Prepare for Scrum.org Professional Scrum Product Owner I (PSPO I) with free sample questions, an 80-question full-length diagnostic, topic drills, timed mock exams, product value, Product Backlog ordering, stakeholder input, evidence, and Scrum-framework scenarios, and detailed explanations in PM Mastery.
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Free diagnostic: Try the 80-question PSPO I full-length practice exam before subscribing. Use it to separate Scrum-framework misses from Product Owner misses around value, Product Backlog ordering, stakeholder input, and evidence.
PSPO I is Scrum.org’s baseline Professional Scrum Product Owner I assessment. Use this page when your real target is product ownership, value ordering, and Product Backlog judgment rather than Scrum Master facilitation.
PSPO I questions usually reward the product decision that protects value, transparency, empiricism, and Product Owner accountability instead of drifting into stakeholder pleasing or team-level process ownership.
Official source check: Last checked: May 5, 2026. Scrum.org lists PSPO I as 80 questions in 60 minutes with an 85% passing score, using multiple-choice, multiple-answer, and true/false formats. Use Scrum.org for final exam-day rules; use PM Mastery for original Product Owner practice.
PSPO I questions usually test whether the Product Owner protects product value without taking over the Developers’ work or outsourcing accountability to stakeholders.
| Scenario signal | First check | Strong answer usually… | Weak answer usually… |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stakeholders want competing items first | Product Goal and value evidence | Orders the Product Backlog using value, risk, learning, and stakeholder input | Lets stakeholder seniority decide order |
| Developers need clarity before Sprint Planning | Product Backlog readiness | Collaborates on refinement and makes acceptance intent transparent | Writes every technical task for the Developers |
| New feedback appears at Sprint Review | Empiricism and Product Backlog adaptation | Uses the feedback to inspect the Increment and adapt the Product Backlog | Treats the plan as fixed because work was already agreed |
| A forecast is treated as a promise | Transparency and uncertainty | Communicates forecast assumptions, evidence, and risk | Guarantees scope/date to satisfy stakeholders |
| AI or analysis suggests a backlog order | Product Owner accountability | Reviews evidence and owns the final ordering decision | Lets generated or external analysis replace accountability |
| Product value is unclear | Outcome measure | Clarifies goals, users, outcomes, and evidence before ordering work | Prioritizes by effort spent or request volume |
| Focus area | What the exam tests | What PM Mastery practice should force | Common trap |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scrum Framework | Whether Product Owner work stays inside Scrum accountabilities, events, artifacts, and Done | Apply Scrum precisely while keeping value decisions clear | Answering like a project manager or committee owner |
| Developing People and Teams | Whether the Product Owner respects self-management | Collaborate with Developers without assigning their work | Treating the Product Owner as team manager |
| Managing Products with Agility | Whether product decisions use value, evidence, goals, stakeholders, and adaptation | Order and adapt the Product Backlog based on transparent value logic | Pleasing stakeholders instead of maximizing product value |
If you want concept-first reading before heavier simulator work, use the companion Scrum.org PSPO I Study Guide on PMExams.com. Then return here for timed mocks, topic drills, explanations, and the full PM Mastery practice route.
Use these child pages when you want focused PM Mastery practice before returning to mixed sets and timed mocks.
Try these 24 public sample questions for PSPO I. They are original PM Mastery practice items aligned to Product Owner accountability, value decisions, Product Backlog management, stakeholder input, and Scrum fundamentals. They are not Scrum.org exam questions and are not copied from any exam sponsor.
Topic: Managing Products with Agility
A Product Owner has three Sprints of evidence from Done Increments on a new product. During the Sprint Review, sales leaders ask, “Can you guarantee all premium reporting features will be released before the industry conference in eight weeks?” Recent customer feedback shows two planned features may need redesign, and the Product Backlog is still changing. What is the best action for the Product Owner?
Best answer: B
Explanation: The best response is to provide an honest forecast based on current evidence, not false certainty. In Scrum, uncertainty is managed through transparency, inspection, and adaptation, so the Product Owner should communicate likely outcomes and trade-offs while continuing to update the forecast as new evidence appears.
Scrum supports forecasting, but forecasts are not guarantees. The Product Owner is accountable for maximizing value and for effective Product Backlog management, so when stakeholders ask for certainty that the evidence does not support, the right response is transparency: share the current forecast, explain what is known and unknown, and discuss scope or ordering trade-offs that best support the Product Goal.
A sound response uses:
This gives stakeholders useful information without pretending uncertainty has disappeared. A false promise or silence would both reduce transparency in different ways.
This keeps forecasting transparent and empirical while preserving the Product Owner’s accountability for value and Product Backlog decisions.
Topic: Developing People and Teams: Self-Managing Teams
Midway through a Sprint, usage data shows some customers cannot complete checkout after a payment-provider API change. The Developers say they can still meet the Sprint Goal by revising their Sprint Backlog plan and dropping some internal tasks. The Product Owner agrees that restoring checkout is the highest-value outcome this Sprint. What is the best interpretation?
Best answer: B
Explanation: This situation separates two Scrum accountabilities. Developers adapt the Sprint Backlog plan during the Sprint, while the Product Owner clarifies which outcome is most valuable and remains accountable for effective Product Backlog management.
The key distinction is between deciding value and managing the plan for doing the work. In Scrum, Developers are self-managing and accountable for creating and adapting the plan for the Sprint, which is reflected in the Sprint Backlog. When the API change appears, they may revise tasks, sequence, and approach to keep moving toward the Sprint Goal. The Product Owner has a different accountability: maximizing value and ensuring the Product Backlog is managed effectively. That includes clarifying that restoring checkout is the most valuable outcome and collaborating on trade-offs, but not assigning tasks or directing the technical plan. A changed Sprint plan does not by itself require canceling the Sprint; cancellation is only relevant if the Sprint Goal becomes obsolete.
Developers self-manage how to achieve the Sprint Goal, while the Product Owner remains accountable for value and effective Product Backlog management.
Topic: Developing People and Teams: Self-Managing Teams
A Scrum Team reviews the following board notes after a Sprint:
Product Goal: "Finish checkout stories in Sprint 12"
Sprint Goal: "Reach Q4 revenue target"
Definition of Done: "Items are refined enough for Sprint Planning"
Status: One selected item is coded but fails integration tests.
Request: Keep it in the Sprint Backlog next Sprint and count it as nearly done.
Which is the best Scrum interpretation and response?
Best answer: D
Explanation: The issue is misuse of Scrum commitments and backlogs. Product Goal, Sprint Goal, and Definition of Done each have distinct meanings, and work that fails the Definition of Done is not Done, so it should be reconsidered in the Product Backlog rather than counted as completed Sprint work.
In Scrum, the Product Goal is the long-term objective for the product and the commitment for the Product Backlog. The Sprint Goal is the single objective for one Sprint. The Definition of Done is the quality measure for the Increment, not a readiness check for Sprint Planning.
Here, all three terms are mislabeled. A coded item that fails integration tests does not meet the Definition of Done, so it is not part of a Done Increment and should not be counted as nearly done. After the Sprint, that unfinished work should be made transparent in the Product Backlog for future consideration and ordering. The Product Owner remains accountable for Product Backlog ordering, while Developers manage the Sprint Backlog during the Sprint.
The closest trap is treating selected work as a carryover commitment across Sprints, but each Sprint has its own Sprint Backlog.
This restores the correct meaning of Product Goal, Sprint Goal, and Definition of Done, and treats unfinished work as not Done.
Topic: Product Owner Accountability and Product Backlog Management
A Product Owner for a subscription product has delegated some Product Backlog item drafting to a business analyst. At Sprint Planning, Developers say they cannot tell which items are most valuable or how several requests support the Product Goal. Stakeholders also complain when items move because they thought the top of the Product Backlog was a release commitment. What should the Product Owner do next to improve Product Backlog transparency?
Best answer: D
Explanation: Product Backlog transparency means people can understand what is ordered, why it is ordered, how it supports the Product Goal, and that it may change as new evidence emerges. The best action is to make those ordering signals explicit while the Product Owner remains accountable for effective Product Backlog management.
The core concept is that a transparent Product Backlog helps both the Scrum Team and stakeholders understand value, order, emergence, and goal alignment. In this scenario, the problem is not missing effort or missing opinions; it is that the Product Backlog does not clearly show why items are where they are or how they contribute to the Product Goal.
A strong Product Owner response is to improve transparency by making ordering criteria visible, such as expected value, risk reduction, and learning, and by linking items to Product Goal progress. That also clarifies that the Product Backlog is emergent rather than a fixed release promise. Drafting work may be delegated, but accountability for effective Product Backlog management stays with the Product Owner.
The key takeaway is that transparency supports better inspection and adaptation; it does not turn ordering into stakeholder voting or developer control.
This makes the Product Backlog transparent as ordered, value-focused, emergent, and aligned to the Product Goal while preserving Product Owner accountability.
Topic: Understanding and Applying the Scrum Framework
Near the end of a Sprint, a selected Product Backlog item is in a board column labeled Ready for Product Owner sign-off. The Developers say coding and testing are complete, so it is “done enough” and can be counted, pending the Product Owner’s approval after the Sprint Review. What is the best correction?
Best answer: D
Explanation: The issue is confusion between Scrum and a phase-gate approval model. Work is not Done because it has not yet met the transparent quality standard for the Increment, and Scrum does not add a separate Product Owner sign-off stage.
Scrum uses the Definition of Done to create transparency about completion. A Product Backlog item becomes part of the Increment only when it meets that Definition of Done and is usable. Adding a board state such as Ready for Product Owner sign-off introduces a phase-gate idea that is outside Scrum and can hide unfinished work behind an approval queue.
The Product Owner collaborates on value and Product Backlog management, but does not act as a final gatekeeper for whether an Increment is Done. The Sprint Review is for inspecting the outcome and adapting future work, not for accepting items into a separate completion status.
The key distinction is that visibility on a board does not change completion: either the work meets the Definition of Done or it does not.
In Scrum, an Increment is usable only when it meets the Definition of Done; the Product Owner does not create an extra acceptance phase.
Topic: Understanding and Applying the Scrum Framework
A Product Owner is preparing for a major customer demo in six weeks. Several stakeholders want every requested feature included, but Sprint Reviews show only a small subset is improving customer outcomes. The Developers say taking all requests would exceed realistic capacity and risk the Definition of Done. Which response best uses Scrum values?
Best answer: B
Explanation: The best response is to be transparent about evidence and realistic capacity, then adapt the Product Backlog toward the most valuable outcome. That reflects Scrum values while preserving the Product Owner’s accountability for maximizing value.
In Scrum, stakeholder pressure does not replace empiricism. The Product Owner should use Sprint Review evidence and the Scrum Team’s actual capacity to make a transparent forecast, then order the Product Backlog to maximize value for the upcoming demo. This shows openness about what is known, courage to reset expectations, focus on the most valuable outcome, and respect for the Developers’ ability to deliver only what can meet the Definition of Done. The Product Owner remains accountable for Product Backlog ordering, so that decision should not be handed to stakeholders. Likewise, confidence should not be protected by promising unsupported scope or by pushing the team beyond sustainable, realistic capacity. The key takeaway is to adapt based on evidence, not pressure.
This uses openness, courage, focus, and respect by making reality transparent and maximizing value within realistic capacity.
Topic: Developing People and Teams: Self-Managing Teams
A Product Owner receives frequent requests from Sales, Support, and Compliance. The Product Backlog has grown quickly, there is no clear Product Goal, and Sprint Planning often slows down because Developers do not understand why items are ordered the way they are. The Scrum Master is asked to help without taking over accountability. What is the best action?
Best answer: B
Explanation: The Scrum Master serves the Product Owner by helping find effective techniques, not by taking over product decisions. Helping the Product Owner define a Product Goal and make ordering rationale transparent improves Product Backlog management while keeping accountability where Scrum places it.
The core concept is service to the Product Owner through coaching and facilitation. In this scenario, the problem is not a lack of authority from the Scrum Master; it is weak transparency around the Product Goal and Product Backlog ordering. The Scrum Master best helps by introducing and facilitating techniques that help the Product Owner clarify the Product Goal, collaborate with stakeholders, and make ordering understandable to Developers.
That approach improves empiricism and supports self-management because the Scrum Team can better understand why work matters without shifting product value decisions away from the Product Owner. The Scrum Master may help with techniques and collaboration, but should not become the person who orders the Product Backlog or lets stakeholders or Developers replace the Product Owner’s accountability.
This supports the Product Owner with effective Product Goal definition and Product Backlog management while preserving Product Owner accountability.
Topic: Understanding and Applying the Scrum Framework
A Product Owner is working toward this Product Goal: Help independent retailers place weekly inventory orders faster and with fewer errors. After a Sprint Review of a new pilot Increment, the evidence is:
What is the best adaptation?
Best answer: A
Explanation: This is an empiricism question: new evidence should change decisions about what to do next. The Product Goal still fits the product outcome, but the Product Backlog order and stakeholder expectations should adapt to the newly identified bottleneck.
In Scrum, adaptation follows inspection of real results. Here, the pilot Increment produced useful evidence: item entry improved, but supplier mismatch corrections are now the larger constraint on customer value. That means the Product Owner should change Product Backlog ordering toward the work most likely to improve the product outcome next.
The Product Goal remains appropriate because it is still about faster, less error-prone ordering. What changes is the best path toward that goal and any release expectations that were based on older assumptions. A release forecast is a forecast, not a commitment, so it should be updated transparently when new evidence appears.
The key takeaway is to preserve the outcome-focused Product Goal while adapting order and expectations based on evidence.
The new evidence changes what is most valuable next, so the Product Owner should adapt ordering and communicate a revised forecast.
Topic: Developing People and Teams: Self-Managing Teams
After three Sprints, a Scrum Team has released Done Increments. At the latest Sprint Review, customer usage data showed one new onboarding feature increased conversions, while another was rarely used. Sales and Marketing now want different next priorities, and a steering committee asks the Product Owner to publish a fixed six-month scope plan and let departments rank Product Backlog items directly.
Which Scrum Master service best addresses this situation?
Best answer: B
Explanation: The Scrum Master helps the Product Owner and organization understand Scrum by promoting empirical product planning and clear accountabilities. Here, Sprint Review evidence should update the forecast, while stakeholder input remains collaboration rather than direct control of Product Backlog ordering.
In Scrum, product planning is empirical, so forecasts should change when Done Increments, customer feedback, and usage data reveal new information. The Scrum Master serves the Product Owner and the organization by helping them understand this approach and by clarifying Scrum boundaries. In this scenario, the steering committee’s request for a fixed six-month scope plan conflicts with empirical planning, and letting departments rank Product Backlog items directly conflicts with the Product Owner’s accountability for effective Product Backlog management. Stakeholders should provide input, constraints, and feedback, but the Product Owner remains accountable for ordering the Product Backlog to maximize value. The key takeaway is to coach adaptation based on evidence, not replace Scrum with committee control or sign-off gates.
This uses Sprint Review evidence to adapt plans while reinforcing Scrum boundaries around Product Owner accountability.
Topic: Product Owner Accountability and Product Backlog Management
A Product Owner says stakeholder input is essential. After a Sprint Review, these follow-up practices are observed. Which observation is the clearest sign that stakeholders are controlling Product Backlog ordering in a way that undermines Product Owner accountability?
Best answer: D
Explanation: The Product Owner is accountable for effective Product Backlog management, including ordering. Stakeholder input is valuable, but when a stakeholder group sets backlog order and the Product Owner simply accepts it, accountability has effectively shifted away from the Product Owner.
The core concept is Product Owner accountability. In Scrum, stakeholders can provide needs, constraints, urgency, and feedback, but they do not own Product Backlog ordering. If a steering group reprioritizes items and that order becomes final without the Product Owner making the decision, stakeholders are controlling the Product Backlog.
Acceptable collaboration still keeps accountability with the Product Owner. That includes gathering business input, inspecting customer feedback, and working with Developers to improve transparency through refinement. Those activities inform ordering, but they do not replace the Product Owner’s decision-making responsibility.
The key takeaway is that collaboration is expected; surrendering ordering authority is the anti-pattern.
This makes stakeholders, not the Product Owner, effectively decide Product Backlog ordering.
Topic: Managing Products with Agility
A Product Owner is updating a release plan after a Sprint Review.
Exhibit:
What is the best release-planning decision?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Release planning in Scrum is a forecast, not a fixed commitment. The Product Owner should use stakeholder feedback, Product Backlog order, market timing, and current Done work to adapt the release plan empirically while avoiding any promise of unfinished functionality.
The key concept is empirical release planning. The Product Owner should inspect the latest evidence: there is a real market window, some functionality is Done, and new stakeholder feedback shows recurring billing now creates more near-term value than tax export. That means the Product Backlog order should change, and the release forecast should be updated accordingly.
A sound decision is to forecast a conference release based on what is already Done plus the highest-value remaining item, while being transparent that unfinished work is still uncertain. In Scrum, Done work can be released, but work that is not Done should not be treated as part of a reliable release promise.
The closest trap is treating the prior plan or stakeholder pressure as more important than current evidence.
This uses new evidence to adapt Product Backlog order and the release forecast while preserving transparency that only Done functionality can be released.
Topic: Managing Products with Agility
A senior stakeholder group tells a Product Owner: “Starting next week, no Product Backlog item should be worked on until we approve it, and we will reorder the top items after each customer call.” They say this will keep the product aligned with the business. What is the best response?
Best answer: B
Explanation: Stakeholders should provide input, feedback, and context, but they should not take over Product Backlog ordering. The best response keeps the Product Owner accountable while using transparent evidence and regular inspection to support empirical learning.
This scenario crosses the line from collaboration into command-and-control governance because stakeholders are trying to create an approval gate and directly control Product Backlog ordering. In Scrum, stakeholders are important sources of feedback, market context, and constraints, but the Product Owner remains accountable for maximizing value and for effective Product Backlog management.
A better response is to increase transparency and engagement without giving away accountability. That means exposing outcomes, forecasts, and customer feedback, inviting stakeholders to inspect results, and adapting based on evidence. This supports empiricism: make work and results transparent, inspect what happened, and adapt the Product Backlog accordingly.
The closest traps either transfer Product Owner decisions to stakeholders, accept pressure without evidence, or cut off useful collaboration entirely.
This preserves stakeholder collaboration and transparency while keeping Product Owner accountability for Product Backlog ordering and value decisions.
Topic: Product Owner Accountability and Product Backlog Management
A Product Owner shares this ordered Product Backlog excerpt with stakeholders and Developers.
Product Goal: Reduce abandoned mobile checkouts.
1. Guest checkout
Rationale: Mobile analytics show 18% of abandonments happen at account creation; likely highest impact on the Product Goal.
2. Payment failure recovery message
Rationale: Sprint Review feedback showed users did not know how to continue after a declined payment.
3. Loyalty badge redesign
Rationale: Requested by the marketing director.
4. New color palette
Rationale: High priority.
Which interpretation is best?
Best answer: C
Explanation: Product Backlog ordering should be transparent enough that stakeholders and Developers can understand why items are placed where they are. Evidence tied to the Product Goal helps, but labels like “requested by” or “high priority” do not make the value decision clear.
Transparency in Product Backlog ordering means people can understand the basis for the Product Owner’s value decision. In this excerpt, the first two items show understandable reasons: analytics, Sprint Review feedback, and expected contribution to the Product Goal. The lower items do not show why they matter in terms of value, risk reduction, learning, or Product Goal progress.
The Product Owner remains accountable for ordering, but accountability does not remove the need for transparency. Also, transparency does not require task breakdowns or full implementation detail. It requires enough clarity that others can inspect the reasoning behind the order and discuss adaptations based on evidence.
A short rationale is enough only when it actually reveals the value logic.
Several items do not explain value, risk, learning, or Product Goal contribution, so others cannot clearly understand those ordering decisions.
Topic: Events, Artifacts, and Done for Product Ownership
At the end of each Sprint, the Scrum Team shows a slide deck to stakeholders. Questions about customer value are postponed until a separate sign-off meeting the next week, where a steering group decides whether the Increment is “accepted” for release. What is the best interpretation or response?
Best answer: C
Explanation: This setup misuses the Sprint Review as demo theatre followed by an approval gate. In Scrum, the Sprint Review is a working session to inspect the outcome with stakeholders and adapt what to do next based on value, feedback, and current conditions.
The core issue is that product inspection and stakeholder collaboration are being delayed until after the Sprint Review. Scrum defines the Sprint Review as the event where the Scrum Team and stakeholders inspect the outcome of the Sprint and determine future adaptations. That means discussing the actual Done Increment, market or customer feedback, and likely next Product Backlog changes during the event itself.
A separate organizational release decision may exist, but it should not turn the Sprint Review into a status presentation or formal acceptance ceremony. When the review becomes slides now and real feedback later, the team loses a key inspect-and-adapt opportunity. The better response is to make the Sprint Review a collaborative product conversation around the Done Increment and resulting Product Backlog adaptations, not a gate before release.
The Sprint Review is for inspecting the outcome and deciding future adaptations with stakeholders, not for formal acceptance or delayed value discussion.
Topic: Product Owner Accountability and Product Backlog Management
During a Sprint Review, the Scrum Team shows a Done Increment for a subscription product. Usage data shows the new onboarding flow reduced setup time by 40%, but conversion to paid accounts did not improve. The Product Goal is to increase paid subscriptions. Marketing asks for referral features next, while Sales asks for discount options. What is the most appropriate next step for the Product Owner?
Best answer: C
Explanation: The Product Owner is accountable for maximizing the value of the product resulting from the Scrum Team’s work. After inspecting evidence from the Done Increment and hearing stakeholder input, the next step is to adapt Product Backlog ordering toward the Product Goal.
This situation calls for empiricism and Product Owner accountability. The Product Owner should inspect the outcome of the Increment, consider stakeholder input, and then adapt the Product Backlog to best advance the Product Goal of increasing paid subscriptions. Stakeholders can provide useful perspectives, but they do not own Product Backlog ordering. Likewise, the Product Owner should not direct Developers on how to do the work or turn forecasting into a fixed commitment.
The right sequence is:
The key takeaway is that maximizing value means making evidence-based product decisions, not handing priority decisions to others or locking in plans too early.
The Product Owner should use the Sprint Review outcome and Product Goal to adapt Product Backlog ordering to maximize product value.
Topic: Developing People and Teams: Self-Managing Teams
A Product Owner is under pressure from management after a Sprint Review. The Head of Sales wants custom reporting for a large prospect, and the Compliance Director wants an approval workflow before an audit. The CEO tells the Developers to “fit both into the next Sprint” and wants a firm release date. Recent Sprint Review evidence shows customer activation problems are the biggest source of lost revenue, and the Product Goal is to improve activation. What should the Product Owner do next?
Best answer: D
Explanation: The Product Owner should use evidence, the Product Goal, and a transparent forecast to explain trade-offs and then order the Product Backlog accordingly. That makes management expectations visible without handing value decisions to stakeholders or Developers.
The core concept is that the Product Owner remains accountable for maximizing product value and for effective Product Backlog management. Stakeholders and managers can provide input, constraints, and urgency, but they do not take over ordering decisions. In this situation, the next appropriate step is to make the Product Goal, current evidence, trade-offs, and forecast transparent so everyone can inspect reality together.
Then the Product Owner adapts the Product Backlog order based on that evidence. This keeps decisions tied to value and learning rather than hierarchy or the loudest request. A forecast can help set expectations, but it is not a commitment to fixed scope by a fixed date. The closest distractors either transfer Product Owner accountability to others or create a false promise for the Sprint.
This preserves Product Owner accountability for value while using evidence and transparency to align stakeholder expectations.
Topic: Product Owner Accountability and Product Backlog Management
A Product Owner is pursuing a Product Goal to improve customer self-service and reduce support costs. Midway through the quarter, a sales executive pressures the Product Owner to move a custom reporting feature for one prospect to the top of the Product Backlog, claiming the deal is urgent. Recent Sprint Reviews show the current self-service work is already reducing support tickets. What is the best action for the Product Owner?
Best answer: C
Explanation: The Product Owner should not let stakeholder pressure alone override coherent product direction. The best response is to use the Product Goal and current evidence to evaluate the request transparently, adapting only if it truly improves value.
This tests Product Owner accountability for maximizing value while maintaining a coherent long-term product direction. Stakeholders can provide important input, including urgent commercial opportunities, but they do not directly determine Product Backlog order. In this case, the Product Goal is clear, and recent evidence supports the current direction.
The Product Owner should:
Immediately prioritizing the loudest request weakens product coherence. Asking Developers to squeeze in work bypasses proper Product Backlog management, and handing the decision to the Scrum Master shifts Product Owner accountability.
The Product Owner remains accountable for Product Backlog ordering and should use evidence and Product Goal alignment rather than stakeholder pressure alone.
Topic: Product Owner Accountability and Product Backlog Management
During Product Backlog refinement, the Product Owner shares this current Product Goal:
Product Goal: Deliver a mobile app, replace search, migrate to the cloud,
and add AI recommendations.
Stakeholders ask which customer problem these changes solve and why they belong together in one long-term objective. What is the best interpretation and response?
Best answer: D
Explanation: The Product Goal is the commitment for the Product Backlog and should describe a coherent long-term objective tied to stakeholder and customer value. Here it is a bundle of proposed solutions, so it should be reframed around the outcome to achieve, with the Product Backlog ordered to explore and deliver toward that outcome.
A strong Product Goal gives the Scrum Team one long-term direction for the product. It should express the value or outcome being pursued, not simply list several planned deliverables. In this scenario, the stated goal is too broad, too solution-specific, and disconnected from visible customer value: a mobile app, search replacement, cloud migration, and AI recommendations are outputs, and stakeholders cannot tell what customer problem unites them.
More detail, separate Sprint Goals, or checklist tracking do not correct a weak Product Goal.
A Product Goal should provide one coherent value-focused objective, not a bundle of solution outputs.
Topic: Events, Artifacts, and Done for Product Ownership
At a Sprint Review, the Scrum Team shows one feature that meets the Definition of Done and another that is coded and tested in staging but still lacks required security checks in the Definition of Done. Stakeholders ask the Product Owner to report both as delivered value because customers will probably use them next Sprint. What is the best response?
Best answer: A
Explanation: In Scrum, delivered value must be transparent. Work that does not meet the Definition of Done is not a complete Increment, even if it is visible, nearly finished, or likely to be completed soon.
The key concept is Increment transparency through the Definition of Done. A Product Owner may decide to release a Done Increment, but incomplete work is not treated as delivered value just because stakeholders saw it or because it is close to completion. In this scenario, the missing security checks mean that feature is not Done, so it should remain visible as unfinished work rather than being counted as delivered.
Calling partial work “delivered value” reduces transparency and weakens empirical decision-making. Forecasts about finishing next Sprint can inform planning, but they do not change completion status. The closest distractor is the idea that visible work counts as delivered; in Scrum, visibility is not the same as Done.
Only a usable Increment that meets the Definition of Done is complete enough to count transparently as delivered value.
Topic: Product Owner Accountability and Product Backlog Management
A product is funded by Sales, Operations, and Compliance. After several priority disputes, an executive asks the Product Owner to let all three department heads share final accountability for Product Backlog ordering. The stakeholders will still provide input, but they want joint final approval of the order. What is the most appropriate next step?
Best answer: A
Explanation: The Product Owner is one person accountable for effective Product Backlog management, including ordering. Stakeholders should contribute input, but final accountability for ordering cannot be shared across a committee.
Scrum makes the Product Owner accountable for maximizing value and for effective Product Backlog management. That includes Product Backlog ordering. In this scenario, the right next step is to make the accountability boundary transparent: stakeholders can provide needs, constraints, and feedback, but one Product Owner must remain the final decision-maker for the order.
Shared final accountability turns Product Backlog ordering into committee control, which reduces clarity and slows adaptation. A better Scrum response is to preserve one accountable Product Owner while encouraging strong stakeholder collaboration.
The closest distractors either distribute accountability away from the Product Owner or create approval gates that interfere with empiricism and timely adaptation.
Scrum requires one Product Owner to remain accountable, even when many stakeholders contribute input and constraints.
Topic: Managing Products with Agility
A Product Owner’s Product Goal is to increase mobile checkout conversion before a seasonal sales window in 8 weeks. After three Sprints, the Scrum Team has a Done Increment with guest checkout and analytics showing conversion improvement. A major stakeholder now wants a loyalty feature first for a conference demo in 5 weeks, while several payment enhancements are still unfinished. Which action best supports release planning?
Best answer: C
Explanation: The best choice uses empiricism for release planning: only Done work provides reliable evidence, and new learning should influence Product Backlog order and forecasting. The Product Owner remains accountable for balancing stakeholder input, Product Goal progress, and market timing without making false scope or date commitments.
Release planning in Scrum is a forecast, not a guarantee. The Product Owner should inspect the evidence from the Done Increment, consider the market window, and reorder the Product Backlog to maximize value toward the Product Goal. Stakeholder requests matter, but they are input to the Product Owner’s decision rather than direct instructions. Unfinished work should not be treated as releasable, and an announced date should not be turned into false certainty when uncertainty remains.
A sound approach is to:
The closest distractors each over-optimize one factor, such as certainty, stakeholder pressure, or plan stability, while ignoring empirical evidence and Product Owner accountability.
Release planning should be based on Done work, current evidence, Product Goal progress, and transparent forecasting under uncertainty.
Topic: Understanding and Applying the Scrum Framework
Which Scrum artifact best matches this description?
It makes transparent the work selected for the current Sprint, the Sprint Goal, and the Developers’ current plan for delivering a Done Increment.
Best answer: B
Explanation: The Sprint Backlog is the artifact that makes the current Sprint’s work transparent. It contains the Sprint Goal, the selected Product Backlog items, and the Developers’ plan, so it shows how the team is progressing toward a Done Increment.
In Scrum, each artifact creates transparency for a different part of the work. The Product Backlog makes transparent what might be needed to improve the product over time. The Sprint Backlog makes transparent what was selected for this Sprint and how the Developers currently plan to achieve the Sprint Goal. The Increment makes transparent the usable result of the work completed so far.
In this description, the key clues are the focus on the current Sprint, the Sprint Goal, and the Developers’ plan. That combination identifies the Sprint Backlog. The closest distractor is the Product Backlog, but that artifact shows the broader ordered list of future product work, not the active Sprint plan.
The Sprint Backlog provides transparency into the current Sprint objective, selected work, and the Developers’ evolving plan.
Topic: Understanding and Applying the Scrum Framework
A Product Owner receives conflicting requests for the next Sprint: a sales manager wants a customer-requested dashboard first, an operations manager wants audit logging first, and the Developers want technical cleanup first to reduce defects. Senior leaders propose a weekly committee to set the Product Backlog order so all groups are represented. What is the best action?
Best answer: D
Explanation: The Product Owner is accountable for maximizing product value and for effective Product Backlog management, including ordering. Stakeholders and Developers contribute input, but they do not take over that accountability.
In Scrum, the Product Owner is one person accountable for maximizing the value of the product and for effective Product Backlog management. That includes ordering the Product Backlog. In this situation, sales, operations, and Developers all provide useful perspectives: customer demand, business constraints, and technical risk. The Product Owner should consider that input, make the ordering decision, and explain how the order supports the Product Goal and value.
A good response is to:
The key boundary is that input is collaborative, but accountability for ordering does not move to a committee, the Developers, or the Scrum Master.
The Product Owner remains accountable for Product Backlog ordering, even when others provide important input.
Topic: Product Owner Accountability and Product Backlog Management
A major customer asks for an audit-export capability and sends the Product Owner a preferred technical design. Sprint Planning is tomorrow. The Developers say they need the customer need and constraints to be clear, but they want to choose the implementation themselves so they can create a Done Increment. What is the best Product Owner response?
Best answer: D
Explanation: The Product Owner should make the customer need transparent and ordered while leaving implementation decisions to the Developers. That supports creation of a Done Increment without taking over how the work is done.
In Scrum, the Product Owner is accountable for maximizing value and for effective Product Backlog management, including clarifying what is needed and ordering work. The Developers are accountable for deciding how to turn selected Product Backlog items into a Done Increment and for creating the Sprint plan.
Here, the best response is to clarify the customer outcome and constraints so the work is understandable and valuable, then let the Developers choose the technical approach. A customer’s preferred design can be useful input, but it should not become a task assignment from the Product Owner. The key is to give enough transparency for planning and delivery without removing Developers’ accountability for how the work is done.
A common near-miss is treating technical direction as the Product Owner’s job instead of enabling informed self-management.
This keeps Product Backlog management with the Product Owner while preserving Developers’ accountability for how selected work becomes a Done Increment.
Use this flow when a question asks what the Product Owner should make transparent or decide. Strong PSPO I answers protect Product Owner accountability while using stakeholder input and evidence.
flowchart LR
A["Product Goal"] --> B["Stakeholder input"]
B --> C["Value and risk tradeoff"]
C --> D["Product Backlog ordering"]
D --> E["Sprint Review feedback"]
E --> F["Backlog adaptation"]
| Concept | Exam-facing use |
|---|---|
| Product Owner accountability | One person is accountable for maximizing product value. |
| Product Goal | Provides direction for Product Backlog decisions. |
| Stakeholder engagement | Stakeholders provide input, not final ordering authority. |
| Transparency | Ordering and tradeoffs should be understandable. |
| Sprint Review | Inspect the Increment and adapt the Product Backlog. |
Use this live PSPO I page for web and app access, public sample questions, timed mocks, topic drills, plans, and related PM Mastery exam links.
Managing Products with Agility lane.| Timing | Practice focus | What to review after the set |
|---|---|---|
| Days 7-5 | One 80-question diagnostic plus drills in weak product-owner areas | Whether misses came from Scrum mechanics, Product Backlog ordering, stakeholder trade-offs, or value evidence |
| Days 4-3 | Mixed Product Owner scenarios | Whether you can explain the value logic and accountability behind the answer |
| Days 2-1 | Light review of Product Goal, Product Backlog, Sprint Review, forecasts, and Product Owner accountability | Only recurring traps; avoid switching into Scrum Master facilitation mode |
| Exam day | Short warm-up if useful | Choose the answer that maximizes value while preserving Scrum accountabilities |
If you can score above 75% on several unseen mixed attempts and explain the Product Owner trade-off behind each miss, you are likely ready. Do not keep repeating the bank until you memorize items; PSPO I is about fresh value, evidence, and accountability decisions under time pressure.
| If you need to practice… | Best page | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Scrum fundamentals that still support product work | PSM I | Best live route for the framework language that PSPO decisions still depend on. |
| AI-informed product decisions | PSPO-AI Essentials | Best live route when product ownership and AI governance are already central. |
| broader product and analysis decisions | Product Management | Best route when your real target is broader product-management planning rather than one exam code. |
| If you are deciding between… | Main distinction |
|---|---|
| PSM I vs PSPO I | PSM I is Scrum Master focused; PSPO I is Product Owner focused. |
| PSPO I vs PSPO II | PSPO I is the baseline Product Owner route; PSPO II is the advanced route. |
| PSPO I vs PSPO-AI | PSPO I is baseline product ownership; PSPO-AI adds AI-specific product and governance decisions. |
Use the live PM Mastery route above if PSPO I is the assessment you actually need.