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Agile Coaching Residency (July 2025)

Masterclasses

Agile Coaching Residency (July 2025)

July

2025

Costs

$50.00 USD

Taught by

Morgan Denner

Starts

Jul 1, 2025

Ends

Sep 29, 2025

Gallery

Key Audiences

UX Design

UX Research

Product Owner

Product Manager

Project Manager

Summary

Product Operations, AKA, "How to Build a Work Process for UX and Dev Teams" is the centerpiece of any thriving Agile product team.

It's one thing to do the UX and development work. It's much more complex to enable the work as a whole on a team. The process is significant and can face a lot of barriers. People don't understand UX, they don't know how to speak the language of UX, and they may not believe in using its methods for building.

How does one navigate this on a team as an Agile product owner or product manager or UX'er?

To do this successfully, one must:

  1. Navigating "product politics" on other teams

  2. Agile coach

  3. Evangelize UX practices to the business

  4. Build UX processes on existing product teams

  5. Work and negotiate with other teams

To be able to drive change or create new processes that are user-centered takes time and energy. "Product Operations" is an area that's not well known, it's niche, but is very important.

Product Operations covers the following areas:

  • How to help teams become more Agile

  • How to help the team become the best performing team possible

  • How to build processes of work delivery on teams

  • How to build standard ways of working

  • How to best drive communication efforts on the team

This class is an intensive deep dive into product operations. Learn how to build a process for user-centered design on any Agile team in the world through the rigorous methods taught in the tech industry today.

This is a 4 week class, with lectures and working sessions each week.

Why Take This Class?

It's important for UX designers, UX researchers, and product managers to learn agile UX methods because it helps them work better as a team, build products faster, and make sure those products actually solve real problems for users. Agile UX helps teams test ideas quickly, get feedback early, and improve things often instead of waiting until the end. This way, they don’t waste time building things people don’t want, and they can create better apps or websites that people enjoy using.

Learning agile UX methods helps you succeed in a tech industry role on an in-house product team or at a startup because it teaches you how to work fast, adapt to change, and focus on what users really need. You learn to collaborate closely with developers, designers, and product managers, quickly test ideas, and use feedback to improve the product continuously. These skills are essential in fast-paced environments where priorities shift often and delivering value quickly is key. Agile UX helps you build products that users love while staying aligned with business goals.

Learning Objectives

  1. Learn how to coach others in Agile philosophies.

  2. Enable teams to do their best Agile work.

  3. Measure Agile team progress.

  4. Start a Kanban or a Scrum process on teams.

  5. Build continuous discovery, Google Design Sprint, or other Lean UX processes on teams.

  6. Create deliverables for process creation and team agreements.

  7. Deal with "product politics" at the business.

  8. Evangelize user-centered design with business.

Reading Assignments

The following three books are considered required reading for this class. They are books you will keep on your shelf and utilize for your entire career. It’s important to read them in this class so that you understand the context of how we “bend and break the rules”. Read “Sprint” if you have to read one.

  1. Gothelf, J., & Seiden, J. (2021). Lean UX: Creating great products with agile teams. O’Reilly Media. Retrieved on .

  2. Knapp, J. (2021). Sprint. Penguin Books. Retrieved on .

  3. Torres, T. (2021). Continuous Discovery Habits: Discover products that create customer value and business. Product Talk LLC. Retrieved on .

Curriculum

Week 1 - Introduction to Agile

  1. Learn about Agile

    1. Agile philosophies

    2. Agile teamwork

    3. Agile operations

    4. The Google Design Sprint

  2. Perform sprint work

    1. Break the ice as a team

    2. Determine cross-functional roles and responsibilities

    3. Pick a discovery topic

    4. Plan the first sprint

Week 2 - Google Design Sprint 1

  • Class-focused discussions

  • Perform sprint work as a team: Identify most important research questions, Build assumptions, Pick research method, Build test plan, Run research, Demo results, Retrospective, Plan the next sprint

Week 3 - Google Design Sprint 2

  • Class-focused discussions

  • Perform sprint work as a team: Identify most important research questions, Build assumptions, Pick research method, Build test plan, Run research, Demo results, Retrospective, Plan the next sprint

Week 4 - Google Design Sprint 3

  • Class-focused discussions

  • Perform sprint work as a team: Identify most important research questions, Build assumptions, Pick research method, Build test plan, Run research, Demo results, Retrospective, Plan the next sprint

Week 5 - Google Design Sprint 4

  • Class-focused discussions

  • Perform sprint work as a team: Identify most important research questions, Build assumptions, Pick research method, Build test plan, Run research, Demo results, Retrospective, Plan the next sprint