What does the "self organizing" in "self organizing Scrum team" mean?
closed as off topic by Brad Larson♦ Aug 3 '12 at 21:30
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See this article for a good explanation. This quote explains the heart of it:
The team approaches a project, and, based on the project at hand, decides how best to allocate its resources to take advantage of each team member's various strengths. |
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It means this: No one – not even the ScrumMaster - tells the Team how to turn Product Backlog into increments of shippable functionality. The Team figures this out on its own. Each Team member applies his or her expertise to all of the problems. The synergy that results improves the entire Team’s overall efficiency and effectiveness. Reference: Scrum Guide |
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A self-organising team is one in which every member of the team is working towards some shared goal. Team members collaborate to reach the goal, valuing the team's output over their own individual productivity. A self-organizing team tends to be:
The project manager's roles in a self-organising team tend to be:
A self-organizing team is usually pretty good at getting things done, blasting through obstacles, communicating issues outside of their control and generally provides a great project experience for anyone using them. See also: Forming, Storming, Norming and Performing - you're looking for that last one. |
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It’s a flexible, responsive team that is allowed to make important decisions on its own in a preset framework. Usually, the management decides on the goals and overall deadlines for a project. Then it's up to the team to find the best ways to attain these goals, distribute tasks among the members, plan and evaluate their own work at the interim deadlines they set. Team leadership is not set in stone. Usually, the Scrum master changes regularly, so that each team member has a chance to try this role. The main aim of such teams is to encourage the self-actualization of every worker. When team members can make a difference, they feel inner responsibility and motivation to perform. This way, self-organization promotes innovation and a good team morale, both of which look like solid benefits. By the way, we recently published a blog post explaining the benefits of the concept in more detail. You can check it out here, if you are interested. |
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