identify usability, adoption, and value risks.

  4. Experiment Design – Translate insights into 2–3 testable sprint experiments.

A practical exercise reinforces the method:

  • Paste 10–20 lines of real feedback into AI.

  • Ask it to cluster themes, surface risks, and propose three experiments for the next sprint.

The core principle: AI accelerates synthesis, enabling continuous learning and faster validation within the Scrum cadence.

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
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