Debate #17 – Should Agile teams stay together?
High-performing Agile teams are hard to come by. When your work slows down, do you keep your Scrum Team together, or break it up?
When it comes to Agile options, the Scrum Framework is far and away the most popular. Check out this extensive collection of blogs about Scrum.
High-performing Agile teams are hard to come by. When your work slows down, do you keep your Scrum Team together, or break it up?
The Scrum Guide 2020 advises that teams of 10 people or less are small and nimble enough, but that any larger may be less effective.
So, can one Agile Team work on more than one product or project at once? I prefer to work on one at a time, but this may not be your reality.
So, can you add items to the Sprint Backlog during the Sprint? The Scrum Guide states that you can, but you may not want to do it. Learn why.
Modified Fibonacci, T-shirt Sizes, Dog Breeds, Ideal Days, and Story Counts are different ways to size User Stories. Which one is the best?
So, can Agile work remotely? Just because your team is distributed or remote doesn’t mean that you can’t be successful. Learn how.
Can the Scrum Master be a Developer on a Scrum Team, too? Join me in exploring why (or why not) a Scrum Master could have these dual roles.
User Stories may be written at various sizes and levels, and there are different terms for them – so what should you call yours?
There’s not a one-size-fits-all project management approach, but I think that Agile can co-exist with Waterfall, albeit with some difficulty.
There are many flavors of Agile, but which one is best? Is it Scrum, XP, Lean, Kanban, or something else? See a comparison of the options.