Scrum is quite popular dev.process these days and often Project Manager suddenly gets new title (Scrum Master). However it should be not just a new title, but new habits and new paradigm. What are the bad habits of your Scrum master?
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The big bad habit our Scrum Master had at first was thinking we would take care of our own impediments. That's one of the things the Scrum Master is supposed to do but she left it to us until it got unmanageable. The other thing we've dealt with is the Scrum Master thinking they were in charge of riding the developers' backs until tasks were taken care of. This creates a bad atmosphere on the team since they're supposed to be self-managing. To me and our team, the Scrum Master's job is to be a shield and assistant for the team, blocking impediments and doing what they can to help expedite things. Ken Schwaber's Agile Software Development with Scrum is an excellent intro to Scrum, it's what our team used and we've been pretty successful with it. There's also Agile Project Management with Scrum, which is more for the Scrum Master and Product Owner roles specifically. |
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I really dislike it when ex-PMs turned Scrum Master consider Scrum a way to cut back on their original (individual) obligations without investing that time back into team-work, and active stress-reduction (planning for setbacks). They just lay back and start praising themselves for the great results, whereas everyone can see the team would perform even better without their presence, at all. In my opinion, our best Scrum masters have been developers with a large sense of responsibility, or non-PMs. Then again, I have worked (before the world knew about Scrum) for PMs that seriously rocked. They would make great Scrum masters today, I'm sure. |
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Scrum is good but it can disregard good engineering practice and technical processes that have worked like a charm for ages. |
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There are two kinds of scrum masters:
The second point is preached and practiced in 'truly' Agile organizations. It is expensive but it has some merits. Also,
So, my point is, if these roles are confused, the team may not do very well. |
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Constantly trying to tie actual hours worked back to story point estimates. |
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Assigning work and asking for daily status reports instead of letting the team learn how to manage its own work. |
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Constantly swapping new bugs in and out of the Sprint. |
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Not keeping scrums on track - letting them descend into technical discussions and a much longer meeting. |
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Not helping with the push-back part of the process e.g. 'these are all the stores the customer wants in this iteration so thats what we have to do'. |
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When I was involved in a Scrum, the Scrum master quickly developed the habit of just letting us do our own thing, and the Scrum fell back into our normal development routine. |
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