image
The Ultimate Drawing Course Beginner to Advanced...
$179
$79
image
User Experience Design Essentials - Adobe XD UI UX...
$179
$79
Total:
$659

Description

Agile software development practices and product management 
borrow a number of concepts from the domain of traditional product design and manufacturing engineering
, for example, lean development, Kanban and more.
However, it is quite common for organisations who implement agile methodologies, like Scrum, to hold the illusion that these would act as the silver bullet to resolve all the weaknesses in their software development and management practices.
The reality is, this is far from being the case! To be able to conceive and foster great software products, the way they are engineered ought to be based on
the kinds of theoretical and practical underpinnings that are inherent of traditional branches of engineering
. This way, the sufficient level of rigour can be achieved to permit the evolution of well-rounded and well-engineered software products that deliver value to stakeholders and customers.
This is where
product design management can be leveraged to revitalise and complement agile software development practices
. Product design management may be seen as an 
enterprise philosophy and a multi-disciplinary management framework
 that fosters the embodiment, the deployment and gradual improvement of the products that the enterprise develops, grows and retires over time.
Aspiring to proper product design management in the world of agile software development demands not only the right mindset as individuals, but also the use of suitable tools as well as the skills to apply a range of appropriate techniques. This course will shed light on
a set of important tools and techniques to support strategic and tactical agile product management
.
The course is chiefly
targeted at agile practitioners
, for example, product managers, product owners, business analysts, agile project managers, etc. The course may also be taken if you have an interest in applied product design management, provided you have had some prior basic exposure to agile software development or have worked within an agile business.
What this course is NOT about:
NOT a course in agile methodologies, agile manifesto, Scrum, Kanban, user story mapping, velocity charts, etc.
NOT a course about interaction or user experience design
Who this course is for:
Novice agile practitioners, for example, product owners, product managers, business analysts and project managers
Technical professionals who want to consolidate their knowledge to add value to software product development and want to have a more holistic view of how to embody solutions, using proper product design management and engineering underpinnings
Less technical individuals who work in, for example, marketing and sales and who do not come from a technical background but wishing to gain knowledge of product design management concepts
Students from traditional engineering backgrounds wanting to learn about the applied dimension of product design management principles

What you'll learn

Become familiar with jargon used in agile product development

Master and apply a wealth of tools and techniques to plan the life cycle, strategy and tactics for product realisation

Adopt the mindset of a qualified product design engineer for embodying successful software product development in agile

Identify opportunities for applying the diligence of product design management to the practice of agile product management

Requirements

  • You will need a copy of Adobe XD 2019 or above. A free trial can be downloaded from Adobe.
  • No previous design experience is needed.
  • No previous Adobe XD skills are needed.

Course Content

27 sections • 95 lectures
Expand All Sections
1-Introduction
6
1.1-Welcome to the course!
1.2-Why aim for product design management rigour?
1.3-Audience, learning outcomes, scope & prerequisites
1.4-Course structure
1.5-Checkpoint: Will this course meet my needs?
1.6-Product design management rigour
2-Product life cycle & requirements
8
2.1-Product life cycle & requirements: Overview
2.2-Product life cycle: Part 1
2.3-Product life cycle: Part 2
2.4-Product maturity curve
2.5-Product life cycle
2.6-Product requirements life cycle
2.7-Product requirements life cycle
2.8-The ultimate 'voice of the customer' capture tool: House of Quality
3-Product strategy: Positioning & fundamental ROI analysis
5
3.1-Product strategy: Overview
3.2-Not your typical SWOT analysis...
3.3-Product break-even analysis: Part 1
3.4-Product break-even analysis: Part 2
3.5-Product break-even analysis
4-Product strategy: Technology readiness
3
4.1-Technology readiness: Part 1
4.2-Technology readiness: Part 2
4.3-Technology Readiness
5-Product strategy: Product roadmaps
8
5.1-Product roadmap: Part 1
5.2-Product roadmap: Part 2
5.3-Product roadmap: Part 3
5.4-Product roadmap: Part 4
5.5-Product roadmap
5.6-Product roadmap exploration
5.7-Other examples of product roadmaps
5.8-Presenting a product roadmap
6-Product tactics: Sizing and prioritisation of work items
5
6.1-[Audio] Product tactics: Overview
6.2-Attribute analysis: Overview
6.3-Attribute analysis: Radar chart: Part 1
6.4-Attribute analysis: Radar chart: Part 2
6.5-Attribute analysis: Radar Chart
7-Product tactics: Product embodiment
8
7.1-Product reference model
7.2-Product embodiment design: Overview
7.3-Product embodiment design: Architecture diagrams
7.4-Product embodiment design: Business process modelling
7.5-Product embodiment design: Information flow modelling
7.6-Product embodiment design: Domain modelling
7.7-Product embodiment design: User interface design
7.8-Showcases
8-Product tactics: Managing technology change
2
8.1-UAT & release management
8.2-Change control
9-Product tactics: Quality management: Cause & effect analysis
5
9.1-[Audio] Overview
9.2-Ishikawa diagram: Part 1
9.3-Ishikawa diagram: Part 2
9.4-Ishikawa diagram
9.5-Root Cause Analysis Cheat-sheet
10-Product tactics: Analysing complex flows
4
10.1-Critical path analysis: Part 1
10.2-Critical path analysis: Part 2
10.3-Critical path analysis: Part 3
10.4-Critical path analysis
11-Wrap-up
2
11.1-Conclusion
11.2-Acknowledgements and more