Professional Scrum Master I in Santiago
Validates knowledge of the Scrum framework and ability to apply it in real-world agile environments as a Scrum Master.
What is Professional Scrum Master I?
The Professional Scrum Master I (PSM I) is an entry-level Scrum certification offered by Scrum.org that validates your understanding of the Scrum framework, its roles, events, and artifacts. Unlike many certifications, PSM I requires no prerequisites, making it accessible to developers, project managers, and team leads alike. In Santiago, demand for certified Scrum practitioners has risen sharply as Chilean tech companies, financial institutions, and startups adopt agile delivery models. Holding the PSM I signals to local employers that you can facilitate Scrum teams effectively and contribute to faster, more reliable product delivery — a skill set increasingly valued across Santiago's growing digital economy.
At $200 USD, the PSM I is one of the most cost-efficient professional certifications available. With the average IT salary in Santiago sitting around $32,000 per year, the projected $9,000 annual salary uplift represents a 28% increase — an exceptional return on a single exam fee. Santiago's tech sector is expanding rapidly, with agile roles appearing consistently across fintech, e-commerce, and software consulting firms. Employers across the city actively filter for Scrum credentials when hiring Scrum Masters and agile coaches. The PSM I pays for itself within days of landing a higher-paying role, and the three-year renewal cycle keeps ongoing costs minimal.
Exam details
Prerequisites: None required
12-week study plan
Exam tips
The Scrum Guide is the only official source of truth — every PSM I answer can be traced back to it, so base all decisions on the Guide's exact wording rather than personal Scrum experience or outside frameworks.
Pay close attention to Sprint cancellation rules: only the Product Owner can cancel a Sprint, and questions will test whether you know this accountability precisely.
The exam uses trick scenarios where a well-meaning team action violates Scrum rules — always ask yourself 'does this align with the Scrum Guide?' rather than 'does this seem reasonable in practice?'
Timebox durations are high-frequency exam content — memorize exact maximums for the Sprint, Sprint Planning, Daily Scrum, Sprint Review, and Sprint Retrospective for a one-month Sprint and know how they scale for shorter Sprints.
If you score below 85% on any practice test, resist the urge to schedule the real exam — review every wrong answer against the Scrum Guide before testing again, since the $200 retake fee rewards patience over urgency.