INNOVATION ROOTS Announces SAFe PO/PM Workshop

It’s a great pleasure to announce a workshop on SAFe PO/PM which will be held on June 30- July 1st 2018 at Bengaluru. The workshop is presented by Priyank Pathak (Curator at INNOVATION ROOTS), an Enterprise Agile Transformation and Continuous Delivery Consultant dedicated to provide training, mentoring, and coaching services to companies gain outcomes like quality, value and continuous flow.

In this two days course, the participants will learn about the roles and responsibilities of Product Owner and Product Manager, drives the delivery of value in an organization where SAFe is implemented. The participants will get an overview of the Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe), carry a Lean-Agile mindset, and understand how the Product Manager and Product Owner roles operate in a SAFe enterprise.

Finally, the participants will get in-depth understanding of activities, tools, and mechanics that directly affect the delivery of value in system. The workshop also teaches participants to identify the major components of SAFe framework, key roles and responsibilities  within a SAFe implementation, connect SAFe framework with Lean-Agile mindset and values, and how to apply values stream strategies to manage solutions and values.

By the end of the workshop, the participants will be able to write user stories, Epics, Features, and Capabilities related to the SAFe context, and gain a solid foundation to manage backlogs and program in a Lean-Agile enterprise. The course is recommended for already existing Product Manager and Product Owners, Business Owners, Business Analysts, Solution Managers, Program Managers, PMO Personnel, Portfolio Managers and Process Leads.

Register for the workshop at www.innovationroots.com

Causation | Glossary

Definition:

Causation is an act or process of causing something, a relationship that describes and analyses cause and effect.

This is the capacity of one variable to influence another variable. The first variable bring the second into existence or may cause the incidence of the second viable to fluctuate.

A correlation between variables, however, does not automatically mean that the change in one variable is the cause of the change in the values of the other variable. Causation indicates that one event is the result of the occurrence of the other event; i.e. there is a causal relationship between the two events.

Further Reading:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causation
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/causation