1.1 Course Overview and Requirements: Project Management Institute (Pmi®) Professional Development Units (Pdus)
1.1 Course Overview and Requirements: Project Management Institute (Pmi®) Professional Development Units (Pdus)
Resources:
Make sure to view/download all of the powerpoint slides for the
course and each week that are included below under “Downloads.”
Good personas tell a story. It’s important to humanise them, give them a name, find a picture,
gather a collage of real examples to support the think, see, feel, do dimensions.
For example: Priya the Parent wears black Nike trainers, has two
Cocker Spaniels, and three long-haired cats. She spends a lot of
time vacuuming up fur!
For example: Priya the Parent wears black Nike trainers, has two
Cocker Spaniels, and three long-haired cats. She spends a lot of
time vacuuming up fur!
• What are some steps, or tools that you can use, to begin to
understand your user better?
At the moment our users are not well defined. It is useful to see how using questionnaires that
are well designed get give you a better understanding of what the user requires rather than
relying on assumptions.
1. Brainstorm Personas
a) Brainstorm at least 5 personas related to your area of interest. Try doing as many as you
can in 5 minutes. All you need to write down is a descriptive name: [Name] the [Job title or
role].
2. Detail a Persona
Develop a detailed description for the top persona from your list.
a) Vividly describe this persona using specific details so that s/he feels like a real person.
What’s a day in their life?
b) Describe what this person thinks, sees, feels, and does related to your area of interest.
ASSIGNMENT GUIDELINES
The reviewers will be asked to give you feedback on the following aspects of your
assignment, so you should consider these when writing:
For this assignment you are completing a scaled down version of customer discovery.
When you are ready to do full customer discovery on the job you may want to start
working from a complete Venture Design Template (this template requires use of
Google Docs). The Personas Tutorial reading may also help as a written reference.
1. Brainstorm Personas
a) Brainstorm at least 5 personas related to your area of interest. Try doing as many as you
can in 5 minutes. All you need to write down is a descriptive name: [Name] the [Job title or
role].
2. Detail a Persona
Develop a detailed description for the top persona from your list.
a) Vividly describe this persona using specific details so that s/he feels like a real person.
What’s a day in their life?
b) Describe what this person thinks, sees, feels, and does related to your area of interest.
ASSIGNMENT GUIDELINES
The reviewers will be asked to give you feedback on the following aspects of your
assignment, so you should consider these when writing:
For this assignment, learners developed a list of personas related to their area of
interest, and a detailed persona to help them understand their target user.
Please review the assignment and provide constructive feedback to each guideline.
ASSIGNMENT GUIDELINES
You’re going to be asked to give feedback on the following aspects of the author’s
assignment:
You must first submit an assignment in the previous step before you
can review other learners’ assignments.
For this assignment you are completing a scaled down version of user story
development. When you are ready to do full user story development on the job you may
want to start working from a complete Venture Design Template (this template
requires use of Google Docs). The Your Best Agile User Story reading may help as a
written reference.
For this assignment, you’ll develop user stories based on the work you did in the first
assignment.
This will be an ‘epic’ that you’ll detail out with child stories. Remember most feature ideas
are a lot more involved than we think. Make sure your epic deals with specific interactions,
like Ted the Technician figuring out how much a part will cost and when he can get it so he
can plan next steps with the customer. This is not the story of your whole product/project.
a) Use the formula, “As a [persona], I want to [do something] so that I can [derive a benefit].”
For example, “‘As Ted the HVAC technician, I want to identify a part that needs replacing so
I can decide my next steps.”
b) Be sure to fully think through the [derive a benefit] clause, since this is where you
establish why you think the software will be valuable to the user. Make sure your idea on this
is testable and focused on a specific functional area.
a) Develop two child stories and related test cases. See examples in Appendix A and B
of Your Best Agile User Story.
b) Check your work using the INVEST checklist (click on “Developing with Stories and
Story Maps” in the Your Best Agile User Story reading).
ASSIGNMENT GUIDELINES
The reviewers will be asked to give you feedback on the following aspects of your
assignment, so you should consider these when writing:
• In your opinion, is the user story at the right level of detail? Not too specific (like a feature)
and not too broad (like a project). How do you suggest adjusting it?
• How testable is the [derive a benefit clause]? How would you suggest making it more
testable?
• How would you make the child stories and test cases more INVESTable?
For this assignment, learners developed a user story that flowed from the persona they
created in the first peer-reviewed assignment.
Please review the assignment and provide constructive feedback to each guideline.
ASSIGNMENT GUIDELINES
You’re going to be asked to give feedback on the following aspects of the author’s
assignment:
• In your opinion, is the user story at the right level of detail? Not too specific (like a feature)
and not too broad (like a project). How do you suggest adjusting it?
• How testable is the [derive a benefit clause]? How would you suggest making it more
testable?
• How would you make the child stories and test cases more INVESTable?
Please keep this window open and do not navigate away before submitting your feedback. If
you close the window or navigate to a different page, you will be given a new assignment to
review when you return.
4.23 Course Summary
A brilliant course for me. I do not work in the field of programming but believe that the Agile
approach is broadly adaptable to problem solving in business. In part this is a discipline based on
process steps but also more closely aligned to 'real' customer needs for me. I believe my
takeaways are: Agile is multi disciplinary, secondly, understanding the customer better rather
than imposing a bright idea upon them will lead to more successful outcomes. The challenge will
be to get the customer engaged in defining there underlying issues so it may be necessary to
explain the rationale of the approach to aid their understanding. I will use this to structure my
problem discovery phase, to engage customers in agreeing the benefits they seek and
continuously experimenting with the customer that the solutions meet their needs.
From this course, I learned how to start developing a persona along with what it means to have
an agile work environment. In the future, this can aid me in better understanding what needs to
be done before putting together a project or proposal. Additionally, it can help me understand
why a company should value agile design even if it will be a larger process.