The Scrum Framework

Image Copyright scrum.org

The simplicity of the definition of Scrum seems to make it easy for teams to adopt. However, many teams adopt the doing of scrum without adopting the behaviours of scrum (and of agile). At best, teams like this achieve small gains in the effectiveness of their work and the resilience of the team. The Scrum Guide itself is clear on the importance of empirical pillars of Scrum - Transparency, Inspection and Adaptation. These are included here as key elements of anAgileMind. The Scrum Values - Commitment, Focus, Openness, Respect, and Courage - are also essential in creating a cohesive, collaborative team that can resiliently deliver on its goals.

Scrum is defined using three roles, five events, three artifacts and two additional key concepts:

Scrum Events

The Sprint

Sprint Planning

Daily Scrum

Sprint Review

Sprint Retrospective

Scrum Roles

Developers

Product Owner

Scrum Master

Scrum Artifacts

Product Backlog

Sprint Backlog

Increment

Additional Concepts

Definition of Done

Product Backlog Refinement

The Scrum Guide does a masterful job of describing the simplicity of the framework:

Scrum requires a Scrum Master to foster an environment where:

  1. A Product Owner orders the work for a complex problem into a Product Backlog.

  2. The Scrum Team turns a selection of the work into an Increment of value during a Sprint.

  3. The Scrum Team and its stakeholders inspect the results and adjust for the next Sprint.

  4. Repeat

…The Scrum framework is purposefully incomplete, only defining the parts required to implement Scrum theory. Scrum is built upon by the collective intelligence of the people using it. Rather than provide people with detailed instructions, the rules of Scrum guide their relationships and interactions.

Various processes, techniques and methods can be employed within the framework. Scrum wraps around existing practices or renders them unnecessary. Scrum makes visible the relative efficacy of current management, environment, and work techniques, so that improvements can be made.

Useful Sources

Scrum Guide - an online version of the current Scrum Guide.

Introduction to Scrum - from scrum.org, a useful source of information and guidance about Scrum


Practices

  • Sprint