Description
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What Is a Product Backlog?
A Product Backlog is an ordered list of everything that might be needed in the product — features, enhancements, bug fixes, technical tasks, and knowledge acquisition items. In PMBOK 8, the Product Backlog is recognized as a key artifact in adaptive (agile/hybrid) delivery approaches. It represents the complete desired scope of the product at any point in time, prioritized by business value, risk, and dependencies. Unlike a fixed scope document, the backlog is continuously refined: items are added, removed, reprioritized, and detailed as the team learns more about the product and the customer's needs.
Even in predictive projects like Project Phoenix — primarily waterfall with a hybrid flavor — a product backlog captures the evolving feature set and provides a structured mechanism for the sponsor to request changes without disrupting the current sprint or phase.
What's Inside This Product Backlog Example
This Product Backlog example covers Project Phoenix — MCG's $72,250 website launch, March 17 to June 13, 2025. The spreadsheet organizes backlog items across three tabs:
- Sprint Backlog: Items committed to the current two-week cycle, with story points, owner, and acceptance criteria
- Product Backlog: Full prioritized list of 47 feature items, ranked by MoSCoW priority (Must Have, Should Have, Could Have, Won't Have this release)
- Icebox: 12 items deferred to Phase 2 after scope management decisions, including the live chat widget (CR-004 rejection) and advanced analytics dashboard
Must Have items (23): home page, service pages (6), about page, contact form, blog module (added via CR-001), navigation, mobile responsiveness, CMS setup, user authentication, SEO metadata framework, SSL configuration, performance optimization, and content migration for core pages.
How Alex Morgan Used This Product Backlog
Alex Morgan maintained the Product Backlog collaboratively with Riley Park, who served as Product Owner equivalent for the sponsor side. Riley Park reviewed and re-ranked the backlog in a 30-minute session every two weeks — this was the mechanism that kept stakeholder expectations aligned with delivery reality throughout the project.
Four backlog management decisions shaped Project Phoenix's outcome:
- CR-001 (blog module): Riley Park requested the blog module in Week 3. Rather than dismissing it as scope creep, Alex added it to the backlog, ran an impact analysis, and brought it to the CCB as CR-001. Approved and prioritized as Must Have, it was inserted into the development sprint beginning Week 5.
- CR-002 scope reduction: The content migration backlog items for 90 low-priority legacy pages were moved to the Icebox in Week 6, preserving the June 13 launch date.
- CR-004 rejection: The live chat widget was added to the backlog as a Could Have, analyzed, and moved to the Icebox with a Phase 2 label after the CCB rejected the timing. Riley Park could see it was captured — not forgotten — which maintained trust.
- Backlog refinement sessions: Held every other Friday, these 45-minute sessions with the lead developer and UX designer ensured that backlog items had clear acceptance criteria before they entered a sprint. Zero items in Project Phoenix were returned mid-sprint due to unclear requirements — a direct result of refinement discipline.
Download and Customize
This Product Backlog example is available as a free download. Use it as a reference to build your own backlog, or start with the blank template and adapt it to your hybrid or agile delivery approach.
- Download the Product Backlog Template — PMBOK 8 (blank, ready to use)
- Read the article: Product Backlog in PMBOK 8 — Guide and Best Practices
Product Backlog Example: Key Takeaways
The most revealing aspect of Project Phoenix's Product Backlog is what ended up in the Icebox. Twelve items were deferred — not lost, not forgotten, but explicitly captured and labeled Phase 2. That discipline is what allowed Riley Park to accept the CR-004 rejection without frustration: the live chat widget was visible in the backlog, prioritized, and earmarked for the next release. Stakeholder trust in scope management comes not from always saying yes, but from demonstrating that every request is heard, evaluated, and tracked to an explicit disposition. The Product Backlog is the tool that makes that discipline visible.
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