What tools for managing Scrum would you recommend?
|
|
I can't reiterate how crucial it is to find your process before you let a tool dictate it for you. Start with the basics:
Later on you can decide which tool will support how your team works best. I love how Mingle is flexible and seems to have a lot of good features, but it does require serious customization. VersionOne looks like it fits our process well. |
||||
|
|
|
I've used Scrumworks before which did a pretty good job, although if you're using TFS then Scrum for Team System is okay. I've heard good things about Thoughtworks' Mingle but haven't had a chance to try it yet, and I know a number of people who swear by TargetProcess. |
|||
|
|
|
|
We use ScrumWorks and have no complaints! We've also found that the traditional task board with stickies / index cards is THE most effective because it is visible -- no tool can replace that! |
|||
|
|
We are seeing more and more online (hosted) Scrum management tools such as: Now, SkinnyBoard, is a beta, its terms of use indicate: "use at your own risk". Scrumy has a free and a commercial, more complete version. I won't recommend any of them since I do not use them on a regular basis, I'm just listing for the sake of completeness. |
|||
|
|
I can tell you what not to use. No matter what anyone says, Excel is a lousy way to manage sprints. |
|||
|
|
|
|
I would recommend to start with the simplest solution that could possibly work :
What is important is to start Scrum and to understand it's process, not the tools. Let the team decide later for a tool if the organization isn't satisfied with the initial solution. But the team has to choose the tool, not someone else. And FYI, there is a list of tools with reviews on www.userstories.com, Mike Cohn's web site dedicated to user stories and product backlogs. |
|||
|
|
|
|
We use VersionOne, which is quite good but somewhat over featured. If I we're setting up anew I'd also consider BaseCamp - not purely a programming tool, but pretty good. Another good option is actually the low tech one: whiteboard + post-its. |
||||
|
|
|
We have used Target Process for around a year, and it's very good. You can buy the software outright, or you can use their hosted version - both work well and the price is reasonable. We used to use Rally, but everyone in development really hated it - it was slow, unintuitive, cumbersome, and in general not at all what we wanted although it was fairly pricey. After living with it for almost a year, we switched to TP, which is actually quite a good tool. The other good thing about TP is that the company behind it isn't as well known as VersionOne and Rally, and so are much more responsive to our needs than Rally ever was... |
|||
|
|
TargetProcess is a good tool, But if you are new to SCRUM, I recommend to use simplest tools first (whiteboard, sticky, etc.). It is important to focus on communication and process first. Then you may feel the need for software tool. |
|||
|
|
|
|
Basically whiteboard + post-its , we did use Scrumworks in the past. We also have custom made cards for out planning poker sessions |
|||
|
|
|
|
We use ProjectCards for ours. I had evaluated VersionOne (the full version, not their new light one), Mingle, Rally, ScrumWorks and a plugin for Serena TeamTrack (which we already use). ProjectCards was great that it was a simple tool which still supported the multiple teams we're running. VersionOne and Rally were just simply too heavy for what we needed (though both looked powerful). Rally refused to talk to us because we were under 75 users and wanted to host it ourselves. I would certainly suggest starting with something simple - index cards on a wall, or a spreadsheet - first. You'll likely quickly outgrow it, but at least you'll spend your time focused on working with the team rather than trying to fit your team to a tool. |
|||
|
|
|
|
I've been doing Scrum with XP for two years now and the best tools we have are various colors of index cards (colors each for stories, bugs, analysis, tech debt, etc), and some big pieces of foam insulation or large corkboards to stick them too. And a lot of Sharpies. We also heavily use a wiki (MediaWiki) for information exchange between teams. For the Scrum Masters, they use a highly-macro'd Excel sheet, which they all hate. They piloted VersionOne and they all liked it. |
|||
|
|
|
|
I'm piloting Scrum for Team System and it looks promising. They have a nice "Task Board" desktop app which gives a good view of the sprint and allows you to move virtual stickies from column to column (e.g. not started to in progress to ready for test to done). The process templates are a free download. The task board is currently in beta but will have a licence fee when relesaed. Ive previously used ScrumWorks and it worked mostly, but was rather flakey at times. |
|||
|
|
|
|
Take a look at IceScrum, an opensource apache tomcat web application. |
|||
|
|
|
|
A whiteboard. |
|||
|
|
|
|
Mingle. Eminently flexible. http://mingle.thoughtworks.com/mingle-agile-project-management |
|||
|
|
|
|
At work we just use an excel spreadsheet. It's simple, flexible, and you can add or change anything you want to it. Which means it's agile :-) |
|||
|
|
|
|
For projects using trac already, agile42 looks like a nice add-on. |
|||
|
|
|
|
Around here we've also been using Cochango plugin for TFS, but whatever the chosen tool may be the important thing is visibility. Around here we started to print our Burndown chart and take it to each Daily Scrum so that everybody sees it, because when you have an "electronic only" chart people tend to miss it for days. |
|||
|
|
|
|
We use a board on the wall with sticky notes and a blackboard (actually white :)) that we use to draw the burn chart on. A KISS as can possibly be |
|||
|
|
|
|
We use VersionOne. There are free and paid versions. I totally love it. |
|||
|
|
|
|
You can take a look on ScrumDesk. It is targeted on Scrum method and used in small or enterprise companies. Stories are displayed as cards, in the grid, unique tree map or on the task board. Reports are accessible on one, interactive, view. Data can be synchronized with TFS too. It is free for up to 5 users. |
|||
|
|
|
|
Scrumy. As Ben said at the top Note Cards, Whiteboards, Big Visible Charts, and Excel if needed for tracking is where to start. That is exactly what Scrumy is. It is basic and intuitive and gives you just that. Both free and a low priced version. |
|||
|
|
If you're lucky enough to have everyone co-located, I've found the Whiteboards/stickypads/etc. work pretty well. But if you're trying to coordinate resources across multiple locations (which is the case in many shops), you really need a tool. If you're a TFS shop, I'd recommend Scrum for TFS: I've used it successfully, and I like the built-in ability that TFS gives you to move seamlessly from the TFS environment to Excel, Project, SharePoint, and so forth. |
|||
|
|
|
|
We use Scrum for Team System w/ the TaskBoard application for a scrum board feel and functionality. TaskBoard is in it's first release and has some kinks to work out, but if you're a Microsoft Team Foundation Server user and want to use the Scrum for Team System process template, I highly recommend using TaskBoard. |
|||
|
|
|
|
XPTracker is very complete: Definitely worth a look ! |
|||
|
|
|
|
Our team uses Rally. http://www.rallydev.com It seems to work good. |
|||
|
|
|
|
If a hosted solution works for you then Pivotal Tracker is the closest I have seen to electronic index cards and is very well implemented (and free). I especially like the sparse beauty of the UI (as simple as possible but no simpler). I'll echo the other advice that you should find the tool that matches your process but, if you find that after using index cards and a whiteboard, you want /insert usual reasons for electronic solution here/, Pivotal tracker is probably what you are looking for. |
|||
|
|
|
|
We tried RallyDev, VersionOne and Scrumworks. All of them are comprehensive tools but they they all took too long to set up and there were a lot of features we did not need. I went back to using Excel sheets as I was looking for something simple, till I came across ScrumEdge. ScrumEdge is really easy to set up and has its own built in scrum community where users can discuss their scrum related problems. All those who use excel sheets i would definitely recommend that you check out ScrumEdge. Best of all, there is a free plan available. |
|||
|
|
|
|
We use mingle for all our development projects, the user experience is very intuitive and the flexible view format really give it an edge over the competition. We have also started to use the tree structure and this has allowed us to implement automated rollup reports to track estimates and actual hours on all stories and cards. Now we spend more time on the interesting work and less time fighting spreadsheets and the like. |
|||
|
|
