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Learning Path

Certified Scrum Product Owner: From Vision to Value

Built for Product Owners and Product Managers who want a practical, repeatable way to turn ideas into outcomes—without losing alignment, clarity, or momentum.

  • Create a clear product direction that teams can execute without constant rework.
  • Build and refine a backlog that connects customer needs to measurable value.
  • Improve delivery decisions with better slicing, prioritization, and stakeholder alignment.

Path Steps

Step-by-step: From Vision to Value

Work through these steps in order. Each step links to a specific article or video post (EasyDNNnews item), includes a one-sentence focus, and (optionally) a small exercise to apply it immediately.

1

You’ll learn how to express a clear product direction that aligns stakeholders and guides real backlog decisions.

Do this exercise: Write a one-sentence vision + three measurable outcomes you want in 90 days.
2

You’ll learn how to clarify who you serve and what decisions they must make—so your backlog has purpose.

Do this exercise: List 2 primary user types and the top 3 “jobs” they need done.
3

You’ll learn a practical slicing approach to create small, testable items that still deliver real value.

4

You’ll learn a simple prioritization model that makes tradeoffs explicit and reduces thrash.

Do this exercise: Score your top 5 backlog items by Value, Risk, and Learning (1–5).
5

You’ll learn how to run refinement so teams leave with shared understanding—not just more tickets.

6

You’ll learn lightweight stakeholder habits that keep direction aligned while protecting team focus.

7

You’ll learn simple metrics that show whether you’re improving value delivery—not just shipping more.

Steps - Free

24 Feb 2026

Step 2: Identify customers, users, and the decisions that matter

Author: Rod Claar  /  Categories: Product Owner Learning Path  /  Rate this article:
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Clarify the Layers

Customer
The economic buyer. They decide to fund or continue the product.

User
The person interacting with the product to complete work.

These are often not the same person.

When teams confuse them, they build for activity instead of value.


Focus on Decisions, Not Features

Users do not want “a dashboard.”
They want to decide:

  • Is this safe to release?

  • Should I prioritize this work?

  • Is performance improving?

  • Where is the risk?

Every backlog item should support a meaningful decision.

If it does not, question it.


Use the “Job to Be Done” Lens

A job is not a task.
It is progress someone is trying to make.

Structure:

When I am [situation], I want to [motivation], so I can [desired outcome].

Example:

When I am preparing for Sprint Planning, I want clarity on backlog readiness, so I can commit confidently.

Now your backlog has direction.


Exercise

  1. List 2 primary user types

  2. For each, define their top 3 jobs to be done

Example format:

User Type 1: Product Owner

  • Prioritize backlog based on business impact

  • Clarify acceptance criteria before refinement

  • Communicate release impact to stakeholders

User Type 2: Developer

  • Understand intent behind each story

  • Identify edge cases early

  • Estimate effort with minimal ambiguity

If your backlog does not clearly help these six jobs, it lacks purpose.

Precision at this step prevents waste later.

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A curated playlist of specific YouTube content.

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