Product Owner Problems with Money
What happens when a Product Owner doesn’t have control or even visibility into the product’s budget? No one will know if it’s successful.
Who is on an Agile Scrum Team? Well, Scrum defines only three official roles: 1) Product Owner, 2) Scrum Master, and 3) Developers. Keep reading to learn more.
What happens when a Product Owner doesn’t have control or even visibility into the product’s budget? No one will know if it’s successful.
In blog two of three, I cover five more ways a Product Owner on a Scrum Team should not behave. Watch out for these behaviors or traits.
In the fourth and final blog in this series on what happens when Agile requirements go wrong, I tackle the final four anti-patterns.
There are many ways requirements can go wrong in Agile. In Part 2 of 4, I tackle five more requirements anti-patterns so you can avoid them.
Managing the Product Backlog is a big job, and there are many ways it can go epically wrong. Learn about the top 5 ways you can screw it up.
Some people can jump right into the Product Owner role, but for most, training provides an essential foundation to do the job successfully.
It’s a fact: The Product Owner is indeed a member of the Scrum Team. But when the PO doesn’t act like a team member, you’re in for trouble.
A Product Owner and a Business Analyst make a winning team by working together to achieve the best and most valuable outcomes.
When meetings went virtual due to COVID, I had to make remote retros effective. Here are 6 Awesome & Fun Visual Remote Retrospectives.
The creators of the Scrum Guide, Ken Schwaber, and Jeff Sutherland, released an update to the Scrum Guide in 2020. Find out what’s new!