Passing the PAL I On Your First Try— Professional Agile Leadership Certification for 2022

Yon Vo
3 min readMay 18, 2020

The PAL I is an interesting test and moderately difficult. You could be faced with questions that could easily be a couple of different correct answers.

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Professional Agile Leadership (PAL I) Practice Test: Free PAL Quiz

The biggest thing to remember is that you need to read each word carefully and think about what they mean in context to Scrum. I doubt the claims of Scrum.org that distributed teams are less effective than colocated teams. I have seen about 5 or 6 studies on this in the past year or so and only one of those studies seemed to find that distributed teams were less effective than colocated ones.

You have to answer from a Scrum perspective, therefore, you have to answer from the perspective that distributed teams are less effective than colocated ones. In most cases, the rationale makes sense and you can tell which ones are good choices. The difficult part is choosing the best choice.

Here is what you should go to pass the Professional Agile Leadership (PAL I) certification exam:

The PAL I isn’t a memorization exam. The open assessments, the course and blog posts I list above will only take you so far. You have to get in on the Agile mindset, which the above helped me to do. You have to critically think about the information above and relate it to real-world scenarios.

You need to remember that the primary purpose of an agile approach isn’t to create value or save money — it’s to improve the outcome for the customer. So when given a choice between lower costs, more value, or improved customer satisfaction; the likely answer has to do with customer satisfaction.

The Product Owner is not a manager of the Scrum team. The Scrum Master doesn’t tell the team how to do their work. These are obvious statements until faced with some questions about what they are supposed to do in given scenarios.

As with the PSM, you need to answer for the Ideal Scrum environment. So a manager outside the team isn’t going to order a Product Owner to add an item to the Sprint backlog — even if you have seen that happen in real life. That isn’t Ideal Scrum.

Hopefully, some of the above tips and study items help you out. It can be a tricky test, but it is a logical one as long as you have a decent grasp of Scrum. The worst part is choosing the best answer when two or more sound like fairly decent options — remember the Scrum Guide when that happens.

If you are taking the PAL I, I recommend you take the practice tests and Hiro Takashimya’s Exam Prep for Professional Agile Leadership (PAL I™) — Pass on your FIRST try! save up to 50%

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