The web development team I work in works with a user experience team that follow User Centered Design principles. Together we all work within Scrum.

What best practices should we be aiming for to get great products delivered?

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Ones with as many buzzwords and acronyms as you can possibly find. – Alex Fort Apr 3 '09 at 18:27
Abandon Scrum? Write specs before starting to code? Make your users smart enough that they know what they want and need? – Varkhan Apr 3 '09 at 18:29
@varkhan we code not teach. I am not a trainer. Also why the hell would I want to teach non programmers how it works? – Stewart Robinson Apr 3 '09 at 18:47
@StewartRobinson Because if your users are not smart, don't expect the result obtained from listening to them to be good. Try to write good software with a purpose, and then educate your users to use it. – Varkhan Apr 3 '09 at 18:51
@Stewart Varkhan is right. You don't have to teach them how to code, but they need to have clearly defined goals and methods if they're going to give you any worthwhile feedback. – Frank Crook Apr 3 '09 at 21:10
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Stewart, judging by your question and subsequent comments it sounds like you have a people problem as opposed to a project management problem. Scrum is great for prioritised, iterative delivery in a customer centric fashion but if the underlying human interaction is flawed you’re going to be fighting an uphill battle.

So in response to “what best practices you should be aiming for to get great products delivered”, start on the social side. If it’s a large group perhaps you have an HR department that can assist. It sounds like a bit of team building and mutual respect would be a good starting point then you can work on the business of actually creating software.

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