Certified Scrum Product Owner
CSPO in San Francisco
Though each CSPO course varies depending on the instructor, all Certified Scrum Product Owner courses focus on Scrum from a product owner's perspective. Graduates will receive the CSPO designation. All CSPO course are taught by Certified Scrum Trainers.

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This Certified Product Owner training class is a highly interactive learning experience designed to turbo-charge your success in Scrum. The Product Owner is a key member of the Scrum team who is responsible for the ROI of the team’s efforts by determining what the team builds. Come learn from one of today’s most experienced and sought-after Agile trainers; you will leave inspired and empowered to drive lasting improvements in the way your organization builds software. |

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After you complete the course, you’ll know
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The two day course is an extraordinary learning experience that you’ll never forget. Topics include:
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On successful completion of the course, you’ll receive
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Why take training from CollabNet?
Need more reasons? We've trained more than 14,000 Certified Scrum Masters - more than anyone. Check out some of their testimonials here. |

What are you waiting for? REGISTER at the top or see more courses here.
| Dates: | 20-21 Feb 2013 |
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| Location: | San Francisco, CA |
| Venue: |
Renaissance San Francisco Stanford Court Hotel |
| Price: |
$1275 |
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| On successful completion of the course, each student receives: | |
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| Course topics include: | |
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| Scrum Flow | |
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Learn the basic rules, roles and activities of Scrum. What is Scrum and how many details do you need to know?Who are the players, and how do they interact? What are the critical meetings for the Product Owner? How should you manage your time with the team in relation to all other tasks you need to do? |

| Agile Product Owner Role | |
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Understand the keys to being great at your job. What are your responsibilities to the team, and which are most important? What responsibilities are most important to your management? How do you best represent the customer to your team? What happens if the team wants to implement something not on your plan? |
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| The Product Backlog (Creation and Management) | |
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Organize and prioritize all your team's work. How do you communicate to your team what needs to be done? What are the processes you use for prioritizing the work? How do you make sure that everything required gets done? What is the best way to handle non-functional requirements? Product issues and bugs? Emergencies? |

| Writing Stories | |
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Translate requirements to the development team. What is a user story? What are the benefits of following the classic format for stories? What happens if you don’t know all the detail yet? Why is the definition of "done" important to you? How do you create multiple stories from an Epic? |
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| Planning and Estimation | |
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Keep releases on track. Why do we need to estimate? What are the most effective estimation techniques in Agile? How is planning on a Scrum team different from traditional planning? How do you plan with multiple teams on a single product? How do you plan for multiple, related products with multiple backlogs? |

| Release Planning and Metrics | |
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Guide the product out the door. How can you predict when the release will be ready? How can you make sure that the release process is well coordinated? What are the most important metrics to use and how should you use them? How do you deal with people who are looking for metrics based on a waterfall method? |
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| Working with the Customer | |
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Manage the relationship. How can everyone be a facilitator? How do you communicate what the team is working on? How does the Sprint Review meeting help ensure that the customer is getting what’s required? How do you tell a customer “no”? What happens when customers change their requirements? How do I represent all customers and not just the loudest ones? |

| Scrum in Large Organizations | |
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Master large projects. What are the different ways of scaling Scrum? What is a Scrum of Scrums? Who should participate? How do you effectively divide the work into manageable pieces? How do you keep track and prioritize backlogs for all the teams? How do you handle release planning and coordination for large projects? |
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What are you waiting for? REGISTER at the top or see more courses here.

| Regardless of whether you have prior exposure to Scrum, we ask that you review the following material before attending your class (links to this material will also be sent to you upon registration): | |
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