Tag Archives: daily scrum

How To Unleash The Benefit From Daily Scrum (Part 2)

THE TEAM DIDN’T COMMIT TO THE SCHEDULE

Note: please visit the Part 1 article here to get the context.

First thing first, let’s double-check are all team members aware of the schedule? And are all team members have agreed to the schedule?.

If the answer is no, you know what you should do, right?

  1. Make a consensus
  2. Make the consensus explicit (i borrow Kanban practices here, make policies explicit)

If the answer is yes, it’s time to make a regular reflection.

  1. What makes it difficult to follow the agreement/schedule

Please note that you have to put your empathy above everything when conducting the session. Do not put any judgment on your team member. Make the session safe for them to emphasize their difficulties.

I believe the way you solve it must be custom based on the case shared by the team. Meanwhile, I hope these myths of daily scrum didn’t arrive at the answer:

The schedule is too early (morning), so I can’t catch up with the schedule.

Answer: No one said that our daily scrum must be done in the morning. Even the Scrum guide doesn’t say so. Even though there’s some benefit if we do it in the early morning, that doesn’t mean we have to. Daily scrum will only benefit if everyone can contribute to the problem resolution and be aware of the adjusted delivery strategy.

I hate to stand up only for the meeting.

Answer: No one said that our daily scrum must be done in a stand-up position. Even the Scrum guide doesn’t say so. You can do it in sit-down, while having a push-up, sit-up, or in any body position that makes you comfortable.

The event doesn’t make any sense because we always sync every time.

Answer: Wow, it would be even better! We believe some of us don’t have that luxury. It could be because some team members are not working at the same location as the others, the type of work has a considerable risk from context switching, etc. The daily scrum is just how the Scrum framework helps us establish the habit. Once it’s established, we will feel it as the way of working, not a meeting. It becomes the need instead of the ceremonies.

I have so many meetings already, only 15 minutes, and I have to join offline? It doesn’t make any sense.

Answer: Daily scrum doesn’t need offline participation instead of active participation. It means we can do asynchronous communication (such as chat or e-mail) or synchronous communication (such as call) to share the problem, discuss the problem-solving, and do action items generation.

Please refer to my Part 1 article to find out the essential things to be shared during the daily scrum.

This is the end of Part 2. Feel free to put any comments or feedback regarding this article. See you in Part 3!

How To Unleash The Benefit From Daily Scrum (Part 1)

How often have you found a useless daily huddle, daily stand up, sync up whatsoever you can call it?

How do you feel about it?

If you expect to find what is the best way to do daily scrum in this article, sorry, it won’t be explained here because there are no such things as best practices!. Let me re-highlight again: THERE’S NO BEST WAY TO DO IT.

But let me help you to find some areas of improvement.

Here are some usual symptoms that are causing your feeling above:

  1. Timing issue
    1. It took so much of our time
    2. The team didn’t commit to the schedule
  2. Facilitating issue
    1. No clear output and outcome from the conversation

IT TOOK SO MUCH OF OUR TIME

I don’t mean to be a preacher of Scrum guide, but in reality, we can do it in less than 15 minutes, seriously, for real. If you find your last daily scrum took more than that, the first thing you can do is learn about the historical event by (1) recording your daily scrum session & (2) re-hearing/re-watching the session.

Then counting the duration of:

  1. Problem explanation
  2. Problem-solving discussion
  3. Action items generation
  4. Others

The first element that we definitely can remove is (4) Others.

The only thing we should keep is (3) Action items generation.

What if (1) Problem explanation took so much time? Here are some ideas that you can play around with:

  1. Be prepared by summarizing your explanation
  2. Only highlighting information that is relevant to others
  3. Postponed the explanation as an action items

What if (2) Problem-solving discussion took so much time? See below other ideas:

  1. First thing first, be brave to cut off the discussion
  2. Postponed the problem solving as an action item

Focusing only on action item generation could save each other time. We only involve relevant people in discussion while still keeping the overall essential issues during the day.

And the most important thing is to put in our mindset that it is okay not to solve everything in 15 minutes. We only have to keep our attitude to adapt your delivery strategy as soon as the problem comes.

Here’s the end of Part 1. Feel free to put any comments or feedback regarding this article.

I’ll see you again in the next part.