Published: Sept. 13, 2019, noon
This week, on the Agile Coaches\u2019 Corner, your host Dan Neumann and his AgileThought colleague, Sam Falco, will be taking a look at the Product Owner role in Scrum! The Product Owner Role sometimes gets overlooked in a lot of discussions around Scrum \u2014 yet, they\u2019re one of the most important, complex, and crucial roles. They\u2019re the visionary behind the product. Primarily, their responsibility to the Scrum team is to maximize the value of what the development team creates.
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Tune in to hear Dan and Sam\u2019s conversation to get more insight into the incredibly important Product Owner role \u2014 what it is, the challenges of being one, the valuable traits and skills for a PO to have, and some of the anti-patterns around the role!
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Key Takeaways
What is the Product Owner Role in Scrum?
- It is one of the three roles of Scrum (product owner, scrum master, and the development team)
- They\u2019re the visionary behind the product
- They\u2019re a crucial reason to why we have Scrum teams in the first place \u2014 they\u2019re feeding the Scrum team the most valuable backlog items to turn into an increment of product every sprint
- The primary role of the Product Owner is to maximize the value of what the development team creates
- It\u2019s important that it\u2019s only one person; not a committee
Challenges of the Product Owner Role:
- Managing and representing the opinions and voices of the dev team and stakeholders by distilling them into a coherent product backlog that\u2019s optimized for value
Valuable traits for a Product Owner:
- Someone with a distinct understanding of the market and a vision for a product that they want to bring into the world
- An entrepreneurial mindset
- Someone with very deep domain knowledge and business knowledge
- Understands the customers (or potential customers)
- Decisiveness
- Open-mindedness
- Strong leadership skills and the ability to motivate others
Important skills for a Product Owner to have:
- Domain and business knowledge
- The ability to write a good business proposal as well as a strong canvas that articulates to funders what it is you\u2019re trying to accomplish
- A willingness to test your hypothesis and do market research
- Communication skills and articulating things in a way that makes sense to your development team
- Negotiation skills
- Having a well-crafted and well-ordered backlog
- Being able to define the sprint goal
- Being able to communicate the vision and having the organizational skills to put the backlog in a good order so the dev team, customers, and stakeholders always know what\u2019s next
- Technical skills (though it is not a must-have, it is helpful for them to have an understanding of the technology they\u2019re working with) \u2014 but be careful, a PO with technical chops can sometimes interfere with the dev team
Anti-patterns within organizations that are not setting up their Product Owner for success:
- Having someone without the right traits and skills in the Product Owner role
- Having a proxy PO stand-in for the real Product Owner, which jumbles the message and leads to \u201canswer shopping\u201d
- Having the role split into two people (where one becomes the \u2018business\u2019 PO owner and the other person becomes the \u2018technical\u2019 PO), which affects team self-organization and leads to uncertainty
Product Owner anti-patterns:
- Rigidity
- Disregarding estimates
- Product Owner is an \u2018order-taker\u2019; simply taking notes and doing everything that is said (which causes issues because they cannot articulate a clear vision)
- When a Product Owner is not valuing everyone\u2019s opinions equally (and instead, giving more value to those who are loudest or had the last say)
- Presenting a release plan to stakeholders that is wildly at odds with what the dev team can accomplish and expecting the dev team to live up to that
- Unbalanced focus and either being too involved with the dev team or not enough
- Spending too much time with the stakeholders
- Only showing up for sprint reviews
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Mentioned in this Episode:
Scrivener
User Stories
The Professional Product Owner: Leveraging Scrum as a Competitive Advantage,
by Don McGreal and Ralph Jocham
Thinking in Bets: Making Smarter Decisions When You Don't Have All the Facts, by Annie Duke
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Sam Falco\u2019s Book Pick:
Business Model Generation: A Handbook for Visionaries, Game Changers, and Challengers, by Alexander Osterwalder and Yves Pigneur
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