Agile Needs a Product Owner




Lean-Agile Straight Talk show

Summary: Why you need a product owner for Agile The Voice of the Customer should set the priorities and vision for the product you seek to deliver. But getting a handle on that Voice can be really hard. Customers can be hard to pin down. They may feel like they are too busy to talk to you or too far away to engage with them successfully. Often, there is more than one customer with a variety of demands – even conflicting demands. And then how do you decide who to listen to? Have you ever found yourself in that situation? Have you found yourself having to guess what customers want? Or, even worse, having to rely on the Marketing department to guess for you? Has that worked well for you? Guessing never works well for me. And it violates one of my fundamental rules for project management: Assume Nothing. Never assume you know what the customer is wanting. Never assume an impediment is too hard to overcome. Never assume a requirement is written in stone. Assume Nothing. Ask someone who knows. The Lean-Agile solution to this challenge is the “Product Owner” role. We discussed this in the Product Owner as part of the Product Development Team podcast. But because the Product Owner is so central to Lean-Agile approaches, it seemed good to get an additional perspective. So, I am turning to Alan Shalloway to get his take. Recommendations - Training by Net Objectives Design Patterns Thinking Recommendations - Reading Design Patterns Explained, 2nd Edition, by Alan Shalloway and Jim Trott Music used in this podcast: “Pizzaman” and “Chocolate” ©2006 William Cushman: ghostnotes.blogspot.com For more information, contact info@netobjectives.com or visit us at www.netobjectives.com Blog Type: PodcastLog in or register to post comments