Hot answers tagged scrummaster
18
Please find below some Google Docs templates (I won't mention excel templates here):
A simple example (Product
Backlog, Sprint Backlog and Burndown
Charts) provided by Pyxis.
A sample sheet (Product Backlog, Sprint Backlog, Burndown Charts, Impediments backlog) provided by Openbravo - and some more sheets at the end of this page.
A basic Scrum template ...
17
Each person should answer these questions:
What did I do yesterday/between the last meeting and this one?
What am I/will I be working on?
Do I have any impediments?
This shouldn't take you more than a few minutes.
Any other discussion should be addressed AFTER the meeting.
The goal of the meeting is to have a general knowledge of what's going on and ...
13
The fist organization was Scrum Alliance. Later on Ken Schwaber (co-founder of Scrum) left Scrum Alliance and started Scrum.org. I heard that there was some disagreement among Ken and other Scurm alliance board members but it is only chit-chat. Scrum alliance still have other interesting and known agile gurus like Jeff Sutherland (also co-founder of Scrum) ...
9
For me there is no separate QA in SCRUM. Each developer is responsible for testing and creating automatic tests = each developer has to have testing skills. If you have separate QA person who is not able to complete his tasks then developers have to help him. This is main point of SCRUM team. There is no "this is his job".
8
As Joseph Pelrine, one of the most prominent certified Scrum Trainers, likes to say (as far as I know): the CSM doesn't really certify much more than that you have breathed the same air than a Scrum trainer for two days.
The value of the CSM really is in the course, not in the certificate.
8
I've spent some considerable time comparing the CSM and PSM certificates. In brief:
The Certified Scrum Master (CSM) certificate is more widely recognised than the Professional Scrum Master (PSM) certificate.
The cost of acquiring, and maintaining, the CSM certificate is considerably more than acquiring a PSM certificate (there are no maintenance costs for ...
6
We're doing 2 week sprints and as you can see our QA resource is severely low.
That's all that's needed to know the situation. You don't need to read the rest to know that without doing anything QA won't be able to catch up. Worst when you add "is split across 5 projects".
QA needs to happen, just because you don't have enough people with that hat on ...
5
Bugs should not be counted towards your velocity. Bugs actually have negative business value as they are work that was not properly completed in a previous sprint. What they do is LOWER your sprint velocity. If you feel that your velocity is not high enough because you are doing to many bug/support issues then you have an impediment for your ...
5
I'm not convinced that the choice of tool will necessarily bring about an improvement on the part of the product owner but I'm sure that a poor choice will only make things worse.
But it sounds to me like your 'product owner' isn't on-board with the role s/he has. I suggest that a (very amicable) sit-down, be it in-person (best) or using some "go to ...
5
The first obvious problem is that the project doesn't have a Product Owner (there are stakeholders but no single PO, no single person that can take decision, prioritize things, maximize the ROI of the product). Involve the management if required but this project needs one (and only one) person to play the PO role and support the associated responsibilities.
...
5
In an "ideal Scrum situation" the Scrum Master would not be responsible for any tasks committed in the sprint, if they were, on occasion there would be a conflict of interest between them needing to complete their task and needing to remove an impediment that a team member has reported.
The Scrum Master should be a faciliator not a manager and during the ...
5
Henrik Kniberg describes some schedules in Scrum and XP from the Trenches. See:
Chapter 4 "How we do sprint planning"
Sprint planning meeting agenda
Chapter 10 How we do sprint retrospectives
How we organize retrospectives
chapter 11 Slack time between sprints.
Just in case, here are some durations I use as bases for a 2 weeks sprint (and ...
5
Pragmatically, you're going to have to continue working. However, it will be useful to understand and communicate the effects of insufficient QA resources.
You can create a definition of done that omits QA testing. However, such a story is not proven shippable. Your quality may suffer from a lack of rapid, iterative collaboration with QA. You may be ...
4
If you're running multiple teams, I have found it best to have a Scrum Master for each team, and a Product Owner for each team. Otherwise, as others have pointed out, you should stagger the sprint start/end dates so the Scrum Master and Product Owner can be fully available at the sprint planning, review, and retrospective meetings.
I find that ...
4
If you want action, you're going to have to start talking the Product Owner's language, and you're going to need to attach consequences to the overdue items. Not in the "we'll send you to bed without dinner" or "we, the engineers, will be unhappy!" sense, but in the "here's what the impact on the project in dollars/euros is" sense. Money tends to get product ...
4
We limit the total to 15 minutes.... and a person to between 2 and 3 minutes...if people start discussing design or specifics then those will have to wait till after the meeting or will have to go into a separate meeting with just the people that need to be involved
you can get real creative and introduce the scrum witch..basically a timer that ...
4
I've not found any good central place for information on my new role, can anyone point me in the right direction?
Get the Scrum Guide (the official Scrum Body Of Knowledge co authored by Ken Schwaber and Jeff Sutherland) from Scrum.org. The Scrum Alliance is also another good place to find resources but the Scrum Guide is definitely a good start.
And ...
4
I've not found any good central place for information on my new role, can anyone point me >in the right direction?
Scrum Guide is the first thing you should refer as commented above.
scrum.org/storage/scrumguides/Scrum%20Guide.pdf then once you are done with that move to scrumalliance.org or others.
We're doing 2 week sprints and as you can see our ...
4
As long as there is one person managing the Product Backog Items, and the team are not getting different answers depending on who they ask, then this may be workable.
I would say that the 'business' PO is not a PO in the Scrum sense, from your description.
You might want to repost this to the scrumdevelopment Yahoo Group/email list.
3
We have 16 devs in 4 sub-teams of 4 each. The sub-teams group and then speak in series. The first begins speaking at 8:45am sharp. After about 3 releases/9 iterations, we are down and can be back to work, a follow-up meeting or coffee by 9:00.
It did take a few refinements to get it from just under 25 minutes to under 15 consistently.
Things we did ...
3
Start with no limits. The people in the meeting are simply stating "I did [x] yesterday. I will do [y] today. I need [z] in order to complete my task(s)." The purpose is NOT to solve the problems and the SCRUM master/moderator should be controlling that flow.
Some people do tend to be a bit long winded and if you run into that, a timer should be used. Start ...
3
Scrum has several practices that mark the rhythm of the Team:
the daily scrum
the sprint planning meeting
Then the burndown chart shows the amount of work remaining for the sprint decreasing.
Big visible charts or information radiator in the team room display important information. Here is an example from Henrik Kniberg "Scrum and XP from the ...
3
I've been told that Scrum is all about exposing problems. Since there's a problem - lack of a Product Owner - your job as Scrum Master is, I think, to see to it that the problem is exposed. One of the best ways to do that might be to let no stories be written, and let everyone understand that nothing happens without stories.
3
We use FogBugz to keep track of both our development tasks as well as our customer's tasks. Yes, it's very developer-friendly, but because its relatively light-weight on technical jargon and has a relatively clean interface, it's pretty customer-friendly as well.
We've somewhat customized FogBugz inside the database (adding new item types: Tasks and ...
3
Yes. It's useful for everyone on an Agile team to know what others are doing, both because they often can provide helpful suggestions, and so they don't end up re-doing work someone else is doing.
Also, there's morale value for developers and testers to know that a scrum master is not just "overhead" but is actually doing work too! :-)
The scrum master ...
3
Forget the analogy. Every analogy breaks down, and it takes all of about 10 minutes before somebody makes the mistake of reversing the analogy: using the analog to ascribe new attributes to the subject. Defining the roles and responsibilities of a team member through an analogy is likely to muddy things without delivering any value.
Analogies are usually ...
3
Shortly, PSM is acquired by assessment, while CSM is acquired by attendance.
The goal of the former is to actually drive towards valid understanding of scrum, while the letter aims at stuffing the trainers' pockets with green notes.
Of course, depending on the trainer, CSM might prove to be a valid inspiration towards good understanding of scrum.
3
An interesting question. The answer, in my view, is no.
The daily scrum is for the development team. Not only is the Scrum Master is not part of the development team, the Scrum Master does not even have to attend the daily scrum (though it would be foolish not to attend as that's where most of the information regarding impediments gets raised).
2
I've worked in situations where they did, and worked in situations where they didn't. Situations where they didn't had a lot to do with them being Scrum Master for a bunch of Scrum teams, and so their work was generally disjoint from the work of the team. That said, I think even in those situations, it is useful to hear from them. Generally, I think ...
2
In any point system, you are setting incentives, and creating outcomes based on those incentives. If you are not awarded points for fixing problems, what is the incentive (other than earning a paycheck) for making things better?
It seems pretty clear, based on your observation that customer interaction and feedback is avoided, and points are not awarded ...
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