Accountability demands that expectations have been set
In my previous post about accountability there was an implication that for someone to be held accountable expectations must be clearly set and there must be a commitment to meet or exceed those expectations. Without clear expectations it is unclear to me how one could be held accountable since the accountability is a direct reference to those expectations. As an example, a Product Owner is accountable, responsible to use the terminology in the Scrum Guide, for managing the Product Backlog. In the Scrum Guide there are five bullet points that detail that responsibility. For the Product Owner to be held accountable for proper management of the Product Backlog the Product Owner and the business, often read the Product Owner's direct manager, must have a shared understanding of what that expectation means. The Product Owner must understand that their role entails making a commitment to meet or exceed those expectations or they are in the wrong role. When discussing expectations i