Scrum fundamentals 2020

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How long is the Daily scrum meeting

15 minutes

Number of members in a scrum team

3-9 members

Burn-up Chart

A chart which shows the amount of work which has been completed

Burn-down Chart

A chart which shows the amount of work which is thought to remain in a backlog

What is scrum

A framework to support teams in complex product development

Stakeholder

A person external to the Scrum Team with a specific interest in and knowledge of a product

Scrum Board

A physical board to visualize information for and by the Scrum Team, often used to manage Sprint Backlog

The end result of a sprint

A product of professional quality that fits business needs

Ready

A shared understanding by the Product Owner and the Development Team regarding the preferred level of description of Product Backlog items introduced at Sprint Planning

Definition of "Done"

A shared understanding of expectations that the Increment must live up to in order to be releasable into production. Managed by the Development Team.

When does the Sprint retrospective take place

After the Sprint Review and prior to the next Sprint Planning

User Story

Agile software development practice to express requirements from an end user perspective, emphasizing verbal communication

Product Backlog

An ordered list of everything that is known to be needed in the product

How long is a Sprint retrospective meeting

At most a three-hour meeting for one-month Sprint

Product Backlog management includes

Clearly expressing Product Backlog items Ordering the items Optimizing the value of the work Ensuring it is visible, transparent, and clear to all Ensuring the Development Team understands items in the Product Backlog

The Development Team

Consists of professionals who do the work of delivering a potentially releasable Increment of "Done" product at the end of each Sprint

Scrum Values

Courage Focus Commitment Respect Openness

When is the sprint goal set

During the Sprint Planning

What are the advantages of having consistent sprint length

Helps to establish a consistent pattern of delivery Helps to objectively measure progress Helps to provide a consistent means of measuring team velocity

Adaptation

If one or more aspects of a process deviate outside acceptable limits, and that the resulting product will be unacceptable, the process must be adjusted

Reason for cancelling a Sprint

If the Sprint Goal becomes obsolete. Only the Product Owner has the authority to cancel the Sprint.

Daily Scrum

Improve communications Identify impediments Highlight and promote quick decision-making Improve the Development Team's level of knowledge

Velocity

Indication of the amount of Product Backlog turned into an Increment of product during a Sprint by a Scrum Team, tracked by the Development Team for use within the Scrum Team

The purpose of the Sprint Retrospective

Inspect how the last Sprint went with regards to people, relationships, process, and tools Identify and order the major items that went well and potential improvements Create a plan for implementing improvements to the way the Scrum Team does its work

How is the Product backlog stacked

Items towards the top of the Product Backlog are smaller in size compared to the ones lingering on the bottom

Empiricism

Knowledge comes from experience and making decisions based on what is known

How long is the Sprint planning meeting

Maximum of eight hours for one month's sprint

Sprint Review

Meeting held at the end of the Sprint to inspect the Increment and adapt the Product Backlog if needed

Sprint Planning

Meeting to decide the work to be performed in the Sprint

Emergence

New facts or new knowledge of a fact, or knowledge of a fact becoming visible unexpectedly

Sprint Retrospective

Opportunity for the Scrum Team to inspect itself and create a plan for improvements to be enacted during the next Sprint

Scrum Team consist of

Product Owner Development Team Scrum Master

The Sprint Goal

Provides guidance to the Development Team on why it is building the Increment

Scrum's artifacts

Represent work or value to provide transparency and opportunities for inspection and adaptation

Product owner

Responsible for maximizing the value of the product resulting from work of the Development Team Responsible for managing the Product Backlog

The Scrum Master

Role within a Scrum Team accountable for guiding, coaching, teaching and assisting a Scrum Team and its environments in a proper understanding and use of Scrum

Scrum consists of

Scrum Teams and their associated roles, events, artifacts, and rules

Inspection

Scrum users must frequently inspect Scrum artifacts and progress toward a Sprint Goal to detect undesirable variances

Development Teams have the following characteristics

Self-organizing Cross-functional No titles for Team members No sub-teams Accountability belongs to the Development Team as a whole

Transparency

Significant aspects of the process must be visible to those responsible for the outcome

Four formal events for inspection and adaptation

Sprint Planning Daily Scrum Sprint Review Sprint Retrospective

Increment

Sum of all the Product Backlog items completed during a Sprint and the value of the increments of all previous Sprints. Typically the result of a Sprint.

Sprint Backlog

The Product Backlog items selected for this Sprint plus the plan for delivering them

Who should define the business value of a feature

The Product owner

Product Backlog refinement

The activity in a Sprint through which the Product Owner and the Development Teams add granularity to the Product Backlog

Self-organization

The management principle that teams autonomously organize their work. Teams choose how best to accomplish their work, rather than being directed by others outside the team.

Where should you put retrospective commitments

The next spring backlog

Coherent/Coherence

The quality of the relationship between certain Product Backlog items which may make them worthy of consideration as a whole

Forecast (of functionality)

The selection of items from the Product Backlog a Development Team deems feasible for implementation in a Sprint

Who ultimately decides when the sprint is full

The team

What is the effect of having a story board on the wall

The team can see progress all the time

Which approach is used to determine the length of the sprint

The team decides on the length of the sprint, taking into consideration the size and complexity of the project

When should the team get acceptance on deliverables

The team should get it from stakeholders at least at the end of every sprint

Technical Debt

The typically unpredictable overhead of maintaining the product, often caused by less than ideal design decisions, contributing to the total cost of ownership

Sprint

Time-box of one month or less during which a "Done", useable, and potentially releasable product Increment is created

Three pillars of scrum

Transparency Inspection Adaption

Two questions during sprint planning

What can be done this Sprint? How will the chosen work get done?


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