show/hide this revision's text 2 augh

Product owner shouldn't be a developer or project management role; the whole point is to have someone who can accept a result and who is the subject matter expert. If you make them a team member, you're back to making the product developers define the product; this is a Bad Thing. And if you make them the SCRUM master, first, they probably don't have the development background a SCUM SCRUM master needs to understand the issues and estimation, and second, they then control the exact processes and products the SCRUM master should be serving as a balance on.

The SCRUM master can certainly take some team member duties, especially in a small team. However, in most cases as the team size grows beyond 3-4, the SCRUM master won't have a ton of time for regualr development work.

[Updated: "SCUM" master a very inconvenient typo.]

show/hide this revision's text 1

Product owner shouldn't be a developer or project management role; the whole point is to have someone who can accept a result and who is the subject matter expert. If you make them a team member, you're back to making the product developers define the product; this is a Bad Thing. And if you make them the SCRUM master, first, they probably don't have the development background a SCUM master needs to understand the issues and estimation, and second, they then control the exact processes and products the SCRUM master should be serving as a balance on.

The SCRUM master can certainly take some team member duties, especially in a small team. However, in most cases as the team size grows beyond 3-4, the SCRUM master won't have a ton of time for regualr development work.