Earn your SAFe Agilist Certification (SA) and become one of the select group of professionals who have a SAFe certification to back-up their hands-on experience.
The Scaled Agile Framework® (or SAFe® ) is a guide to aligning Agile development throughout an organization. Most organizations focus their Agile development efforts at the team level, first starting with a pilot team and later transitioning individual teams one at a time. Unfortunately, this method fails to fully integrate each team's efforts with the larger stakeholder need. The Scaled Agile Framework gives you proven techniques to align these teams to work at the larger program level, and ultimately to align multiple programs into a portfolio that maximizes shareholder value.
This two-day SAFe Agilist certification course will show you how to successfully scale Agile principals across your organization by utilizing Lean thinking practices and Product Development Flow techniques.
This SAFe certification course is beneficial to all members on an Agile team, but it is primarily oriented towards those leading the efforts to adopt and scale Lean and Agile principles and practices via the Scaled Agile Framework™. This course is ideally suited for:
Executives
Managers
Change Agents
Program Managers
Coaches
Anyone helping lead the SAFe implementation
Prerequisites
All are welcome to attend the course, regardless of experience. However, the following prerequisites are highly recommended for those who intend to take the SA certification exam.
5+ years’ experience in software development, testing, business analysis, product or project management
Experience in Scrum
*Course cost listed does not include the cost of courseware or exam. Please contact us at learn@vtec.org or 207-775-0244 for additional pricing information, or if you have any questions. Course is subject to a minimum enrollment. This course may run as a live distance learning class if the minimum enrollment is not met. Required:
An overview of Lean Software Development and Product Development Flow
Lean Tooks, House of Quality, Optimal Batch Size
Product Development Flow, Controlling Flow Under Uncertainty
Controlling Flow Under Uncertainty, Value Stream Mapping
Pass the Pennies: In groups of five, pass and process pennies according to exercise instructions in order to learn about the effects of large and small batch sizes on cycle time, variability, and risk
Work-In-Progress (WIP) Constraints: Analyze the given team story board to assess the effects of increasing and decreasing WIP limits on the team’s delivery rate.
Decentralizing Decisions: Consider two problems you are currently facing and use the given decision criteria matrix to help determine if you should centralize or decentralize the decision
How to apply Agile development principles and practices across the enterprise. An overview of Business Benefits that can be realized from such enterprise transformation.
Accelerating Value Delivery
Brief Agile Overview
Business Benefits
Case Studies
Accelerating Value Delivery: Given the projects and constraints provided in the exercise, plot value delivery curves for three projects done serially and done in parallel (simultaneously).
An experiential walkthrough of SAFe practices for teams including the utilization of Scrum and XP methods. Focus is on the technical, project management and economic prioritization practices
that will enable scaling across teams and up to the program and portfolio levels.
Overview of Scrum plus XP in SAFe, Roles in ScrumXP, The Power of “Ba”
Backlog Sizing and Estimating, Estimating and Planning
Code Quality and Continuous Integration,
The Ball Point Game: An exercise to introduce Scrum and the concepts of Self-Organization, Flow and Continuous Learning & Improvement to teams.
Relative Estimation: As a team, using the example backlog, use relative estimating techniques to size the backlog items.
Sprint Goals: Discuss as a team what the goal of the sprint excercise is.
Sprint Planning: As a team, plan how you will execute the sprint exercise given to you with teammates self-organizing to take responsibility for backlog items
Sprint Execution: As a team, execute the sprint, completing as many backlog items as possible and gain acceptance from the Product Owner so you can learn from the experience.
Sprint Retrospective: As a team, reflect on the results of your sprint and determine three improvements you will make next time.
How to identify, implement and execute an Agile Release Train (ART) in your organization. An ART is a long-lived program whereby teams-of-agile-teams optimize quality and velocity delivery for the ent
What is an ART?
What are the Rules of an ART?
What new Roles are added?
Identifying ART opportunities
Program Vision and Roadmap
Optimal ROI and the Economics of the Cost of Delay
ART Duration Estimating
Release Planning and Managing the Train
Program Backlog: Define ten program backlog items based on your own project or personal business context
Prioritize the Program Backlog: Prioritize three of your program backlog items based on the Weighted Shortest Job First economic prioritization method.
Defining Agile Portfolio Management and the associated Agile transformational patterns. Topics covered include Strategy and Investment Funding, Program Management and Governance.
What is Portfolio Program Management (PPM)?
What is PPM’s role in Strategy and Investment Funding?
The principles of Agile Architecture, the role of Enterprise and System Architects within SAFe, and how to architect in an evolutionary, continual-flow model of development.
Architecture in SAFe
ART and System Architecture
7 Principles of Agile Architecture
SAFe’s Architectural Runway
Agile Architecture Discussion: Breakout, small group discussions on the meaning and potential applications of Agile Architecture Principles in your organization.