Although often treated as distinct methodologies, both Agile and Lean are rooted in similar values. These methodologies continue to evolve as they expand into new industries, applications, and opportunities, and many organizations have had amazing success in drawing on elements of both. Using Lean’s systems thinking and continuous improvement approach, agile development practices can be used to help organizations build healthy, innovative organizations that can sustainably deliver customer value.
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Scrum: A Comprehensive Tutorial
Scrum itself is a simple framework for effective team collaboration on complex products. The Scrum Guide to explain scrum clearly and concisely. this guide contains a definition of scrum. This definition consists of Scrum’s roles, events, artifacts, and the rules that tie them together. Each component within the framework serves a specific purpose and is essential to Scrum’s success and usage. The rules of Scrum bind together the roles, events, and artifacts, governing the relationships and interaction
Continue readingWhy Scrum Masters love Scrum?
A Scrum master is a member of a Scrum team. Their task is to create a productive work environment and guide others to understand the values, principles, and practices of Scrum. scrum directors tend to be people-oriented, have a high EQ, and find joy in helping their team members grow.
Continue readingWhy Product Owners love Scrum?
A Product Owner who owns the product on behalf of the company is a part of a Scrum team. However, a product owner has no authority over other members of the team, same as the Scrum Master. A Product Owner is responsible for looking after a product for an extended period of time and is accountable for achieving product success. As the product owner, you should directly interact with the customers and users, the development team, and other key stakeholders, as the picture below shows.
Continue readingWhy it should be Sprint Review instead of Sprint Demo?
A Sprint Review is more than just a demo; it is a review of the completed Sprint, the Product Backlog, and the Marketplace. Admittedly, demos are an important part of the Sprint Review. The purpose of the Sprint Review meeting is for the team to show the customers and stakeholders the work they have accomplished over the sprint and compare it to the commitment given at the beginning of the sprint.
Continue readingWhy Development Teams Love Scrum?
A Scrum development team has the autonomy to choose how best to accomplish their work, rather than being directed by others outside the team. Unlike traditional management principles, the self-organizing empowered teams are not directed and controlled from the top; rather they evolve from team members participating actively & collectively in all the Scrum practices and events.
Continue readingScrum: Why Colocated Team?
Colocation is useful for meetings that require close listening, such as design discussions. It is also handy when new employees are training and need some amount of hand-holding or encouragement. Whiteboard is highly effective for colocated team but can be managed with online tools as well.
Continue readingScrum Philosophy: Release Early, Release Often
Release early, release often is a software development philosophy that emphasizes the importance of early and frequent releases in creating a tight feedback loop between developers and testers or users, contrary to a feature-based release strategy.
Continue readingScrum: How to Refine Product Backlog?
Not all items in the product backlog will be of the same size and level of detail (i.e. features/ eprics/ user stories and tasks) at the same time. PBIs that we plan to work on soon should be at the top of the backlog, smaller in size, and very detailed so that they can be worked on in the near-term sprint. PBIs that we won’t be working on for some time should be at the bottom of the backlog, larger, and less detailed.
Continue readingScrum: Do you need a vision statement?
A vision statement identifies where the organization wants or intends to be in future or where it should be to best meet the needs of the stakeholders. Every project needs a vision to steer itself in a proper direction. A vision serves as a guide for choosing the current as well as future course of actions.
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