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Is saw that are out there Scrum certifications to become certified scrum master!?. I'm not a big fan of certifications in general, but getting a certification for a methodology, for a way of doing things doesn't make sense at all to me. Can you give me other perspectives please, maybe I am wrong.

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Seems rather silly to me too. – Dav Aug 12 at 17:53
By the time you would be done by scrum certification, scrum would be dead. It's just gona live until there is hype for it, it has no substance in it – mamu Aug 12 at 17:55
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The silly part is how ScrumMaster and Product Owner are "introductory", while Practitioner is Advanced... – Thomas Owens Aug 12 at 17:55
@Thomas Owens Yes. Silly. And they must provide evidence of at least one year of Scrum practice ... how you do that? – Elzo Valugi Aug 12 at 18:07
The CSM is more a training than a certification and, to me, it's the trainer and the training material that are certified, not the trainee. This is how people should understand and value the CSM. – Pascal Thivent Sep 9 at 22:27

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As to the philosophical question you pose: Does it make any sense to certify someone for a methodology? I don't see it as any different from certifying someone for any other kind of subject matter knowledge.

Individuals who go after certifications tend to do so because they believe (rightly or wrongly) that having the certification will make it easier to get/keep/perform a job.

Employers who look for certifications tend to do so as either a way of reducing a huge resume pool or because of the belief (right or wrong) that the candidate with the certification will do a better job than the candidate without the certification, all things being equal.

Companies/instructors who offer certification courses tend to do so as a means to make income and/or out of the desire to share their passion for the subject matter.

It seems to me that in IT many certifications do not make it easier for a person to get/keep/perform a job. Similarly, I don't believe they are typically a good recruiting tool. And yet, as long as some people pay for the courses, some companies/instructors continue to offer them.

And there certainly is a group in the agile community that devalues methodology certifications in particular.

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They are a way to sell courses.

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Courses of what? People who go into scrum as a philosophy are smart enough not to take a course just for the social aspect of it... – Elzo Valugi Aug 12 at 18:05
From the site you linked: "Effective 1 October 2009, all CSMs will be required to complete a Certified ScrumMaster course and pass a Certified ScrumMaster (CSM) online certification exam to maintain certification." – Marie Aug 12 at 18:42
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In practice these certifications are kind of silly, although I am sure at least some of the courses that accompany them might be useful.

On the other hand, having a certification does have distinct advantages during the recruiting process namely:

  • At the recruiter/hr stage, you get an automatic check in the box for Agile and Scrum
  • It will discourage too many questions during the interview about what exactly you know about Agile/Scrum.

Given how much variation there is between companies who supposedly use the same methodology, that second point might be very beneficial. For example, if you use a modified scrum that is different from the interviewers modified scrum, then you might get dinged for "doing it wrong" when you describe your implementation.

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