Course Information
Course Overview
[Unofficial] Prepare For Agile Product Owner Level 1 Certification And Succeed In 2025
IMPORTANT Professional Scrum Product Owner and PSPO are registered trademarks of Advanced Development Methods (Scrum dot org) and this course is not licensed, endorsed, or affiliated with Advanced Development Methods (Scrum dot org) in any way. This course and practice exams are neither endorsed by, nor in partnership, nor affiliated with (Scrum dot org) or any other organizations.
Welcome to The Ultimate Product Owner Certification Training!
If you're looking to develop an Agile mindset, master the Scrum framework, and ultimately become a certified Product Owner, you're in the right place.
Hi,
I am Vladimir from Bulgaria, and I will be leading you through the course. I work in an Agile team, and I am a Project Management Professional (PMP certified) with 5 Scrum certifications, including Product Owner levels 1 and 2.
I teach over 162,136 students and have received over 25,000 positive reviews.
Who Is This Course For?
This course is perfect for:
Current and would-be Product Owners
Scrum Masters and Agile Leaders
Project and Product Managers
Business Analysts and agile team members
By the end of it, you will feel confident in your Scrum Product Ownership knowledge. In addition, you will have a perfect understanding of the Scrum Framework and its rules, accountabilities (formerly known as roles), events, artifacts, and commitments.
How Is This Course Organized?
Here is just a glimpse of what you will learn inside:
Section 1 - Introduction To Agile Principles and Scrum Overview
The difference between Adaptive and Predictive approaches to development
What is Scrum (a high-level overview)?
The 5 Scrum Values and what they mean in the real world
The Agile manifesto and the 12 Agile principles
The concepts of Iterative and Incremental Development
Agile Planning vs Waterfall Planning
The Agile Concept: Timeboxing Explained
Sections 2, 3, and 4 - The Scrum Framework
The concepts of Cross-Functionality and Self-Management
Characteristics of the three sets of accountabilities
The Scrum Master
The Developers
The Product Owner (with emphasis)
The Sprint and its main purpose
Sprint Planning and answering the three questions - why, what, and how
Daily Scrum (a key inspect and adapt event for the Developers)
Sprint Review and why feedback is critically important
Sprint Retrospective (the driver of continuous improvement)
The concept of Feedback Loops
The Product Backlog (the single source of work undertaken by the Scrum Team)
The Sprint Backlog (when does it emerge, who is accountable for it, what happens with the PBIs that are not complete)
The Increment (the relationship between the Increment and the Product Backlog, who decides to release it, and in what condition it should be)
The Definition Of Done (Who Crafts It And Why? Is It Mandatory? Can it change?)
The Product Goal (the long-term objective for the Scrum Team)
The Sprint Goal (the objective for the Sprint)
Section 5 - Mastering Product Ownership in Scrum
The Product Vision and why it is important
Value (Financial and Societal) - The Most Important Topic For Any Product Owner
Evidence-Based Management (EBM) Guide And The 4 Key-Value Areas Explained
Current Value (CV)
Unrealized Value (UV)
Time-to-Market (T2M)
Ability to Innovate (A2I)
The Difference Between Product and Project Management (Mental Shifts)
The 3 Attributes Of A Product Backlog Item (PBI).
Description
Size
Order
Product Backlog Refinement (How The Product Owner and The Developers Collaborate)
The Concept Of Readiness and The Definition Of Ready
Story Points (Effort-based Units To Estimate the Size Of the PBIs)
Planning Poker (A Voting Technique That Eliminates The Psychological Bias Called Anchoring)
Information Radiators
Burndown Charts
Burnup Charts
The Cone Of Uncertainty (Beware When You Make Promises Regarding Project Completion)
Technical Debt (Any Product Owner MUST Know If They Can Pay The Debt Back)
Code Refactoring
Continuous Integration
Release Planning (What Should We Consider Before A Release?)
Scaled Scrum Explained (What Scrum Believes In)
Component Teams vs Feature Teams
Types Of Contracts and Budgeting
Section 6 - Scrum Example (The Agile Company: Intelligent Web Solutions Helps a Chiropractic Clinic Build a Conversion-Focused Website)
Introduction to the number 1 issue tracking tool used by Agile teams - JIRA
How to create a Product Backlog
How to create a Sprint Backlog
How to write User Stories, How to assign tasks (Careful, the PO doesn't do it)
How to write the Sprint Goal
How to set the duration of a Sprint
An example of high-priority process improvement and how the Scrum Master resolves impediments
An example of the Definition of Done (plus updates)
An example of Acceptance Criteria
The difference between the Definition of Done and the Acceptance Criteria
Section 7 - Avoid Common Mistakes
Top reasons why people fail the exam (and solutions)
Recommended Resources (Free Practice Exams Included)
Section 8 - Agile Product Owner Practice Exams
Let's set the stage with a simple quiz
[Unofficial] Practice Exam 1
[Unofficial] Practice Exam 2
[Highly Recommended] You can take these exams multiple times as the questions and answers are randomized.
Section 9 - How Product Owners Deal With Difficult Situations
Confronting PO Challenges: Explore eight distinct scenarios that demand strong Product Owner leadership and decision-making.
Witness My Analysis: See how I dissect each complex situation, identifying key factors and potential courses of action with clear reasoning.
Section 10 - Essential Product Owner Strategic Skills In Action
Defining Your Product's North Star: Uncover a comprehensive process for creating and articulating a powerful Product Vision Statement (Parts 1-3).
Navigating the Stakeholder Landscape: Explore effective techniques for successful Stakeholder Management (Parts 1-2), building alignment and fostering collaboration.
Validating Ideas with Experiments: Learn a framework for designing and executing impactful product experiments (Parts 1-2) to drive data-informed decisions.
Section 11 - Essential Product Owner Strategic Skills In Action
The Product Owner's Guide to UX/UI: Explore the essential UX/UI principles (Parts 1-3) that enable Product Owners to make informed decisions about product design and usability.
From Big Picture to Granular Detail: Understand how Epics and User Stories connect strategic goals to actionable development tasks, utilizing the "Three C's" for clarity.
Ensuring Quality Requirements: Learn and apply the INVEST criteria to write effective User Stories and master the process of defining clear Bug Tasks.
Do I Get A Guarantee?
You can enroll now 100 percent risk-free because you receive a 30-day, unconditional money-back guarantee.
If for any reason you are not satisfied (and that might be something as simple as you don't like my accent) - no problem, you are one click away from a refund.
No hassle, no hard feelings!
Go ahead and click the Buy Now button right now and let’s awaken the Product Owner within almost instantly!
DISCLAIMER STATEMENT
The statements made and opinions expressed herein belong exclusively to the creator of this course and are not shared by or represent the viewpoint of Scrum dot org. This training does not constitute an endorsement of any product, service, or point of view. Scrum dot org makes no representations, warranties, or assurances of any kind, express or implied, as to the completeness, accuracy, reliability, suitability, availability, or currency of the content contained in this presentation or any material related to this presentation. In no event shall Scrum dot org, its agents, officers, employees, licensees, or affiliates be liable for any damages whatsoever (including, without limitation, damages for loss of profits, business information, loss of information) arising out of the information or statements contained in the training. Any reliance you place on such content is strictly at your own risk.
TRADEMARK NOTICE STATEMENT
Scrum dot org, Professional Scrum Master, Professional Scrum Product Owner, PSM, PSM I, PSM 1, PSPO, PSPO I, PSPO 1 are trademarks of Scrum dot org and may be registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office and in other countries.
ATTRIBUTION AND USE FOR THE SCRUM GUIDE, NEXUS GUIDE, AND EVIDENCE-BASED MANAGEMENT GUIDE
This course uses screenshots from the Scrum Guide, Nexus Guide, and Evidence-Based Management Guide to point the attention of the student to important concepts, ideas, rules, and practices.
The authors of the Scrum Guide are Ken Schwaber and Jeff Sutherland.
The Nexus Guide is developed and sustained by Ken Schwaber and Scrum dot org.
Evidence-Based Management was collaboratively developed by Scrum .org, the Professional Scrum Trainer Community, Ken Schwaber, and Christina Schwaber.
No changes have been made to the content of the Scrum Guide, Nexus Guide, and Evidence-Based Management Guide.
License - Attribution Share-Alike license of Creative Commons
This course contains the use of artificial intelligence.
Course Content
- 10 section(s)
- 120 lecture(s)
- Section 1 Agile & Scrum Fundamentals for Product Owners
- Section 2 Scrum Team: Roles (Accountabilities) Explained
- Section 3 The Five Scrum Events and Their Purpose
- Section 4 Scrum Artifacts and Their Commitments
- Section 5 Mastering Product Ownership in Scrum
- Section 6 Scrum Example - A Solution For A Chiropractic Clinic
- Section 7 Avoid These Mistakes On Your Exam
- Section 8 Two Product Onwer Practice Exams [Updated for 2025]
- Section 9 How Product Owners Deal With Difficult Situations
- Section 10 Essential Product Owner Strategic Skills In Action
What You’ll Learn
- [Unofficial] Detailed Preparation For An Agile Product Owner Level 1 Certification (A Total Of 270 Questions & Explanations)
- [Up-To-Date] Master Agile Product Ownership - No Previous Knowledge Needed
- [Downloadable] 47 Slides, 80+ Scrum and Agile Drawings & 11 Audio Files
- Characteristics Of The Product Vision
- Value (Financial & Societal) - The Most Important Topic For Any Product Owner
- Evidence-Based Management Guide(TM) And The 4 Key Value Areas Explained
- The Difference Between Adaptive and Predictive Approach To Development
- The Difference Between Agile vs Waterfall Planning
- Release Planning
- Scaled Scrum
- The 3 Attributes Of A Product Backlog Item (PBI) Explained
- The Difference Between Product & Project Management
- Types Of Contracts & Budgeting
- Characteristics Of The Scrum Master
- Characteristics Of The Product Owner
- Characteristics Of The Developers
- The Agile Concept "Timeboxing"
- The Concepts of Iterative and Incremental Development
- Characteristics Of The Sprint
- Characteristics Of The Sprint Planning Event
- Characteristics Of The Daily Scrum Event
- Characteristics Of The Sprint Review Event
- Characteristics Of The Sprint Retrospective Event
- Characteristics Of The Product Backlog
- Characteristics Of The Sprint Backlog
- Characteristics Of The Increment
- Characteristics Of The Product Goal
- Characteristics Of Definition of Done
- The Difference Between The Definition Of Done and The Definition Of Ready
- Understand Story Points As A Relative Unit Of Measurement
- The The Planning Poker Activity To Eliminate The Anchoring Bias
- Burnup and Burndown Charts Explained
- The Cone Of Uncertainty And What It Shows
- The Concept Of Technical Debt & Code Refactoring
- The Concept Of "Feedback Loops"
- The Difference Between The Definition Of Done and Acceptance Criteria
- Product Backlog Refinement
- The Difference Between Component Teams and Feature Teams
Skills covered in this course
Reviews
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VVenugopal Vangimalla
Vladimir explains clearly the fundamentals of Scrum, roles, events and also differences between old and new Scrum guides. As a professional with 7 years of experience in scrum teams, i see that the information is very organized and well explained to suit even for someone new to the Scrum. Well done Vladimir.
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MMarc Burkhard
it hopefully helped me to become certified :) thanks
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KKenneth A Nowak
I like the content, easy to follow and seems to be following a nice but detailed plan.
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DDANIELA PETRE
So far, I find the course interesting, and the way it is explained captivates me, prompting me to click for more information.