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Posts Tagged ‘Scrum’

  1. Scrum Process Template for Team Foundation Server.

    September 14, 2010 by Tino Seeber

    Brian Harry from Microsoft released a beta of a new Team Foundation Server process template specifically optimized for Scrum projects – Team Foundation Server Scrum v1.0 Beta.

    Releasing this template he noticed on his blog:

    Over the past couple of years, Scrum has evolved as an extremely popular iterative development process and we’ve been getting feedback that our Agile template feels unnatural for teams trying to do Scrum. For example, it uses different terminology like Iteration rather than Sprint, User Story rather than “Product Backlog item”, etc.

    (…)

    Our goal has been to make our Scrum template “truly Scrum” so that if you pick up a book on Scrum or take a class on Scrum and then try out the TFS Scrum process template it will all make sense to you and correspond to everything you’ve learned.

    Download Scrum Template Process Template


  2. Introducing Scrum.

    September 14, 2010 by Tino Seeber

    If you are interested in SCRUM, their philosophy and model for further discussion, I recommend you the following slides:


  3. What is better than Kanban?

    September 10, 2010 by Tino Seeber


  4. Scrum in 10 Minutes.

    September 9, 2010 by Tino Seeber

    Here you go:


  5. Top 7 Responsibilities of a Scrum Master.

    September 7, 2010 by Tino Seeber

    I found a nice and helpful list of the Top 7 Responsibilities of a Scrum Master on Laszlo’s Blog. Here it comes:

    1. Be a team player. The best ScrumMasters are real team players, who receive as much satisfaction from facilitating others’ success as their own. They must also be comfortable surrendering control to the Product Owner and team. For those two reasons, traditional project managers don’t usually make great ScrumMasters.

    2. Remove impediments. First and foremost, the ScrumMaster should do everything in his or her power to remove obstacles that are preventing the team from accomplishing its sprint goals. Basically, anything that distracts or inhibits the team from making progress is considered an impediment, so the challenges a ScrumMaster might work to resolve are truly infinite. When a developer’s computer dies, it’s the ScrumMaster’s job to get it back up and running—or replace it. If developers are complaining about the high temperature in the team room, the ScrumMaster must find a way to cool it down.

    3. Radiate information. One of the ScrumMaster’s primary responsibilities is to radiate information or ensure that a team’s progress and successes are highly visible to all stakeholders, including the team itself. These radiators may take the form of various Scrum artifacts, from backlogs to burndown charts.

    4. Support the Product Owner. Just as the ScrumMaster removes impediments for the team, he or she also works to assist the Product Owner with various activities. These include communicating updates and impediments as well as assisting with backlog and release plan maintenance.

    5. Facilitate creativity and empowerment for the development team. The flipside of the ScrumMaster’s mandate to remove impediments for the team is his or her charge to foster an environment where creativity and empowerment can flourish. If a team is to self-organize to meet sprint goals, it will perform up to its potential if its members feel they have the support and confidence of the ScrumMaster and Product Owner behind them.

    6. Improve the team’s engineering practices and tools as needed. To fully facilitate productivity, the ScrumMaster must make sure teams have the tools and know-how they need to succeed. This might include a Scrum tool to bring distributed teams together for close collaboration or introducing a new engineering practice that can help developers improve processes.

    7. Communicate, communicate, communicate. Yes, communication is integral to each of the above points, but it’s so essential that it’s worth mentioning again. Scrum’s success hinges on clear and frequent communication among all stakeholders. The ScrumMaster acts as a hub for all of that communication, ensuring that everyone—the Product Owner, the team, and various other stakeholders—are always up-to-speed.

    Opinion?

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  6. Scrum on One Page.

    September 5, 2010 by Tino Seeber

    Here it is: The agile Project management Method SCRUM on one Page (Download PDF)


  7. Vertragsmuster für SCRUM-Verträge.

    September 1, 2010 by Tino Seeber

    Wer Individualsoftware mit der agilen Projektmanagementmethode SCRUM entwickeln möchte, sollte sich rechtlich absichern. Rechtsanwalt Marcus Antonius Hofmann stellt im Rahmen das VertragsmusterErstellung von Individualsoftware mit SCRUM” (PDF) kostenlos zur Verfügung:

    Dieses Vertragsmuster dient der rechtlichen Absicherung der Erstellung von Individualsoftware unter Verwendung von SCRUM. Es berücksichtigt die Besonderheiten des agilen Vorgehensmodells und stellt Rechtssicherheit her, soweit dies möglich ist, ohne dem Prozess seine Dynamik zu nehmen.

    Dieses Vertragsmuster ist unter einer modifizierten Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 3.0 (by-sa) Lizenz freigegeben, auch zur kommerziellen Verwendung.

    via