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I realize lots of people look upon certifications with some scepticism, but has anyone achieved ScrumMaster and found a big difference in the response they were getting from potential employers?

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I hadn't ever even heard of a ScrumMaster certification. Sounds like a scam. – SoapBox Dec 7 '08 at 22:23
Actually, that's not a scam: see scrumalliance.org/training – Roberto Liffredo Dec 7 '08 at 22:33

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It will not hurt. I am generally skeptic about certifications in general, since the cramming style has become common and a lot of certifications tend to focus on knowledge retention over comprehension and logical skills.

However, choose a course that gives a certification upon completion, and that looks better from a certification standpoint.

Like otherwise mentioned, this can actually help you standout if the shop is scrum or scrum-based. On the flip-side, it can scare non-scrum shops away. Given the state of the current job market, though, I think the latter is less likely to happen.

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It shows you might be interested in the development process. That's a pro.

Your questions shows you're sceptical about certification. That's another pro.

And it might help you stay away from waterfall companies.

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I think you have to ask yourself if would like a job where scrum certification would matter. The certification might lead to more opportunities, but would you want them. It is a personal choice.

For me the answer would be no. Not to knock scrum or certification. I just prefer writing code to being the methodology person on the team. Last time I wrote my resume I did not play up the Agile stuff too much, but I still looked for a place that was already pretty agile.

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I wouldn't want a ScrumMaster to be the methodology guy. I want one because he might understand agility. – Stephan Eggermont Dec 7 '08 at 23:25
What is it about agility that you want and why does a certified scrum master help? I've met certified scrum masters who knew little about the parts of agile I was most worried about. I agree that there will be lots of places that are not looking for a methodology guy and still care. But it's a risk. – Mike Two Dec 7 '08 at 23:45
Well, today I also met one. But I meet more who do have a clue. – Stephan Eggermont Dec 9 '08 at 23:59
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does anyone know if there is any online scrum master certification?

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I think Scrum Alliance certification is valuable, but the CSM as awarded up to late 2009 is not that valuable. However, the process is changing; as of October 1, 2009 you will have to complete a CSM class taught by a Scrum Alliance-certified CST (Certified Scrum Trainer) and then take and pass an online test.

IMO the real value in Scrum certification starts at the Certified Scrum Practitioner (CSP) level. This certification requires a year of experience plus a qualitative evaluation by the Scrum Alliance as to whether or not the applicant groks Scrum... not just the process but the principles behind the process. IMO the CSP certification is the separator between people who have taken a class and people who actually understand enough about Scrum to help make it work in an organization.

Will Scrum Alliance certification help you find a job? I think that if a company is looking for a person with Agile/Scrum experience, and two otherwise-equivalent people (in terms of technical qualifications and experience) apply, the one with the CSM will most likely get the nod. I can tell you from personal experience that advanced certification definitely helps in terms of getting into the interview. After that, of course, it's up to you.

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