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Welcome to the Professional Scrum Product Owner (PSPO 2) Certification course, your gateway to the dynamic world of agile product ownership and management. The PSPO II training program is designed for individuals seeking to confirm their advanced understanding of Professional Scrum Product Ownership, the Scrum framework, and the delivery of valuable products. A PSPO II certification demonstrates a comprehensive grasp of the fundamental principles of the Product Owner role and the ability to implement Scrum in challenging real-world scenarios. Upon successful completion of the assessment, participants will receive the highly regarded PSPO II certification, which showcases their advanced knowledge and skills as a Scrum Product Owner or Master.
You’ll apply these skills in real-world scenarios, equipping yourself with the knowledge and capabilities that are currently in high demand.
The demand for skilled Scrum Product Owners has surged across industries as organizations increasingly recognize the value of agile practices in product development. As a certified Professional Scrum Product Owner (PSPO 2), you’ll find yourself at the forefront of this transformation, making you a highly sought-after asset in today’s competitive job market.
Scrum Product Owners are particularly vital, as they bridge the gap between stakeholders and development teams to deliver successful products. This course equips you with the expertise and practical skills that employers are actively seeking.
Whether you’re new to agile product ownership or an experienced professional looking to enhance your career prospects, our Professional Scrum Product Owner (PSPO 2) course is designed to empower you. With lifetime access to course materials and the support of experts available 24/7, we are dedicated to ensuring your success in the job market. Enrol today to become a part of the future of agile product development and seize exciting career opportunities in the dynamic realm of Scrum. Take advantage of this thrilling journey!
Earn a Certificate upon completion
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These highlights encapsulate the essential areas of focus and learning outcomes in the Professional Scrum Product Owner (PSPO 2) Certification course.
Our courses are balanced mix of videos & articles
Empiricism:
A cornerstone to Scrum and Agile. A practitioner will be able to apply the concepts of the empirical process to the problems they encounter. That means they can describe problems in terms of learning, break problems down into the smallest increments that will generate valuable evidence, and execute in an empirical way. By learning and practicing the skills in this Focus Area, a practitioner will become an expert in the application of scientific methods to complex problems, understanding why and how to apply an empirical process.
Scrum Values:
For agility to thrive, the culture of the organization must support the fundamental concepts of agility. A practitioner will understand both the Scrum Values – Focus, Respect, Openness, Commitment, and Courage – and demonstrate that they can apply them in the reality of organizations whose values do not match those of Scrum. By living the Scrum Values and helping others to apply them, learners will create an environment where empirical process, self- organization, and continual improvement will be more successful.
Scrum Team:
The Scrum Team consists of one Product Owner, one Scrum Master, and Developers. The skilled practitioner will understand how accountability is shared amongst team members and how they take on work in the context of their Product Goal.
Events:
The Scrum framework describes 5 events: The Sprint, Sprint Planning, Daily Scrum, Sprint Review, and the Sprint Retrospective. All events are time-boxed and enable progress through adaptation and transparency. The practitioner will understand the events and be able to practice each event, but more importantly be able to apply these events in complex situations and at scale. The events are used to uphold empirical process control, through the three pillars of Scrum: transparency, inspection, and adaptation.
Artifacts:
The Scrum framework describes 3 artifacts. The Product Backlog, Sprint Backlog, and Increment. These artifacts provide the team with a minimal set of materials to plan, execute, and review the Sprint. The Practitioner will understand these artifacts and how to implement them in complex, real-world situations. They will also understand the relationship of these artifacts relative to other practices and techniques and how to integrate them into an organization’s own process.
Done:
The objective of each Sprint is to deliver an Increment. The Definition of Done (DoD) provides a way for the team to make what done means transparent. In this Focus Area, the practitioner will be able to describe what a DoD is, apply it to their particular context, and understand how the DoD enables the benefits of agile. They will also be able to describe the implications of the necessary trade-offs and compromises required to deliver Increments within their organization.
Scaling:
Scrum is designed to work at the team, product, and organization level. The practitioner will be able to apply Scrum in increasing levels of complexity and scale. They will be able to demonstrate when to scale and when not to scale and appreciate scaling practices and complementary frameworks that help organizations scale Scrum. The ultimate level of proficiency within this Focus Area is the ability to know what, and what not, to compromise in pursuit of a scaling approach by understanding the trade-offs and benefits of particular concepts and practices. Ultimately, the practitioner will demonstrate that they can scale Scrum and still keep its essential qualities of empiricism, self-organization, and continuous improvement.
Forecasting and Release Planning:
Complex problems and the application of an empirical process requires a specific way of planning, estimating, and forecasting. Practitioners should be able to apply agile forecasting and release planning techniques, and understand the value of different approaches. They should understand which approaches work better in different situations. They should also understand how releases should be planned while dealing with complexity, dependencies, and value creation.
Product Vision:
The product vision defines the purpose that the product aspires to fulfill. It is defined by the value that the product strives to deliver. Practitioners should be able to describe what a product vision is and what techniques should be employed to both build a vision and make it transparent. They should also understand how to use a product vision to drive strategy and execution, and how to build a vision that motivates, communicates, and provides constraints for delivery.
Product Value:
The ultimate goal is to deliver value to the customer and stakeholders. But value is complex, made up of long term and short-term impact, internal and external value, and indirect and direct value. The practitioner should be able to understand how to define value for context, and apply it to the work they and the team do. They should be able to manage others’ understanding of value and apply different techniques and practices for defining, communicating and measuring value. They should understand the connection between value and empirical process, and how value should be the driving factor of the Product Goal.
Product Backlog Management:
The Product Backlog is a key artifact within Scrum. It is an ordered list that describes what is needed in the product. The Product Backlog provides transparency into what is happening to the product for the team, organization, and stakeholders. The practitioner should be able to describe what a Product Backlog is and apply a variety of techniques for managing the backlog. They should also understand how to make the Product Backlog transparent and how to manage stakeholder expectations associated with the backlog.
Business Strategy:
A product lives within the context of a business strategy. That strategy describes how the Product Vision will be executed in a broader context. A practitioner will understand techniques for exposing business strategy and show how it drives the product. They will understand approaches, such as Lean Startup and Design Thinking, and how those affect the flow of ideas from strategy to execution. They will understand how an empirical process affects the execution and feedback of a strategy.
Stakeholders and Customers:
Effectively working with stakeholders and customers is a key skill for everyone on the Scrum Team. Scrum changes the nature of the interactions, encouraging more frequent collaboration and more open dialogue. The practitioner will understand the implication moving to an Agile approach will have to their stakeholders and customers and also become familiar with practices and stances that will help them work and collaborate in a more agile way.
Organizational Design and Culture:
Traditional organizations are often structured around Taylorism and mass production concepts in response to simple problems. Complex problems require a different way of organizing. This Focus Area describes the fundamental differences of an agile organization; namely its structure, culture, and design. A practitioner will understand what an agile enterprise looks like and approaches for implementing the agile enterprise in a traditional organization. They will understand how to balance the needs for agility with the existing reality of traditional organizational structures.
Portfolio Planning:
For many large organizations, work is being undertaken in the context of a broader portfolio. That portfolio couldbe a product, system, value stream, supply chain, or even a program. This Focus Area describes what agile portfolio planning looks like; its characteristics, principles, and associated practices. The Practitioner will understand why agile portfolio planning must be different than traditional portfolio planning in order to deal with complex products and systems. They will also understand how to apply these ideas to their portfolio. Practitioners will understand the challenges of managing complex dependencies and the choices that need to be made, while ensuring that team agility is not broken, to serve the needs of the larger organization.
Evidence-Based Management:
A fundamental element of Scrum is empirical process; the idea that complex problems require real experience to effectively plan and deliver value. Evidence-Based Management (EBM) is a set of ideas and practices that describe broad measurement areas used to provide an effective, empirical, and value-based approach to any product. This Focus Area describes what EBM is and how to apply it to any product. The practitioner will understand what EBM is, as well as the practices that comprise it, and how to use EBM to enable a business driven, value-based empirical process.
The Professional Scrum Product Owner (PSPO 2) Certification course is designed for individuals looking to advance their skills in agile product ownership. It holds particular value for the following roles within the product development and agile management field:
Enrol today to become a proficient Professional Scrum Product Owner (PSPO 2) and play a central role in delivering successful products through agile practices, shaping the future of product development in a dynamic, ever-evolving industry.
Details of the course you need to know
16 Hrs
2 Days
-
60 Min
70%
Why choose us?
6+ hours of training videos for all the objectives. You will be amazed by the way of explaining the concepts that are very easy to understand.
1 Full-length mock exams ( 85+ unique Exam practice questions
Our support team consists o experts, ready to clarify all your questions.
Our courses come with the lifetime license/validity. Once purchased, you can access them for the lifetime.
We provide 100% unconditional moneyback gurantee.
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Easy to understand
A well-organised curriculum that simplifies the learning process and offers a clearer path to success
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Certification
Upon successfully completing the course, you will receive a certificate of your achievement and dedication
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