Training Social Proofs

Testimonials from clients who engaged me to address delivery constraints, transform systems of work, implement tooling, or attend training courses. Also includes colleagues who worked alongside me on projects.

These statements describe what people observed or experienced. They are evidence of approach, knowledge, and working style, not endorsement.

How to Use This

Look for testimonials that describe constraints similar to yours. Notice what the client valued, what changed, and whether the outcome matched their intent.

Filter by category if you want to see feedback specific to a particular engagement type or outcome area.

Showing 5 of 112 social proofs

Great Scrum Master training with lots of real life examples. Thanks for all the relevant knowledge provided in the class. I am now comfortable understanding the functions involved in a professional Scrum master role and can take the certification.

Jordi Isse
Great Professional Scrum Master training
StudentPSM⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

The honest truth is that the two days Martin took us in class was what we needed; a hands-on to praticalise all we'd learned on Scrum and Agile. Listening to the recording sessions revealed indeed that it was an outstanding exercise on its own. Thank you, Martin.

Jude Chucks Uzonwanne
The honest truth is that the two days…
StudentPSM⭐⭐⭐⭐

I liked the training and Martin made it even more insightful, thank you very much, looking forward to continuing this inspirational journey with agile practices I have learned.

Karina Jarikbayeva
I liked the training and Martin made it…
StudentPAL-E⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Course content and tutor fantastic - shame about the co-ordinator (QA), had to visit 4 separate buildings prior to actually reaching the classroom

Leanne Burrows
Course content and tutor fantastic
StudentPAL-E⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Class was super interactive and Martin was very engaging.

Leyla Yaltiligil
Interactive, fun class
StudentAPS-SD⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

What to Do Next

Testimonials show what others experienced. The relevant question is whether your constraint is addressable using a similar diagnostic process.

If your situation appears similar, start a diagnostic conversation.