Select the search type
  • Site
  • Web
Search

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.

Search Results

24 Feb 2026

Step 3: Turn outcomes into backlog slices (without giant stories)

Author: Rod Claar  /  Categories: Product Owner Learning Path  / 

Start With the Outcome

Revisit your measurable outcomes from Step 1.

Example outcome:

  • Increase Sprint goal completion from 60% to 85%

Now ask:

What smallest usable behavior would move this metric?

Not:

  • “Build planning module”

  • “Create reporting dashboard”

Instead:

  • Show backlog readiness score for top 10 items

  • Highlight missing acceptance criteria automatically

  • Flag dependencies across teams

Each slice should enable a real decision.


Use These Slicing Techniques

1. Workflow Slicing
Deliver one step of the workflow end-to-end.

2. Rule Variations
Implement the simplest rule first. Add complexity later.

3. Data Subset
Support one user type or one scenario before expanding.

4. Risk First
Build the part with the highest uncertainty early.


Definition Check

A properly sliced backlog item:

  • Has clear acceptance criteria

  • Produces observable user behavior

  • Can be demonstrated

  • Can be tested

  • Moves at least one measurable outcome

If it takes multiple Sprints, it is still too large.


Practical Heuristic

If the story contains “and,” split it.

Example:

System validates input and generates report
That is two slices.


Small slices reduce cognitive load, improve forecasting accuracy, and surface feedback faster.

That is how outcomes become delivery.

Precision here compounds across every Sprint.

Print

Number of views (81)      Comments (0)

Tags:

Search

«March 2026»
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
22232425
262728
123456
7
891011121314
1516
17181920
21
2223
2425262728
2930311234

Upcoming events Events RSSiCalendar export