About the Course
The “Engineering Project Management: Agile & Scrum Frameworks” course is an advanced training program designed to introduce modern, flexible theoretical methodologies into the engineering sector. In 2026, engineering projects require more than just rigid scheduling; they demand rapid adaptability and stakeholder transparency. This course bridges the gap between traditional Waterfall management and modern Agile frameworks, empowering engineers to lead high-velocity projects with precision and efficiency.
Course Objectives
- Understand the core principles of Agile and the Scrum framework within an engineering context.
- Master the application of Scrum artifacts and ceremonies to complex technical projects.
- Build cross-functional, flexible engineering teams capable of rapid problem-solving.
- Develop high-level planning, execution, and tracking skills using iterative Agile cycles.
- Enhance stakeholder engagement and real-time communication throughout the project lifecycle.
- Adopt global best practices for implementing Agile in non-software engineering disciplines.
- Prepare for professional leadership roles such as Scrum Master or Product Owner in engineering firms.
Course Syllabus
Day 1: Introduction to Agile and Scrum Methodologies
- The Agile Manifesto: Core values and strategic goals for engineering.
- The evolution of Scrum: From software development to complex hardware and civil engineering.
- Strategic Comparison: Waterfall vs. Agile in the engineering labor market.
- Adapting Agile principles: Managing physical constraints vs. digital flexibility.
Day 2: Scrum Roles and Team Dynamics
Defining the “Who” in a flexible engineering project environment.
[Image of the Scrum Team roles: Product Owner, Scrum Master, and Development Team]
- Core Roles: Product Owner, Scrum Master, and the Development (Engineering) Team.
- Defining responsibilities: Who manages the technical specs vs. the project flow?
- Building “Self-Organizing” engineering teams: Trust, collaboration, and accountability.
- Selection criteria: Identifying the right talent for an Agile engineering environment.
Day 3: Scrum Ceremonies in Engineering Projects
Focusing on the Sprint cycle as the engine of project progress.
- The Daily Standup: Synchronization and roadblock removal for site and office teams.
- Sprint Planning: Breaking down complex engineering scopes into manageable increments.
- Sprint Review: Continuous evaluation and stakeholder feedback loops.
- Sprint Retrospective: Analyzing engineering performance for continuous improvement.
Day 4: Agile Planning and Tracking Tools
Turning client requirements into technical Engineering Backlogs.
- Drafting User Stories and translating them into technical engineering requirements.
- Estimation techniques: Using Story Points and Planning Poker for effort assessment.
- Visual Management: Utilizing Scrum/Kanban Boards to track site execution phases.
- Backlog Refinement: Prioritizing high-value engineering tasks.
Day 5: Scaling Agile and Organizational Change
- Integrating Agile with other philosophies (e.g., Lean Engineering and Six Sigma).
- Selection Matrix: Choosing the right methodology (Agile, Waterfall, or Hybrid) based on project type.
- Common hurdles: Navigating the transition from traditional hierarchy to Agile flexibility.
- Cultural Transformation: How engineering firms can adopt a “Fail-Fast, Learn-Fast” mindset based on Scrum.


