In 2009, I published Scrum Product Ownership - Ed. 1. Then the 2'nd Ed. in 2013. This is the 3'rd edition, celebrating the 10th anniversary of the original book. It's evolved from a beginners guide to be a more balanced reference for beginners, practitioner, and expert Product Owners.
When I published the first edition of this book in 2009, my purpose was to fill the gap in basic guidance around the role of product owner. Very little existed at that time, and many people were struggling to execute the basics of the role. My intent was to provide a 101-style guide that covered those basics and related Scrum and agile practices.
From 2009 to 2012 the initial edition met that objective quite well. During that time, the agile community evolved. Scaling started becoming more of a challenge, and so did portfolio-level backlogs. The lean software community also started developing. So, I published the second edition in 2013 to refresh the book’s treatment of these and other developments. I also provided more real-world stories, while preserving the value the book would have to a first-time product owner.
From 2013 to 2016 our community continued to evolve. Scaling has continued to be a challenge and SAFe has become the leader in that space. DevOps and UX interests are now being incorporated into agile instances. Weaving architectural strategies and other technical workflow into backlogs is still a challenge. But while there are advances, I still encounter many product owners who struggle to prioritize a backlog, figure out effective ways to write technical user stories, or get anyone to attend and engage with their sprint reviews. As it turns out, the basics are still a challenge for new and experienced product owners alike.
This evolution, and the challenges that accompany it, have inspired me to write the third edition of this book. My overarching goal is to maintain its usefulness as a guide to the beginning product owner, but also provide a relevant resource for experienced product owners who are struggling with today’s real-world problems.
From the Inside Out Nearly every conversation in this book starts with your interactions with your agile or Scrum team. I’m certainly not downplaying the importance of being customer- or outward-facing as a product owner. But I’ve seen so many Scrum product owners who focus exclusively on the outward direction and forget how much their team’s need them.
While I honor how difficult this role is, I want to emphasize the characteristics of great product owners as they engage their teams in the moment of execution and delivery. That, before they look externally, they have established a firm partnership with their team and are spending sufficient time with them.
I often say that the prime directive of a product owner is to feed their team well. This exemplifies the inside out mindset and posture I think is so important for effective product ownership.