Use this syllabus as your PMI-ACP® coverage checklist. Work through each domain and practice immediately after each task set.
What’s covered
Mindset (28%)
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Task 1 — Experiment Early
- Explain why early experimentation reduces delivery risk and increases learning velocity in uncertain environments.
- Select an appropriate experiment type (prototype, spike, MVP slice) to validate solution feasibility or market need.
- Define success criteria and timebox for an experiment so results are decision-ready.
- Build an increment that is small enough to learn quickly yet representative enough to validate assumptions.
- Identify signals that invalidate assumptions and decide whether to pivot, persevere, or stop the initiative.
- Create an environment that encourages safe-to-try experiments, learning, and iteration without blame.
- Document experiment outcomes and integrate learning into backlog refinement and planning decisions.
- Communicate experiment results to stakeholders in terms of evidence, trade-offs, and next decisions.
Task 2 — Embrace Agile Mindset
- Describe how agile values and principles guide decisions about collaboration, delivery cadence, and change handling.
- Classify a scenario using complexity thinking and identify implications for how the team should plan and adapt.
- Apply a complexity method (CAS, Stacey Matrix, Cynefin) to determine whether work is simple, complicated, complex, or chaotic.
- Explain risks of using overly predictive approaches in complex domains and overly adaptive approaches in simple domains.
- Interpret the output of agile suitability tools and translate results into practical delivery approach choices.
- Select an agile model or framework appropriate to context (team size, constraints, product volatility, governance).
- Tailor practices and artifacts without violating core agile principles or reducing transparency.
- Identify signals that a chosen approach is mismatched and propose a better fit based on evidence.
- Create a shared team vision that connects day-to-day work to outcomes and customer value.
- Draft working agreements that define collaboration norms, decision-making, and Definition of Done/Ready expectations.
- Identify characteristics of high-performing teams and select interventions to move the team toward that state.
- Facilitate retrospectives that generate specific, owned improvement actions rather than generic observations.
- Use collaboration practices to reduce silos and improve cross-functional flow (pairing, mobbing, shared ownership).
- Demonstrate commitment to team decisions while constructively raising concerns through agreed channels.
- Assess the team’s understanding of agile and tailor coaching, practices, and ceremonies to maturity level.
- Choose an inter-team coordination approach (scrum of scrums, team of teams) based on dependencies and integration needs.
Task 4 — Build Transparency
- Identify what information must be transparent for decision-making (progress, risks, impediments, learning, and quality).
- Design information radiators that make status and process visible without requiring special access or interpretation.
- Establish feedback loops that convert transparency into action (daily sync, reviews, retrospectives, metrics reviews).
- Select communication strategies suitable for co-located and distributed teams (cadence, tooling, synchronous vs asynchronous).
- Detect when transparency is distorted by vanity metrics, hidden work, or unclear definitions and correct the system.
- Ensure risk and impediment visibility includes ownership, next actions, and escalation thresholds.
- Promote transparency across roles by aligning on shared definitions (Done, Ready, priority, risk severity).
- Use transparent progress evidence to renegotiate scope, sequencing, or release expectations with stakeholders.
Task 5 — Foster Psychological Safety
- Explain how psychological safety improves learning, candor, and quality outcomes in agile delivery.
- Promote a no-blame culture by separating problems from people and encouraging objective evidence over attribution.
- Facilitate dialogue over debate to surface assumptions, constraints, and trade-offs constructively.
- Solicit and provide constructive feedback using specific examples and agreed improvement actions.
- Create mechanisms that make it safe to raise risks, impediments, and quality concerns early.
- Encourage the team to challenge the status quo using experiments and retrospectives rather than escalation battles.
- Detect safety breakdown signals (silence, fear of reporting, blame) and intervene with coaching and structure.
- Model behaviors that reinforce safety (curiosity, humility, transparency, follow-through).
Task 6 — Shorten Feedback Loops
- Explain why shortened feedback loops reduce rework and improve product-market fit.
- Include stakeholders from day one by designing review and discovery touchpoints into cadence.
- Maximize value within a fixed timeframe by slicing work into testable increments and prioritizing learning.
- Select tools and techniques to shorten feedback (design thinking, lean startup, prototype testing) for a given scenario.
- Design acceptance criteria and validation checks that produce fast, unambiguous feedback.
- Use early feedback to refine backlog ordering, scope, and Definition of Done/Ready.
- Identify bottlenecks that slow feedback (handoffs, approvals, environment delays) and propose mitigations.
- Communicate feedback outcomes as decisions and next actions rather than raw comments.
Task 7 — Embrace Change
- Promote a growth mindset by framing change as learning and adaptation rather than failure.
- Respond to changing requirements by reordering backlog and re-planning within agreed cadence and constraints.
- Adapt processes and ceremonies based on evidence from retrospectives and delivery outcomes.
- Encourage and model cross-skilling to reduce bottlenecks and enable resilient delivery (generalizing specialists).
- Evaluate change requests against value, risk, and capacity to choose the best response strategy.
- Use transparency and metrics to explain the impact of change on scope, schedule, and quality trade-offs.
- Adapt product decisions based on learning and feedback while maintaining alignment to vision and goals.
- Identify anti-patterns that resist change (rigid handoffs, local optimization) and propose corrective actions.
Leadership (25%)
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Task 1 — Empower Teams
- Create an environment of trust by enabling transparent communication and clear decision-making.
- Select motivation techniques that encourage experimentation and appropriate risk-taking without compromising quality.
- Apply coaching and mentoring approaches to improve team capability, autonomy, and accountability.
- Promote collective ownership of goals and outcomes rather than role-silo ownership of tasks.
- Differentiate training, coaching, and mentoring and choose the right approach for a given maturity gap.
- Use emotional intelligence techniques to support empathy, influence, conflict de-escalation, and collaboration.
- Interpret non-verbal cues in team interactions and adjust facilitation to improve understanding and inclusion.
- Use self-assessment tools output to identify team capability gaps and propose targeted improvement actions.
Task 2 — Facilitate Problem Resolution
- Diagnose problems by separating symptoms from causes and collecting evidence from the system.
- Apply root-cause analysis techniques (Five Whys, Ishikawa/fishbone) to identify systemic drivers.
- Facilitate team selection of resolution strategies that maximize value and minimize unintended consequences.
- Decide when to timebox investigation, run an experiment, or escalate based on severity and impact.
- Ensure problem resolution includes ownership, next actions, and verification criteria.
- Track resolution progress transparently and remove blockers that prevent timely closure.
- Evaluate solution effectiveness and prevent recurrence through process or working agreement changes.
- Document learnings and integrate them into standards, playbooks, and onboarding where appropriate.
- Design an environment that captures and shares knowledge continuously (retrospectives, communities of practice).
- Select lightweight documentation practices that preserve learning without slowing flow.
- Leverage organizational knowledge assets from similar initiatives to avoid rework and repeated mistakes.
- Create explicit time and cadence for knowledge sharing, updates, and learning review.
- Identify when knowledge gaps create delivery risk and propose targeted learning or pairing interventions.
- Establish feedback loops that keep shared assets current (templates, decision records, runbooks).
- Encourage cross-team knowledge transfer to reduce silos and improve integration outcomes.
- Measure knowledge-sharing effectiveness using adoption signals and improvements in delivery performance.
- Create awareness of agile values and principles by connecting them to real decisions and outcomes.
- Identify behaviors that indicate agile alignment versus agile theater and coach toward meaningful practices.
- Foster an environment for continuous improvement through regular inspection and adaptation.
- Recognize and celebrate agile behavior that improves collaboration, transparency, learning, and delivery.
- Use storytelling and evidence to influence stakeholders who prefer predictive control models.
- Tailor practices to context while maintaining the intent of agile principles (value delivery, feedback, flow).
- Detect drift from principles (overloaded WIP, hidden work, delayed feedback) and propose corrective steps.
- Reinforce agile habits through working agreements, coaching, and consistent governance expectations.
- Facilitate a common understanding of product purpose and vision across stakeholders and the team.
- Translate vision into clear near-term objectives that guide backlog prioritization and trade-offs.
- Ensure ongoing work remains aligned with vision and organizational goals through reviews and metrics.
- Continuously communicate vision and purpose using consistent messages tailored to audience needs.
- Identify misalignment signals (conflicting priorities, churn, scope creep) and drive realignment conversations.
- Use artifacts (product roadmap, outcome metrics) to keep vision actionable rather than aspirational.
- Balance competing stakeholder demands by anchoring decisions to agreed outcomes and constraints.
- Validate that increments and releases deliver value consistent with the vision and adjust plans accordingly.
Task 6 — Facilitate Conflict Management
- Identify the root cause and level of conflict (task, process, relationship; low to high intensity) from scenario cues.
- Select facilitation approaches that promote collaboration and de-escalation while protecting outcomes.
- Use shared goals, data, and working agreements to reframe conflict from positions to interests.
- Establish structured decision-making to resolve conflicts fairly (timeboxing, criteria-based selection, consent).
- Intervene when conflict becomes harmful to psychological safety or delivery and escalate when needed.
- Coach stakeholders to communicate trade-offs explicitly instead of using hidden agendas or side channels.
- Confirm resolution by documenting agreements, owners, and follow-up checks.
- Prevent recurring conflicts by updating working agreements, roles, or governance expectations.
Product (19%)
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Task 1 — Refine Product Backlog
- Clarify backlog items by improving descriptions, acceptance criteria, and shared understanding with stakeholders.
- Prioritize backlog items using value, risk, dependencies, and capacity constraints.
- Decompose large items into smaller, testable slices that can be delivered within iteration constraints.
- Select estimation techniques (relative sizing, planning poker, T-shirt sizing) appropriate for team context.
- Facilitate collaborative sizing to reduce bias and align expectations on effort and uncertainty.
- Identify when a backlog item needs discovery or a spike before it can be sized or committed.
- Ensure backlog refinement results in an actionable near-term backlog while keeping long-term items appropriately coarse.
- Maintain traceability between backlog ordering and product vision, outcomes, and stakeholder priorities.
Task 2 — Manage Increments
- Ensure planned increments align with business priorities and current strategic objectives.
- Define increment goals that are outcome-oriented and testable, not just lists of tasks.
- Demonstrate increments of value in reviews to obtain early feedback and validate assumptions.
- Select release and iteration strategies that balance learning speed with operational readiness.
- Define and enforce Definition of Done so increments are potentially shippable and quality-controlled.
- Measure delivery of value using outcome metrics and leading indicators rather than activity counts.
- Use feedback on increments to adjust roadmap, backlog ordering, and scope trade-offs.
- Identify when an increment is not delivering value and propose corrective actions (re-slice, pivot, stop).
Task 3 — Visualize Work
- Explain how work visualization improves flow, transparency, and bottleneck detection.
- Choose an appropriate visualization approach (Scrum board, Kanban board, story map) for team context.
- Educate stakeholders and team members on how to interpret visualization artifacts accurately.
- Define policies for updating work state so boards reflect reality, not wishful thinking.
- Establish processes to update data and statistics (WIP, aging, throughput) consistently.
- Use visual signals to surface blockers, dependencies, and risk hotspots early.
- Continuously share information with relevant audiences while avoiding information overload.
- Use visualization insights to drive decisions about WIP limits, sequencing, and capacity allocation.
Task 4 — Manage Value Delivery
- Define what value looks like in a scenario using success criteria, outcomes, and constraints (security, privacy, compliance).
- Ensure value increments are optimized by prioritizing the highest-impact slices and reducing delay.
- Validate that targeted results are achieved using measurable indicators (customer satisfaction, adoption, revenue signals).
- Balance value delivery with sustainability by managing technical debt and quality practices.
- Identify when compliance or regulatory constraints change value trade-offs and adjust prioritization accordingly.
- Use customer feedback and outcome data to re-evaluate product direction and backlog strategy.
- Align value decisions to product vision and organizational goals while managing competing stakeholder demands.
- Communicate value progress transparently, including uncertainty and trade-offs, to enable timely decisions.
Delivery (28%)
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Task 1 — Seek Early Feedback
- Explain how early feedback improves alignment and reduces costly late-stage rework.
- Evaluate customer satisfaction using appropriate methods for the context (surveys, interviews, usage signals).
- Deliver work in small increments that enable rapid validation of assumptions and acceptance criteria.
- Establish a regular feedback cadence with stakeholders and ensure feedback is decision-ready.
- Differentiate between opinion and evidence-based feedback and weigh each appropriately.
- Incorporate feedback by updating backlog, acceptance criteria, and release plans transparently.
- Identify feedback bottlenecks (stakeholder availability, environments) and propose mitigation strategies.
- Communicate how feedback was applied (or why it was not) to maintain trust and shared understanding.
Task 2 — Manage Agile Metrics
- Select metrics that match the decision needs of the audience (team, product, leadership) without driving vanity behavior.
- Differentiate flow metrics (cycle time, WIP, throughput) from output metrics (velocity) and outcome metrics (value).
- Radiate metrics transparently using dashboards and information radiators that highlight trends and exceptions.
- Review and analyze metrics to identify bottlenecks, instability, quality issues, and capacity constraints.
- Use metrics insights to support decisions about scope, sequencing, staffing, and process improvement.
- Detect metric misuse (gaming, false precision) and adjust definitions, context, or measurement approach.
- Explain metrics limitations and variability so stakeholders interpret them correctly.
- Use experiments to test whether a process change improves metrics in a meaningful way.
Task 3 — Manage Impediments and Risk
- Proactively identify risks and impediments using team input, flow data, and stakeholder signals.
- Classify impediments by impact and urgency and choose whether to resolve, mitigate, accept, or escalate.
- Engage the team to select the most appropriate course of action and define clear ownership.
- Prioritize impediment removal and risk mitigation activities to protect near-term flow and long-term outcomes.
- Monitor and control risks and impediments using visible tracking and regular review cadence.
- Apply lessons learned to prevent recurrence through working agreements, tooling, or process changes.
- Recognize systemic impediments (dependencies, policy constraints) and drive cross-team resolution strategies.
- Communicate risk status and decisions to stakeholders in terms of impact, options, and trade-offs.
Task 4 — Recognize and Eliminate Waste
- Visualize the end-to-end flow of value and distinguish value-added work from non-value-added work.
- Identify common waste patterns (handoffs, waiting, rework, overproduction) from metrics and observation.
- Use feedback loops and tools (value stream mapping, cumulative flow) to locate waste sources objectively.
- Prioritize waste reduction activities based on impact to flow, quality, and customer outcomes.
- Design experiments to remove waste while protecting necessary controls (security, compliance).
- Iterate on waste identification and reduction as the system changes and new constraints emerge.
- Validate waste reduction effectiveness using before/after evidence rather than subjective impressions.
- Teach teams and stakeholders to spot waste and propose improvements continuously.
- Use metrics and feedback to identify improvement opportunities with the highest leverage.
- Facilitate improvement planning that results in specific actions, owners, and success criteria.
- Implement improvement actions incrementally to reduce risk and enable learning.
- Evaluate effectiveness of process improvements using outcomes and leading indicators, not just effort spent.
- Ensure improvements are integrated into working agreements and day-to-day behaviors to sustain gains.
- Balance local team improvements with broader system constraints and dependencies.
- Use retrospectives and intraspectives to adapt processes while maintaining delivery commitments responsibly.
- Retire ineffective practices and standardize effective ones across teams when appropriate.
Task 6 — Actively Engage Customers
- Identify and analyze customer needs, constraints, and success criteria for a scenario.
- Establish collaboration mechanisms that keep customers engaged without overwhelming them (reviews, discovery sessions).
- Validate that iteration deliverables meet acceptance criteria through demos, tests, and stakeholder review.
- Handle conflicting customer requests by anchoring decisions to value, risk, and vision alignment.
- Translate customer feedback into actionable backlog changes and communicate impact on timelines and scope.
- Ensure customer collaboration includes clarity on trade-offs, especially for quality and compliance constraints.
- Detect customer disengagement signals and intervene to restore alignment and feedback flow.
- Build trust by following through on commitments and making decisions transparent.
Task 7 — Optimize Flow
- Explain how WIP limits improve throughput predictability and reduce cycle time in knowledge work.
- Set and adjust WIP limits at team and system levels based on flow evidence and capacity constraints.
- Shield the team from interruptions by creating clear interfaces, intake policies, and escalation channels.
- Identify bottlenecks and constraints using flow metrics and visual signals and select corrective actions.
- Use metrics (cycle time, lead time, throughput) to analyze flow stability and forecast delivery realistically.
- Reduce handoffs and queueing by improving cross-functional collaboration and swarming on blocked work.
- Coordinate dependencies across teams to protect flow and integration readiness.
- Continuously refine flow policies based on results, stakeholder needs, and changing constraints.
Tip: When multiple answers look reasonable, choose the one that protects learning and flow: make work visible → shorten feedback → reduce WIP → improve continuously.