Select the search type
  • Site
  • Web
Search

Learning Path

Certified Scrum Product Owner: From Vision to Value

Built for Product Owners and Product Managers who want a practical, repeatable way to turn ideas into outcomes—without losing alignment, clarity, or momentum.

  • Create a clear product direction that teams can execute without constant rework.
  • Build and refine a backlog that connects customer needs to measurable value.
  • Improve delivery decisions with better slicing, prioritization, and stakeholder alignment.

Path Steps

Step-by-step: From Vision to Value

Work through these steps in order. Each step links to a specific article or video post (EasyDNNnews item), includes a one-sentence focus, and (optionally) a small exercise to apply it immediately.

1

You’ll learn how to express a clear product direction that aligns stakeholders and guides real backlog decisions.

Do this exercise: Write a one-sentence vision + three measurable outcomes you want in 90 days.
2

You’ll learn how to clarify who you serve and what decisions they must make—so your backlog has purpose.

Do this exercise: List 2 primary user types and the top 3 “jobs” they need done.
3

You’ll learn a practical slicing approach to create small, testable items that still deliver real value.

4

You’ll learn a simple prioritization model that makes tradeoffs explicit and reduces thrash.

Do this exercise: Score your top 5 backlog items by Value, Risk, and Learning (1–5).
5

You’ll learn how to run refinement so teams leave with shared understanding—not just more tickets.

6

You’ll learn lightweight stakeholder habits that keep direction aligned while protecting team focus.

7

You’ll learn simple metrics that show whether you’re improving value delivery—not just shipping more.

Steps - Free

24 Feb 2026

Step 1: Start with product vision that teams can actually execute

If the team cannot use it to prioritize backlog items, it is not actionable.

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
Article rating: No rating

24 Feb 2026

Step 2: Identify customers, users, and the decisions that matter

If you cannot name:

  • Who you serve

  • What they are trying to decide

  • What “job” they need completed

Your backlog will drift.

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
Article rating: No rating

24 Feb 2026

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

If a backlog item cannot be completed inside a Sprint with clear acceptance criteria, it is not sliced—it is deferred complexity.

The goal is not smaller tasks.
The goal is small increments of validated outcome.

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
Article rating: No rating

24 Feb 2026

Step 4: Prioritize with Confidence: Value, Risk, and Learning

Prioritize with Confidence: Value, Risk, and Learning

This step introduces a simple, explicit prioritization model based on three dimensions: Value, Risk, and Learning (V-R-L).

Instead of relying on vague “priority” discussions, teams score each backlog item (1–5) on:

  • Value — business impact delivered

  • Risk — uncertainty reduced or exposed

  • Learning — validated insight gained

Making these criteria visible reduces backlog thrash, clarifies trade-offs, and exposes hidden assumptions. It also encourages earlier risk burn-down and faster validation of uncertainty.

The exercise requires scoring the top five backlog items and reviewing the ranking for balance. The goal is not mathematical precision, but strategic clarity.

AI can strengthen this process by stress-testing assumptions, surfacing overlooked risks, and simulating alternative rankings—while leaving final decisions to human judgment.

The broader outcome is disciplined, transparent prioritization aligned with strategy rather than habit.

For deeper capability, the next step is the AI for Scrum Product Owners class, which expands on using AI to refine backlog items, quantify value hypotheses, and improve decision quality.

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
Article rating: No rating
RSS

Steps - Members

 
 
✓ Featured Content

Scrum Product Owner Videos

A curated playlist of specific YouTube content.

Search Results

20 Jan 2026

Effective Scrum Developer

Author: SuperUser Account  /  Categories: Scrum & Agile Training  / 

Event date: 1/20/2026 - 1/21/2026 Export event

This course is aimed at helping software development professionals and teams be more effective when implementing Scrum and other agile software development methodologies. In an effort to raise the effectiveness of Scrum, the Scrum Alliance has created the Certified Scrum Developer program. This course is designed to deliver the core Agile Development Practices Learning Objectives of that program.

Audience

This course is intended for professional software developers who are on a Scrum team and want to understand how Scrum and agile engineering practices are applied and how they affect their role in the team. The participant should have an understanding of Scrum preferably from taking our Certified ScrumMaster Workshop or a similar course.

The Approach

One of the agile practices commonly used by Scrum teams is the breakdown of requirements into User Stories. This course was designed to meet this user story:

As a Developer on a Scrum team, I want to use Agile Engineering Practices, so that my team delivers business value with Production Quality Software in every Sprint.

To meet this goal this course meets the Scrum Alliance Learning Objectives for the Certified Scrum Developer Program in these areas:

Collaboration

The teamwork and collaboration on a Scrum team

Architecture and Design

The principles that drive code quality and support quick delivery of business value from testable, understandable and correct code.

Test Driven Development

Using the practice of Test First to help ensure the requirements are well understood and automated tests can be added to the build process to validate the system in the future.

Refactoring

The process of improving the design of software to increase the understandability and testability of the code and allow for easy and safe additions to the system in the future.

Continuous Integration

The process of creating and running automated build and test cycles as new code is checked in so that cross-application issues are discovered as soon as possible.

Course Outline

The course is structured around these user stories that provide the goals for each section:

The Developer Role In Scrum

As a Developer I want to understand my role on a Scrum Team So that the team is successful in meeting Sprint and Release goals.

Test First

As a Developer I want to clearly understand the story So that I can deliver the right functionality.

Writing Unit Tests 

As a developer I want to write effective Unit Tests So that I will know when the code is done.

Agile Analysis for Developers

As a Developer I want quickly and accurately break down requirements So that the work of delivering the business value can be planned effectively.

What is Quality Code?

As a Developer I want to write high quality code and be able to evaluate code quality So that the project is not slowed down in the future by poor quality code.

Scrum Teamwork

As a Developer I want to work collaboratively and efficiently with the other members of my Scrum team So that the Sprint and Release Goals are achieved.

Test Driven Development

As a Developer I want to write small tests then write the code to pass the tests and clean up the code So that I can work quickly and efficiently.

Agile Architecture

As a Developer I want to create software components that are maintainable and efficient So that the product will have a long life and adapt to new requirements easily.

Talking About Design

As a Developer I want to have a common language to use when discussing application design with other developers So that we can quickly and accurately describe the system design.

Refactoring

As a Developer I want to clean up my new code safely So that the new code is flexible and easy to understand.

Automated Refactoring

As a Developer I want to use automatic tools to Refactor So that I can concentrate on delivering the functionality.

Integrating Often

As a Developer I want to verify that my code works in the system and does not break the system as often as possible So that issues are discovered quickly and the project is almost always in a state that can be demonstrated.

Continuous Integration

As a Developer I want use a build system that automatically builds the system and runs all automated tests So that integrating often is as easy as possible.

Class Price$899.00
Print

Number of views (84)      Comments (0)

Tags:

Learn more!

Keep learning — at your pace

Choose the next step that fits where you are today. Stay connected for new lessons, or go deeper with live training when you’re ready.

Free

Join updates and get new lessons as they’re released for this learning path.

Join updates / get new lessons

Search

Calendar

«March 2026»
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
22232425262728
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930311234

Upcoming events

Categories

Upcoming Scrum and Agile Training

25 Feb 2026

0 Comments

12 Feb 2026

0 Comments

20 Jan 2026

0 Comments
RSS