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The People-Pleasing Product Owner and the PO Who Understood User Value — Two Sides of Product Ownership | Efe Gümüs
Description
In this episode, we refer to the SPIDR slicing method.
The Great Product Owner: The PO Who Understood User ValueRead the full Show Notes and search through the world's largest audio library on Agile and Scrum directly on the Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast website: http://bit.ly/SMTP_ShowNotes.
"If your product owner can phrase what the user wants to do — not what the button should look like — it is going to be a night and day difference." - Efe Gümüs
Efe describes the great product owner as someone who creates focus and a clear product vision, so the team knows what they're building and why. The foundation is simple but powerful: describe what the user will be able to do, not what the interface should look like. Instead of specifying a red subscribe button with exact text in three languages, say "as a user, I want to subscribe to my favorite channel." That shift unlocks the team's ability to contribute design insights, architecture decisions, and user journey thinking — the kind of expertise no product owner could anticipate alone. Efe highlights the SPIDR slicing method as one of his favorite tools for breaking product backlog items into consumable pieces — by interface (iOS, Android, web), by data, by rules. When the PO frames work around user value and slices it effectively, the team delivers visible value in iterations, and sprint goals become meaningful. Without this, the team becomes a ticket delivery machine.
Self-reflection Question: When you look at your product backlog right now, are items described in terms of what users can do — or in terms of what the interface should look like?
The Bad Product Owner: The People-Pleasing PO Who Says Yes to EverythingRead the full Show Notes and search through the world's largest audio library on Agile and Scrum directly on the Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast website: http://bit.ly/SMTP_ShowNotes.
"If you are doing everything your customer says, then you are not managing your product. That's the foundation." - Efe Gümüs
Efe names people-pleasing as the worst product owner anti-pattern — the "customer is always right" mentality applied to product management. When a PO says yes to every request, the consequences cascade quickly: multiple priorities competing simultaneously, everything marked urgent, no meaningful sprint goal, constant context switching, and new items injected mid-sprint. The team loses focus entirely. Efe has seen this in startups where the CEO walks in with urgent customer requests, and in larger organizations where multiple customers each demand customizations. In both cases, the PO becomes a pass-through instead of a decision-maker. The customer might be happy today, but will they be satisfied in six months when nothing is coherent? As Vasco notes, when you're serving multiple custom