What tools for managing Scrum would you recommend?
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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. |
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There's a new tool on the market you may also want to checkout - Bright Green Projects. It's clean, easy to use and cheap. http://www.brightgreenprojects.com |
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How about iMeta Agility a Scrum Management Tool. It is a rich internet tool written in Silverlight. It is free! iMeta Agility is focused around simplicity and usability. Importantly the team that are developing the product are delivering functionality based on community feedback. So you can influence the future development direction. |
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we use XPlanner+ and develop it :) XPlanner-Plus is an open source tool for agile, scrum teams. It's based on XPlanner and has a new and improved features, such as fancy design, email notifications for tasks' status and others. Demo is available. |
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I am here to promote the tool, I am developing: XPlanner Plus. You all must have heard of XPlanner, so my tool is based on it. It's very simple for understanding, open source, scrum tool. It's ready for use and the current releases can be downloaded on sf.net New features are under intensive development. |
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Scrum Tool is an easy desktop app (Windows/Linux) to support the traditional white board based sprints. It is under development, so developers are very open to suggestions. |
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I'd like to recommend Scrumpad. It has a simple and friendly interface. I've been using Scrumpad to manage sprints and stories for over a year, really like it. It's easy to use and to manage stories within a specific sprint or cross multiple sprints. It also provides the traceability among stories if one story got split or descoped. |
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ScrumPad is a simple yet complete in functionality. It uses convention over configuration. So, it is easy to get up to speed. Also it does not forces you to work in a certain way. The only requirement is that you do iterative, incremental development. I highly recommend it. |
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Pivotal Tracker is the best Agile project management tool in my eyes. It's simple, easy-to-use, and free. |
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Take a look at http://pangoscrum.com As simple as possible and with a friendly interface, PangoScrum does not intend to replace the task board or change the team's Scrum process. |
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Agilo for Scrum Pro is a new version of Agilo for Scrum and offers a functional online whiteboard (Planning Board) Its only 78 Euro per team and month including professional support. |
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I believe Banana Scrum is worth looking at. It has some really nice features. You can try it out without registering. |
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If you have Outlook, you can start your scrum process cheaply with Task Analytics. |
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Mostly excel. Otherwise Product Owners will complain ;-) We also use TFS with the Scrum Template |
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Have you tried Agilo for Scrum? http://www.agiloforscrum.org it is free and Open Source, it has a nice integration with SVN that speeds up a lot the usage from the development team perspective. It is based on Trac that is a very wide spread tool for Agile Project Management and adds nice charts and: - Sprint Backlog with automated Burndown Chart - Product Backlog with customizable sorting criteria, and types - Statistics Charts on Team Velocity, Commitment, Estimations - Integration with SVN and code browsing, very cool updating tickets through SVN comments - Drag & Drop to manually reposition items in the backlogs - Import & Export from CSV - Ticket linking and grouping for better traceability and organization We like it a lot :-) It is rumored that a whiteboard and enterprise features will come soon, at least this is what appeared already a couple of times on the Agilo User Group (Google Groups) |
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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. |
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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. |
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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. |
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Our team uses Rally. http://www.rallydev.com It seems to work good. |
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XPTracker is very complete: Definitely worth a look ! |
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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. |
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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. |
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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. |
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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. |
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Mingle. Eminently flexible. http://mingle.thoughtworks.com/mingle-agile-project-management |
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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. |
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I have used Greenhopper where JIRA was already available. It requires just a little bit of customization to 2-3 fields in Jira to make the burndowns and estimates work as I expected. Overall, it worked very well. |
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We use VersionOne. There are free and paid versions. I totally love it. |
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A whiteboard. |
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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 |
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