
OVERVIEW

Prerequisites | Basic knowledge or experience with Scrum or Agile |
---|---|
Outcome | CSPO Certification and 14 PDUs; 14 SEUs |
Duration | 2 Days |
Required reading | Scrum 101 |
3Back’s Certified Scrum Product Owner training provides a comprehensive look at Product Ownership in the Scrum environment. Learn the mechanics of routine activities, such as managing the Backlog, as well as enterprise-level concerns, such as strategic visioning with Scrum, managing multiple projects per Team, and managing single projects that span multiple Teams. Through a combination of lectures, activities, and simulation, students will learn the fundamentals of leading an agile project.
What You Get
We’ll cover your Scrum Alliance membership dues and certification for the first 2 years.
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Agenda
The 2-day Certified Scrum Product Owner class is an intensive interactive session designed to leverage the diverse background of the participants through facilitated discussion, activities and simulation. The following topics will be covered:
- Values and Principles
- The Scrum Framework
- Modern Scrum vs. Original Scrum
- Roles, Artifacts and Ceremonies
- Scrum-Appropriate Projects
Additional Details
So you want to learn about Agile Project Management. But is training really worth it? Isn’t ‘Product Owner’ just the Scrum term for ‘Product Manager’? What can training provide that reading a few books can’t? Can this training help solve the Product Owner Dilemma? Remember: A Good ScrumMaster isn’t Everything Although the emphasized ScrumMaster role is key to successful Scrum application, the role of Product Owner is no less important, though it may be less talked about. Learn how to partner with your ScrumMaster to make an effective Scrum force. Scrum Product Owner training is especially appropriate for anyone in the corporate structure dealing with rapidly changing demands and decision-making responsibilities.
Required Reading

Scrum 101
Optional Reading

Exploring Scrum: The Fundamentals
By Dan Rawsthorne and Doug Shimp
This book takes a deep, exploratory, look into the Scrum framework, and offers advice about how to think about it, and how to use it. Some of this advice is philosophical, some is pragmatic, some is practical, and some of it is controversial.
This book is not an introductory text.3Back Exclusive
Scrum Tools

Get To Done® is both online software and cards on walls. We have worked hard to bring this unique tool to you so that you have full support for writing and managing complex backlogs. Stop regressing! Getting Scrum implemented right is hard, your software tool needs to support the right behaviors or groups often regress.

Scrum Dictionary exists for one simple reason. Words matter. In the world of Agile frameworks, words matter event more. Scrum Dictionary removes the lexicon noise and delivers a clear, concise definition of Agile terms, complete with examples and related terminology, in a format that's as user-friendly as they come.
Certified Scrum Product Owner Training Benefits
So you want to learn Scrum. But is training really worth it?
What can training give you that reading a few books can’t?
Transforming your team or organization to a new methodology is a big undertaking. Organized training will give you the kickstart you need and save you valuable time otherwise wasted on costly trial and error.
Studies show that when learners “do and say,” they experience an increase of knowledge retention up to 80% over reading alone.
Books and blogs are good knowledge resources. Skill, however, is acquired by doing. There is simply no replacement for the skill building that occurs with hands-on activities and real-life simulations.
Who Should Attend

There is no right or wrong person to attend this training. In fact, the most successful agile adoptions have included training for everyone, right down to Finance and Sales staff. Scrum training is especially appropriate for anyone in the corporate structure dealing with rapidly changing demands. In a traditional organization, these roles might include:
What Industries
Use Scrum?

The most popular use of Scrum is for software development in a wide variety of industries, including financial services, insurance, education, information technology, government programs and supply chain management. But Scrum goes beyond software development! We’ve known organizations and individuals who have used Scrum for graphic design, wedding planning, data warehousing, consulting, classroom projects, household management, auto salvage yards and much more. Scrum is appropriate for almost any complex project with rapidly changing or emergent requirements, regardless of the industry.
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