Are you starting Scrum by only focusing on outputs? You are missing out. Using Scrum for outputs without outcomes & team engagement is a mistake.
The latest release of The Scrum Guide has some welcome changes. One of those modifications is being less prescriptive.
With less prescription, what do teams and organizations do when they don’t know the “how?” What do they do when their experience is low and they are starting on their journey? Is less prescription a good thing for these types of teams?
Empowerment did not work as a movement. What can we do to ensure team autonomy does not meet the same fate?
“My team consistently rolls work over from Sprint-to-Sprint. Why is it not motivated to finish what it starts? It doesn’t deliver what it commits to deliver. I must have the wrong people.” Do you ever hear this? Do you say it about your teams? We blame the team, but we should not.
When we envision mastery, we often think about becoming an expert in our specialty. But today’s product teams need less specialization, not more. Mastery today is about diversification, not specialization.
Do you have grit? We need it to conquer obstacles on our Agile journey. But grit alone is not enough. We need something else to ensure our success. This additional ingredient eluded me until my client helped me see it. I am convinced it, along with grit, will make the difference between success and apathy in the journey to become Agile.
Do you separate Product Discovery and Delivery into two teams? Product Discovery and Delivery are better together.
Scrum does not fit your organization. This makes it difficult to master. What should you do? Should you adapt Scrum to your organization? Or should you adapt your organization? And how can Zen help? Read more in my latest post.
For the past several years, I have watched our pursuit of Agile lose its way due to the magnitude of the change. Is there a simpler approach to the Agile journey? Read about three simple ways to ease your Agile journey in my latest post.
When faced with change, we can become anxious. We want to hold on to what we know. But to embrace change, we need this one critical leadership behavior.