DEV Community

Cover image for What is a Product Owner? Job Role of a product owner.
ambersu123
ambersu123

Posted on

What is a Product Owner? Job Role of a product owner.

Every development cycle revolves around the **Product Owners, ** and they often have several important duties and responsibilities ranging from business strategy to product design. Through constant backlog management, they oversee maximizing product and company value.

Who is Product Owner?

An individual committed to increasing a product's value is known as a product owner. In order to accomplish this, product owners work with product management, development team and sometimes end users to create a product vision, identify particular product features, and then turn those features into product backlog items for the Scrum team to work on.

Prior to the completion of the final product, they serve as a point of contact between the Scrum team, business stakeholders, and end users. By effectively coordinating the activities of the development team, the product owner can help the team produce the best product possible and one that meets user needs.

Job Role of Product Owner

A product owner is responsible for ensuring that the organization receives the most value possible from the product development process. This basically entails working closely with the development team to make sure all of the product requirements are clearly stated and carried out on schedule. Along with the Scrum master and the development team, a Product Owner is an important member of the Scrum team.

Managing the product backlog is one of the basic roles of a product owner. The following things may fall under this category:

  • The product backlog needs to be precisely specified, and each item needs to be thoroughly described.
  • Prioritize and arrange the product backlog correctly such that the most crucial tasks are given top priority.
  • Set work item and product backlog priorities that are consistent with the objectives and vision of the customer.
  • Review the development team's work and offer input frequently.
  • All team members must receive a comprehensive explanation of the product backlog, according to the product owner.
  • The quality standards and user expectations must be understood by the Scrum Team.

Day to Day Tasks of Product Owner

Some of the tasks of the product owners are checking statuses and plans, based on the details from scrum meetings like the daily standup meetings. They make notes, ask questions, and set the plan for the day. They collaborate with the designer to check on the status, provide input, determine job priorities, and, if necessary, clarify specifics. They prepare documents such as release or update notes while carefully reviewing the documentation. Additionally, they sync with the director, product team, and sales. Additionally, they conduct client interviews and analyses, which requires thorough customer knowledge.

For B2B and client products, this may vary. A significant portion of a product owner's day is probably spent on brief calls or chats with team members, addressing queries about ongoing projects, monitoring progress, and exchanging memes.

Product Manager vs Product Owner and analogy of Product Owner

Is there a difference between a product owner and a product manager? is among the most often asked questions. If you want your project to be successful, you must get this difference right. The terms "product manager" and "product owner" are frequently used interchangeably.

Teams that are used to, say, product owners doing one thing and then a product manager coming in and doing the same thing find this to be quite confusing. Predictability and hence efficiency are destroyed. Let us illustrate this with a simple analogy.

Think of a steam train rumbling along a track, but the track is still being built. The process of project is comparable in many ways.

The product owner can be compared to a driver. How fast are we traveling, do we have enough coal, is the team piling that coal getting tired, where is the next corner, and do I need to slow down or speed up? are some of the queries they will be asking.

The product manager, on the other hand, is the one who plots out and lays down the railway a few miles in advance. How far behind the train is it, what obstacles lie in our path, how can we get there the quickest, how much track do I need, and how can we bridge that river are some of the queries they are posing.

The duties and responsibilities of the two roles heavily overlap. As a product owner, request a clearer vision and a more precise plan from your product manager. If you're a product manager, ask your product owner to be more specific about the current situation and the expected improvements.

Conclusion

In conclusion, a Product Owner needs to be knowledgeable about the business area and industry. A Product Owner must be well-versed in both business logic and the technical capabilities of the product in order to better comprehend client expectations and translate them into product requirements.

As the most significant function in guaranteeing the delivery of high-quality products while increasing product value in accordance with the product vision of the customer, a Product Owner is essential.

Top comments (1)

Collapse
 
kortizti12 profile image
Kevin

While the Product Owner must be well-rounded and adaptable, a great Product Owner will be especially strong in three areas:

  • Time management: A great Product Owner understands the importance of the role and makes sure they have enough time and space to do it well.
  • Prioritization: this role requires the ability to collect, distill, and prioritize requirements from diverse stakeholders and departments. They’ll be able to weigh the value of new features, fixes, and additions against the technical feasibility and difficulty to make sound decisions for the product roadmap.
  • Communication: A PO must learn to communicate with stakeholders and team members in multiple modalities, including written, spoken, and diagramming. They must communicate throughout the product development cycle to various team members and external stakeholders, keeping everyone informed of changes and progress.

If you want to read more about skills for Product Owners and Data Product Owners, I’d recommend this article by Veronica Arreche: scalablepath.com/project-managemen...