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To quote wikipedia:

Scrum is facilitated by a ScrumMaster, whose primary job is to remove impediments to the ability of the team to deliver the sprint goal. The ScrumMaster is not the leader of the team (as they are self-organizing) but acts as a buffer between the team and any distracting influences. The ScrumMaster ensures that the Scrum process is used as intended. The ScrumMaster is the enforcer of rules."

Working on this basis, and the fact that most businesses are running 2-3 projects at a time, what actual work tasks does a SM do to fill a full time job? Or, is it not a full time job and that individual do other things such as development, sales etc?

Do any SM's out there have anything to share?

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12 Answers

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The Scrum Master will do things like ensuring scrums occur, organising sprint planning meetings, retrospectives etc. Also (s)he will be able to explain to management what the team is doing and why the team members cannot be poached off onto other projects until the sprint finishes. Beyond that, there aren't really any defined tasks for the Scrum Master. So one person should easily be able to be Scrum Master for 3 teams, and still have time left over to either do management type jobs (holiday requests, procedures, attending boring meetings with directors or whatever), or be free to contribute to the development resources of the team.

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It is not recommendable for one scrum master to facilitate more than one team or even get involved in the development team. – jpartogi Sep 29 at 21:57
This answer does not accurately reflect the role of ScrumMaster, particularly the bit about "So one person should easily be able to be Scrum Master for 3 teams, and still have time left over to either do management type jobs (holiday requests, procedures, attending boring meetings with directors or whatever),..." – drivendevelopment Oct 1 at 19:48
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"acts as a buffer between the team and any distracting influences"

That is a full time job. There are a bunch of people who would love to get information from the team and it is the SM to handle those questions. To do that job well, it is important to be proactive, not reactive. Therefore they should be keeping all the wheels running smoothly. It is an amazing transformation when the SM is working well.

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Unfortunately we don't have the luxury of having dedicated scrum masters. I am also a team leader and senior developer which more than fills the day.

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Not sure why I got voted down here, I thought I answered the question. – Si Keep Sep 24 '08 at 15:25
You likely fill the role of Scrum Master, even if you do not have the title – David Arno Sep 24 '08 at 15:25
Yep I do, it is one of my titles. – Si Keep Sep 24 '08 at 15:26
I'm not sure why you were voted down either as you made a valid point. So I promptly voted you back up again ;) – David Arno Sep 24 '08 at 15:28
nice work, cheers! – Si Keep Sep 24 '08 at 15:33
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Ideally, the Scrum Master will maintain up to three projects --whatever number he's comfortable with. He shouldn't be a true developer, since that takes up too much time and is a conflict of interest in a lot of ways, anyway. Instead, think of the SM as the Project Manager in waterfall development.

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To make a long story short, the Scrum Master is responsible for making things happen. And in practice it is often the case that the Scrum Master is actually a project manager in disguise. At least that's the case in my company.

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The ScrumMaster/ Iteration Manager

  • Builds the Release Plan
  • Builds the Scrum/ Iteration Plan
  • Plans and hosts the
    • Scrum/ Iteration Planning Meetings
    • Show & Tells
    • Release Planning Meetings
    • Retrospectives
  • Owns the blocker board and actively works with the team to identify and remove blockers
  • Updates the team WIKI
  • Updates Big Visible Charts in the team room including the story card wall
  • Participates in the daily standup
  • Participates in the daily Scrum of Scrums

The ScrumMaster/ Iteration Manager is also the sheep dog, that is they protect the team (herd). Finally, the ScrumMaster/ Iteration Manager is the point of contact for the team to external resources but primarily the Project Manager.

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Scrum master is not responsible to do all that, the team is. Scrum master is only to make sure process is running, but not doing the process itself. – jpartogi Sep 29 at 21:59
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I typically am on Stack Overflow all day. Oh, and I try to co-ordinate lunches.

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While ScrumMaster is a role within the Scrum framework, the individual fulfilling that role must be a member of the Team. In Scrum, Team members should at all costs be full time. Team members should be able to pick up tasks on the Sprint backlog. They might be development tasks, testing tasks, configuring the CI server tasks, etc... If you can't contribute to the burndown then why be on the team? Buggering off and joining another team is the last thing any self respecting ScrumMaster should do. ScrumMasters should be servant leaders that are embedded with and dedicated to their Team and product. ScrumMaster is a role on a Team, not a job title. I disagree with those that think you can be a ScrumMaster on more than one project at a time and still be world class. The fact is, that's just not Scrum.

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Working on this basis, and the fact that most businesses are running 2-3 projects at a time, what actual work tasks does a SM do to fill a full time job?

Anything within their skillset to help the Team achieve the goal.

Or, is it not a full time job and that individual do other things such as development, sales etc?

ScrumMaster was not originally intended to be a full time job. ScrumMaster is a role fulfilled by someone on the Team. That team member is dedicated to the product full time. So, when he\she is not doing ScrumMaster duties they default back to burning down tasks on the Sprint Backlog.

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The key to the ScrumMaster role is to remove impediments.

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I think there will be as many answers to this question as there are people to answer it. On a small team with dedicated people who mostly know what they doing, the role of SM is almost invisible; on a larger team trying to cope with vague requirements and power struggles the SM will be highly visible and probably never have a moment to themselves, as they will become the lightning conductor for all the frustrations of the team (and stakeholders outside it).

There's no substitute for knowing what you want to achieve and having a small team of people who know how to achieve it. If you have that, and you "adopt SCRUM", you will probably be convinced quickly that being a Scrum Master is easy. But if instead you have a big mess of a team, and an undefined goal, and a lot of political fighting going on, and you "adopt SCRUM", you will probably come away thinking that being a Scrum Master is a full-time (perhaps impossible) job requiring a combination of very rare talents. Most real teams are probably somewhere between these extremes.

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Everything and anything that developers need to keep being productive. Order pizza. Go talk to admins, management, other teams. Do bureaucracy kind of stuff. Fix the build server if no one else's available.

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