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  3. So in SCRUM...?

So in SCRUM...?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
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  • K kmg365

    Chris Losinger wrote:

    ruthlessly prioritizing everything

    Chris Losinger wrote:

    if development screws that up, and makes the sales team look bad, then development is going to be in a world of sh*t.

    This started from day one (2 weeks ago). Delivery date is 6 months out

    C Offline
    C Offline
    Chris Buckett
    wrote on last edited by
    #22

    Surely if the delivery date is 6 months away then that would be a scrum marathon rather than a sprint?

    ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]

    B 1 Reply Last reply
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    • K kmg365

      Is it normal to have daily meetings lasting 1/2 hour, every issue being analyzed as to it's impact on the schedule. It's not pleasant and is in fact odd and seems to encourage hostilities. My first SCRUM project I worked on. Was just wondering?

      D Offline
      D Offline
      Duncan Edwards Jones
      wrote on last edited by
      #23

      No - take the chairs out of that meeting room. It is becoming a school staffroom meeting rather than a scrum.

      '--8<------------------------ Ex Datis: Duncan Jones Free eBook: Printing - a .NET Developer's Guide (Part 1)

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      • L Lost User

        We have a 15 minute meeting every morning at 9:45AM and they are quite useful IMHO.

        Blogging about Qt Creator

        G Offline
        G Offline
        Guy Harwood
        wrote on last edited by
        #24

        Rob Caldecott wrote:

        We have a 15 minute meeting every morning at 9:45AM and they are quite useful IMHO.

        that would seem about right IMO. anything longer and it can potentially work against productivity.

        ---Guy H ;-)---

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        • E El Corazon

          kmg365 wrote:

          My first SCRUM project I worked on. Was just wondering?

          from one of many SCRUM sources, I tried to convince others that this is how it should be... but with one meeting lasting 2 hours we never had more than one a week and sometimes we couldn't stomach that. Anyhow... try these rules on for a spin:

          Before You Scrum Before holding your first scrum, your team – with the help of management – must decide what projects should be completed in the next 15 to 30 days – a time period known as the sprint. At the end of the sprint, your team is expected to have completed all assigned work. Also, it's important to remind managers that their job is not to tell the team members how to do their work, explains Schwaber, but instead to be their coach and help them succeed. Rules for Scrum Meetings * Choose a scrum leader to enforce the rules during the sprint * Hold scrums every day in the same location and at the same time - preferably first thing in the morning * Each scrum should last only 15 to 30 minutes * Ask all participants the same three questions: What did you do since the last scrum? What are you going to do between now and the next scrum? Is anything in the way of you doing your work? * Address issues other than the three questions outside the scrum – this includes suggestions for a team member who's hit a roadblock * Managers are not allowed to speak * If a manager or colleague assigns unplanned work to a team member that will throw the team's schedule off track, the scrum leader has the power to excuse the person of the additional work. The work must either be fit into the next sprint or be assigned to someone who's not on the team. * Your team must have a concrete deliverable for management after the sprint * Start the process again after each sprint

          _________________________ John Andrew Holmes "It is well to remember that the entire universe, with one trifling exception, is composed of others." Shhhhh.... I am not really here. I am a figment of your imagination.... I am still in my cave so this must be an illusion....

          modified on Wednesday, June 16, 2010 10:47 PM

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          Phan7om
          wrote on last edited by
          #25

          managers are not allowed to speak in the scrum meeting but what if the manager is the scrum leader :P

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          • C Chris Buckett

            Surely if the delivery date is 6 months away then that would be a scrum marathon rather than a sprint?

            ChrisB ChrisDoesDev[^]

            B Offline
            B Offline
            BrainiacV
            wrote on last edited by
            #26

            Sounds like the beginnings of a Death March.

            Psychosis at 10 Film at 11

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            • K kmg365

              Is it normal to have daily meetings lasting 1/2 hour, every issue being analyzed as to it's impact on the schedule. It's not pleasant and is in fact odd and seems to encourage hostilities. My first SCRUM project I worked on. Was just wondering?

              E Offline
              E Offline
              Ed K
              wrote on last edited by
              #27

              Ditto what the above have repeated a few times! :) But it sounds like your scrums have turned into status meetings. Poke your scrum-master a bit to see if they can get it corrected.

              ed ~"Watch your thoughts; they become your words. Watch your words they become your actions. Watch your actions; they become your habits. Watch your habits; they become your character. Watch your character; it becomes your destiny." -Frank Outlaw.

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              • E El Corazon

                kmg365 wrote:

                Is it normal to have daily meetings lasting 1/2 hour

                Meeting length has less to do with the product and the methods than the people. Talk to me when you've survived a two hour session of "You broke ... Jeff, fix it." Our longest meeting was 4.5 hours I think... I've lost track there have been soooooo many and they all ended up being complete wastes of time and just power-plays. The caller of those meetings now owns his own business. :-D

                _________________________ John Andrew Holmes "It is well to remember that the entire universe, with one trifling exception, is composed of others." Shhhhh.... I am not really here. I am a figment of your imagination.... I am still in my cave so this must be an illusion....

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                C Offline
                clearbrian1
                wrote on last edited by
                #28

                1,2 hours..Lightweight! I once had a meeting in america that went on for 2 DAYS! till midnight both night. 3 months designing of this application. head guy says he knows best then drag everyone into a meeting to talk him through our design. To which he then argues every point out so eventually he does it all his way. Day 2 involved him sitting with us redesigning the whole thing in MS Project page by page. I remember my team lead thumping me in the leg as my eyes had started to close and head nod back. 6 month deadline arrive....missed, 8 months.. missed. 9 months team lead walks. half the team goes contracting. 1 year later no product delivered. parent company fires everyone inc the annoying manager who rewrote it all HAHAHAHAHA. Im now IPhone programming. if it doesnt get delivered its my fault noone elses ..scary but rewarding. tend to clarify your mind when you have real customers and not clients :and all the bugs are yours and not someone elses. feature creep is avoided :)

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                • L Lost User

                  We have a 15 minute meeting every morning at 9:45AM and they are quite useful IMHO.

                  Blogging about Qt Creator

                  J Offline
                  J Offline
                  jgehman
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #29

                  It is the same were I work, however they range in the amount of time consumed from 5-30 mins. The big kicker for me is I have upto 3 different scrums I need to attend on a daily basis.

                  jgehman Software Engineer

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                  • G Guy Harwood

                    Rob Caldecott wrote:

                    We have a 15 minute meeting every morning at 9:45AM and they are quite useful IMHO.

                    that would seem about right IMO. anything longer and it can potentially work against productivity.

                    ---Guy H ;-)---

                    C Offline
                    C Offline
                    Caslen
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #30

                    30mins a day over a 40 hour week means 'production' has been reduced by 6.25%, I hope the benefit of these meetings outweighs that.

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                    • C clearbrian1

                      1,2 hours..Lightweight! I once had a meeting in america that went on for 2 DAYS! till midnight both night. 3 months designing of this application. head guy says he knows best then drag everyone into a meeting to talk him through our design. To which he then argues every point out so eventually he does it all his way. Day 2 involved him sitting with us redesigning the whole thing in MS Project page by page. I remember my team lead thumping me in the leg as my eyes had started to close and head nod back. 6 month deadline arrive....missed, 8 months.. missed. 9 months team lead walks. half the team goes contracting. 1 year later no product delivered. parent company fires everyone inc the annoying manager who rewrote it all HAHAHAHAHA. Im now IPhone programming. if it doesnt get delivered its my fault noone elses ..scary but rewarding. tend to clarify your mind when you have real customers and not clients :and all the bugs are yours and not someone elses. feature creep is avoided :)

                      E Offline
                      E Offline
                      El Corazon
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #31

                      clearbrian1 wrote:

                      I once had a meeting in america that went on for 2 DAYS! till midnight both night. 3 months designing of this application. head guy says he knows best then drag everyone into a meeting to talk him through our design. To which he then argues every point out so eventually he does it all his way. Day 2 involved him sitting with us redesigning the whole thing in MS Project page by page. I remember my team lead thumping me in the leg as my eyes had started to close and head nod back.

                      Well, it's nice to know how CLK's previous employment worked out... actually, ours was a peer. He went to CMMI class so the PL assigned him to keep us inline with CMMI, he decided that that awarded him as Code Nazi. We did have one two day planning meeting, but the PL at least paid for a conference room at a hotel.... Planning meetings can go on forever. No this was our equivalent for a SCRUM meeting. It was a keep on track purpose, but the weekly meeting was more accusation and arguing from the one peer. Even though he was not our superior, we all learned that if you don't at least go along with what was said, it will last forever. I called it our weekly ass chewing meeting.

                      _________________________ John Andrew Holmes "It is well to remember that the entire universe, with one trifling exception, is composed of others." Shhhhh.... I am not really here. I am a figment of your imagination.... I am still in my cave so this must be an illusion....

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