Scrum

Definition

Scrum is a lightweight framework that helps people, teams and organizations generate value through adaptive solutions for complex problems

Components

Events

Artifacts

Roles

Scrum exists only in its entirety, all of the core components and rules exist with a specific purpose

Scrum is founded on empiricism

Scrum focus on solving problems that are complex, unpredictable and adaptative

Scrum uses the empirical process control

Inspection

Adaptation

Transparency

product owner

Scrum master

Developers

The sprint

Sprint planning

Daily scrum

Sprint review

Sprint retrospective

Product backlog

Sprint backlog

Unknow or exquisite nouns/concepts

Product backlog

The Product Backlog is an ordered list, emergent with what is necessary to improve the product. This is the single work that is undertaken by the Scrum team.

Sprint backlog

The Sprint Backlog is made by a mix of the sprint goal (why), the set of product backlog items that were selected for the sprint (what), and the plan for delivering the increment (how).

Scrum artifacts

Scrum’s artifacts represent work or value. They are created to maximize transparency of key information. With this, everyone inspecting them has the same basis for adaptation.

Stakeholders

Acionista

Increment

An Increment is a concrete stepping stone toward the Product Goal. Every time that there's a new increment it is added to the previous ones with intense verifications, to ensure that every increment works well together. An increment must be usable to provide value.