Yeah, I have recently added a closing/reminder note at the end of the sprint planning by saying, " All right guys, thanks for joining the sprint planning today, but our planning doesn't stop here, we will continue to adjust the plan if needed at our dailies!"
I understood that the "Daily Standup" came from a misunderstanding about a standing meeting, it is at the same time every day, not that we need to be standing up. But at the end of the day what we call the meeting is less important than what we do in this 10 to 15 minutes.
I'll let the Scrum Guide answer this one: "The Product Owner proposes how the product could increase its value and utility in the current Sprint. The whole Scrum Team then collaborates to define a Sprint Goal that communicates why the Sprint is valuable to stakeholders..."
It's another great episode. Happy Friday! Good to know that Daily Standup is from Extreme Programming. The only thing I did not hear from this episode is 'inspection' and 'adaptation' for Daily Scrum:-). Todd said it's a planning event. I think it is a planning event with inspection and adaptation :-).
Hi Ryan and Todd! Your videos are Scrumptious!I'm a recently certified Scrum Master, though I've unknowingly been applying Scrum principles for years. I'd like to get more hands on experience with the 'pure form' My question is: how would you suggest implementing Scrum in your company? I think my boss would be supportive but I'm not sure the best way to approach it.
Good insight. Agree this perception. Help! It is so common with scrum teams operating from distributed locations. If the team does not have any overlapping working hours ( e.g teams operating from Ireland and Sydney) , how do we get the daily scrum and the rest of the ceremonies organised? No room for collaboration! Do you see this as an anti pattern in how scrum team should be set up being thoughtful about the timezones?
I am so happy you broke down the difference and the genesis of Daily Standup. It is very common for the two Scrum events to used interchangeably (i.e Daily Standup vs Daily Scrum). I honestly believe that within the Scrum framework. The use of Daily Scrum is aligned with the (Scrum framework) as oppose to use of Daily Standup. Another Scrum event that is often used interchangeably is Backlog Grooming as oppose to Backlog Refinement. Thanks TM & RR.
I've never stood up during a stand up... if that was accurate it'd be called "daily laying down in bed still" and if we are on the topic of inclusion lets change the term sprint too lol I think some teams can benefit from a daily standup rather than daily scrum based on the definitions you used here. I do also think agree with your definitions and the purposes behind both. Nice food for thought.
Yeah, I have recently added a closing/reminder note at the end of the sprint planning by saying, " All right guys, thanks for joining the sprint planning today, but our planning doesn't stop here, we will continue to adjust the plan if needed at our dailies!"
Hey Ryan and Todd... I enjoy you guys so much. Such an amazing series. I try not to miss any session.
I understood that the "Daily Standup" came from a misunderstanding about a standing meeting, it is at the same time every day, not that we need to be standing up.
But at the end of the day what we call the meeting is less important than what we do in this 10 to 15 minutes.
So true. Planning not justifying. DSFH can help but does not get to the specific points made here. Great video. Thanks RR+TM 🌟
if there is anything you want to change in Srcum/Agile, what would it be?
I would love to hear about:
Can developers negotiate on "Sprint Goal" with Product Owner during Sprint Planning?
I'll let the Scrum Guide answer this one:
"The Product Owner proposes how the product could increase its value and utility in the current Sprint. The whole Scrum Team then collaborates to define a Sprint Goal that communicates why the Sprint is valuable to stakeholders..."
It's another great episode. Happy Friday! Good to know that Daily Standup is from Extreme Programming. The only thing I did not hear from this episode is 'inspection' and 'adaptation' for Daily Scrum:-). Todd said it's a planning event. I think it is a planning event with inspection and adaptation :-).
Hi Ryan and Todd! Your videos are Scrumptious!I'm a recently certified Scrum Master, though I've unknowingly been applying Scrum principles for years. I'd like to get more hands on experience with the 'pure form' My question is: how would you suggest implementing Scrum in your company? I think my boss would be supportive but I'm not sure the best way to approach it.
Good insight. Agree this perception.
Help! It is so common with scrum teams operating from distributed locations. If the team does not have any overlapping working hours ( e.g teams operating from Ireland and Sydney) , how do we get the daily scrum and the rest of the ceremonies organised? No room for collaboration! Do you see this as an anti pattern in how scrum team should be set up being thoughtful about the timezones?
Such a great insight. Thanks
I am so happy you broke down the difference and the genesis of Daily Standup. It is very common for the two Scrum events to used interchangeably (i.e Daily Standup vs Daily Scrum). I honestly believe that within the Scrum framework. The use of Daily Scrum is aligned with the (Scrum framework) as oppose to use of Daily Standup. Another Scrum event that is often used interchangeably is Backlog Grooming as oppose to Backlog Refinement. Thanks TM & RR.
I've never stood up during a stand up... if that was accurate it'd be called "daily laying down in bed still" and if we are on the topic of inclusion lets change the term sprint too lol
I think some teams can benefit from a daily standup rather than daily scrum based on the definitions you used here. I do also think agree with your definitions and the purposes behind both. Nice food for thought.
Do you guys cover SAFe methodology?
We do not. We haven't seen SAFe work so we don't feel comfortable talking about it.
The Daily Status Meeting haha
Why can’t it be both ?
I would say that it's because Scrum is very intentional with the language it uses because it has a specific meaning.
TGIF