Monday, April 29, 2019

When Daily Scrum Goes Bad

Are Your Daily Scrum Neetings Taking More Than 15 Minutes?

Scrum Meeting

In Michael Mankins’s and Eric Garton’s book “Time, Talent, Energy: Overcome Organizational Drag and Unleash Your Team’s Productive Power”, they state that most people spend on average 11 hours per week in meetings. The point of meetings is to communicate. Communication is a common problem in large complex software projects and constant (daily) communication is key to successful project management. This is why the Daily Scrum is so important. Daily Scrum (when done correctly) optimizes team collaboration and performance. The goal is for everyone on the development team to be on the same page, aligned with the sprint goal, and to get a plan out for the next 24 hours. According to the Scrum Guide, a Daily Scrum is a 15-minute time-boxed event that is held every day of the Sprint. If you are consistently going over the 15 minutes, your Daily Scrum might be going bad. If that is the case, then one of two things could be happening:



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