
PSPO I Study Guide
KVA to KPI Mapping
| Key Value Area (KVA) | Purpose | Common KPIs |
|---|---|---|
| Current Value (CV) | Measures the value currently delivered to customers, users, and the organization. | Customer satisfaction, NPS, retention rate, revenue per user, product usage frequency. |
| Unrealized Value (UV) | Estimates potential future value if unmet needs were addressed. | Market share gap, opportunity score, customer requests backlog, feature desirability. |
| Ability to Innovate (A2I) | Reflects how easily the organization can deliver new capabilities. | Defect escape rate, deployment frequency, technical debt ratio, innovation rate. |
| Time to Market (T2M) | Evaluates how quickly ideas and value reach customers. | Cycle time, lead time, release frequency, time-to-learn, customer validation speed. |
Product Owner Overview
- Stewards value, not people management.
- Owns Product Backlog content and order.
- Ensures transparency of goals, progress, and value.
Product Value and Empiricism
- Make value visible: outcomes over outputs.
- Run small experiments. Measure. Adapt.
- Align work with Product Goal and stakeholder needs.
Product Goal
- Each Product Backlog has one Product Goal.
- PBIs should contribute to the Product Goal.
- The Product Goal can evolve as new evidence emerges.
Stakeholders and Transparency
- Map stakeholders by interest, influence, and needs.
- Publish a transparent Product Goal and roadmap.
- Set expectations about uncertainty and learning.
Product Backlog Management
- Order by value, risk, learning, and urgency.
- Right-size PBIs so the team can forecast responsibly.
- Do not micromanage tasks. Focus on outcomes and acceptance criteria.
Release Strategy and Forecasting
- Use throughput, cycle time, or velocity as historical evidence, not guarantees.
- Favor frequent, small releases to reduce risk and time to learning.
- Update forecasts at least each Sprint with new evidence.
Evidence-Based Management (EBM)
- Current Value (CV): Value delivered today to customers, users, and the organization.
- Unrealized Value (UV): Potential value if unmet needs are served.
- Ability to Innovate (A2I): Ease of delivering new capabilities.
- Time to Market (T2M): Speed of delivering and validating value.
- Collect quantitative and qualitative measures for each KVA.
- Link measures to decisions, experiments, and Product Goal.
- Review trends each Sprint and adapt goals and plans.
Evidence-Based Management: KVAs and Measures
* denotes an item that is in the EBM GuideCurrent Value (CV): Measures the value the product delivers today to customers, users, and the organization.
- * Net Promoter Score (NPS): NPS = % Promoters − % Detractors
- Promoters (9–10): Loyal enthusiasts who will keep buying and refer others.
- Passives (7–8): Satisfied but unenthusiastic customers vulnerable to competitive offerings.
- Detractors (0–6): Unhappy customers who may damage your brand through negative word of mouth.
- * Revenue per Employee: Total revenue divided by employee count over the same period.
- Product Cost Ratio: Total product and operating costs divided by product revenue.
- * Employee Satisfaction: Aggregated scores from periodic engagement or sentiment surveys.
- * Customer Satisfaction: Survey or feedback averages collected after key interactions or releases.
- Customer Usage Index: Feature or session usage frequency compiled from analytics logs.
Unrealized Value (UV): Estimates potential future value if unmet needs or opportunities are addressed.
- * Relative Market Share: Measures your current market share compared to that of your largest competitor.
Relative Market Share = (Your Market Share) ÷ (Market Share of Largest Competitor)- A ratio above 1 means you lead the market.
- A ratio below 1 means competitors have a larger share.
- * Market Share Gap: how much unrealized value remains between where you are and where you could be.
Market Share Gap = (Target or Competitor Market Share) − (Your Market Share) - Potential Market Share: Modeled share based on addressable market and competitive benchmarks.
- * Customer Satisfaction Gap: Desired experience score minus current experience score from surveys.
- Desired Customer Experience: Qualitative synthesis of what customers say they want to achieve, captured via interviews and studies.
Time to Market (T2M): Measures how quickly ideas and value reach customers and generate learning.
- * Build and Integration Frequency: Count of integrated and tested builds per period from CI data.
- * Release Frequency: Number of production releases per period from deployment records.
- Release Stabilization Period: Time spent fixing issues between “ready to release” and actual release.
- Mean Time to Repair: Average elapsed time from detection of a failure to restored service.
- Customer Cycle Time: Time from start of work on a release to availability for customers.
- * Lead Time: Time from idea or request to customer benefit recorded in analytics or support data.
- Lead Time for Changes: Time from code commit to running in production captured by pipeline tooling.
- Deployment Frequency: Count of successful production deployments per period.
- Time to Restore Service: Duration from outage start to full recovery as logged by incident tools.
- Time to Learn: Time from experiment kickoff to validated learning outcome.
- Time to Remove Impediment: Average time from raising an impediment to closure.
- Time to Pivot: Elapsed time from new market evidence to delivering a changed approach.
Ability to Innovate (A2I): Quantifies how effectively the organization can deliver new capabilities.
- Employee Engagement: Engagement survey indices aligned to organizational goals.
- * Innovation Rate: Percentage of effort on new capabilities versus maintenance or fixes.
- * Defect Trends: Change in defect counts or rates per period from tracking systems.
- On-Product Index: Percentage of time teams spend directly on value-producing work.
- Installed Version Index: Number of supported product versions maintained in the field.
- * Technical Debt: Estimated rework effort documented in code quality tools or backlog.
- Production Incident Count: Number of production incidents requiring developer action.
- Active Product Branches: Count of maintained code branches in version control.
- Time Spent Merging Code: Average effort to merge changes across branches measured by VCS data.
- Time Spent Context-Switching: Measured loss of focus time from interruptions and parallel work.
- Change Failure Rate: Percentage of releases causing degradation, hotfix, or rollback.
Value Metrics and Dashboards
- Current Value: NPS, customer retention, revenue per user.
- Unrealized Value: addressable segments, opportunity scores.
- Ability to Innovate: defect escape rate, deployment lead time.
- Time to Market: cycle time, release frequency, lead time to value.
Product Economics
- Apply ROI, cost of delay, risk exposure, and option value.
- Stop or pivot when marginal value falls below cost or risk tolerance.
- Marginal Value The additional value gained by doing one more unit of work — for example, developing one more feature or iteration. When the marginal value (the benefit of doing a little more) becomes smaller than the cost or risk, Scrum teams know it’s time to stop, pivot, or re-prioritize.
- Cost The resources spent to achieve the next bit of value — including developer effort, opportunity cost, infrastructure, or maintenance burden.
- Risk Tolerance The amount of uncertainty or potential loss an organization is willing to accept before it must make a change. High-risk-tolerant teams may continue exploring uncertain opportunities; low-risk-tolerant teams may pivot sooner once evidence shows value is doubtful.
- Prefer experiments that reduce uncertainty quickly.
Collaboration and Communication
- Roadmap workshops and Product Goal alignment sessions.
- Sprint Reviews as collaborative planning, not demos only.
- Stakeholder maps and communication cadences.
Professionalism and Ethics
- Make tradeoffs explicit and test assumptions openly.
- Protect product integrity and user trust.
- Promote learning and continuous improvement.
Stakeholder Mapping
- Clarify who contributes input to the Product Backlog.
- Understand who receives value and how that value differs.
- Balance competing needs and priorities among groups.
- Tailor communication based on influence, interest, and attitude.
Step 2: Evaluate their Influence (power to affect the product) and Interest (how much they care about outcomes).
Step 3: Place them on a 2×2 grid to determine engagement strategy.
Step 4: Add two optional layers for richer insight:
- Value Expectation: What kind of value they seek (financial, user experience, compliance, reputation).
- Attitude: Their current stance — supportive, neutral, or resistant.
High Interest
Manage Closely
Involve in planning and major decisions.
Example: Executive sponsor, key product owner, strategic partner
Low Interest
Keep Satisfied
Provide concise updates and ensure alignment.
Example: Finance, legal, compliance
High Interest
Keep Informed
Engage through feedback sessions and demos.
Example: Teachers, support staff, end users
Low Interest
Monitor
Minimal contact unless interest increases.
Example: Peripheral departments, external observers
| Stakeholder | Influence | Interest | Value Expectation | Attitude |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chief Product Officer | High | High | Strategic alignment, ROI | Supportive |
| Legal/Compliance | High | Low | Risk reduction, regulation compliance | Neutral |
| Teachers (Primary Users) | Low | High | Ease of use, reliability, results | Supportive |
| Students | Low | Medium | Engagement, intuitive interface | Neutral |
| IT Operations | Medium | Medium | System stability, scalability | Supportive |
This example combines influence, interest, value expectation, and attitude to help guide communication, prioritization, and change management strategies.